What good is the warmth of summer, without the cold of winter to give it sweetness. JS

Friday 6 September 2013

The Fall and Rise of Dream Cities

Having visited four cities in the Land of Dreams, I'm not sure where US-style urban planning is heading. Two of the cities are growing cities and two are shrinking, however I'm not sure whether lessons are learnt. The cycles of growing and shrinking will affect most cities over time, however I'm unsure whether urban planning is up to the challenge of simultaneously planning for both rise and fall, as growth often is followed by decline.

The prosperity of downtown Philadelphia slowly reaching the inner suburbs
Philadelphia was the first city I visited on my recent trip, staying a week one mile south of downtown, in a mostly mono ethnic (black) inner southern suburb, made up of townhouses from around 1900. The still prosperous and diverse downtown is squeezed in between two rivers a mile apart, giving the city an historical urban density that still remains. Most of the wealth of the city is still there, in our just adjacent to downtown, including shops, apartment buildings, townhouses and two major universities with their enormous hospitals. Philadelphia's poorest neighbourhoods are further out, areas that I failed to visit.

Philadelphia's 30th Street Station as a cathedral of light, marble and bras anno 1933.  

Parks and squares increasing quality of life in the big apple
In New York I stayed first in Chelsea/West Village and then in Downtown, by World Trade Centre and Battery Park. Spending four days in Mid- and Downtown, I had the opportunity to explore the stunning pocket parks, piers and riverside parks of the lower Manhattan, primarily along the Hudson, partly by boat, partly by bike and partly on foot. The signs of wealth and prosperity are overwhelming, with private or public investment visible on every other street corner. Globalisation has benefited the city on the scale of only three other places on earth, London, Hong Kong and the twin cities of Dubai and Abu Dhabi.

Downtown Cleveland going its own way
I arrived in Cleveland by car from eastern Pennsylvania. Squeezed in between the southern shores of Lake Eire and a buckling river, the present city centre is only a dozen blocks in either direction, the rest of the former warehouses adjacent to downtown mostly turned into acres of car parks. There are virtually no shops and few apartments downtown, but a new convention centre and park, three stadiums and many major hotels brings some kind of life to the centre. Most wealth and shops have migrated to the suburbs (outside the administrative city limits), leaving a rim of poor inner city suburbs of townhouses, small apartment buildings and sub-standard schools. However, the population of Greater Cleveland is stable, despite that the (administrative) city itself has lost over half a million people, or more than half its population in half a century.

Chicago's wealth and prosperity encaptured in the design of a luxury store on Michigan Avenue anno 2012.

I arrived in Chicago by Greyhound bus from Ohio, staying in the southern part of downtown, one block south of the overground loop transit train. Downtown extends maybe two miles north-south and half a mile east-west, but is as dense as Uptown or Downtown Manhattan, much of it residential, including a major university hospital, many times the size of Europe's largest new hospital building in Whitechapel, London. Central Chicago is super wealthy, with suburbs stretching in three directions as far as the eyes can see. And the high density of downtown allows for high frequent train services deep into the suburbs, a little bit like in suburban London, where dense row housing and parks dominate.

What can be learned from my brief visits to four very different US cities?

Very high rise city centre buildings are maybe not so appropriate in mid-size cities, including declining or shrinking cities. The newer highest buildings of Cleveland and Philadelphia are somewhat inappropriate, in cities struggling to keep or bring prosperous life to their city centre streets, avenues, squares and parks. Having acres of car parks adjacent to very high rise buildings make little sense, opting for medium high densities on a European scale is maybe more appropriate, where big prosperous cities in particularly Germany have succeeded in accommodating the car, high density living, high-tech production, high end service jobs and major retail.

Attract small households from the suburb to the inner city
Keeping and bringing wealthy single and small households back to the city centre is maybe the most important factor in retaining or attracting city centre retail and prosperous city life. The moment middle class singles and small households prefer living in the suburbs, the city centre may experience an endless spiral of economic decline. Getting wealthy elderly to relocate from the suburbs to the centre is equally important, as they make up the largest (and at present in the western world the most prosperous and growing) proportion of small households.

Public realm at the station plaza in Philadelphia with flowers, parasols, cafe furniture and chaise longues for anyone to enjoy anno 2013.

Subsidising inner city housing to an extent that poor people outnumber middle class residents is a recipe for disaster. If poor people make up 15-20 per cent of the population of the US or the EU, they must live somewhere, but for them to congregate in vast areas in inner city suburbs is maybe not such a great idea. The approach of London, with small pockets of extreme poverty is maybe a better solution, than the US, Greater Paris or East London solution of vast areas of inner city poverty. But shifting the poor even further out will only work if their quality of life and their job prospects are as high in the countryside as in the big cities. Sadly, this is often not the case for ethnic minorities, who experience or feel they have a higher quality of life near people of similar ethnic background.

Hospitals and universities are major inner city catalysts
The extreme size (and cost) of education, sports and health facilities in the US, means that they are more important to the economy of the inner cities of the US than maybe to the rest of the world. However, locating these facilities as close to the inner cities as possible is still very important everywhere, as the city life and logistics associated with these facilities are major economic boosters, even if on a slightly different scale in the US than elsewhere.