Touring the Election Night Parties: Who's Out, Who's In—and Who's Dancing to November
If you missed it, there's a really excellent piece in the Sunday New York Times about how America's highway and urban planning policies in the last 50 years have undermined the cultural centers of cities, fueled sprawl and heightened class and racial divisions. Architecture critic Nicolai Ouroussoff basically points out, hey we're about to spend billions of federal money on repairing our national infrastructure, we should step back and realize that the way we've been building most cities recently hasn't been smart or healthy.
The article, Reinventing America's Cities, reads like a grim manifesto:
The country has fallen on hard times, but those of us who love cities know we have been living in the dark ages for a while now. We know that turning things around will take more than just pouring money into shovel-ready projects, regardless of how they might boost the economy. Windmills won’t do it either. We long for a bold urban vision.
One of the main points Ouroussoff makes is that the unpopularity of public works projects during the Reagan era left the planning of city spaces to private developers. Developers "began refurbishing parks and old historic quarters. The result was sanitized versions of real cities organized around themed districts, convention centers and sports complexes."
Themed districts, convention centers and sports complexes, huh? Sound familiar, Portland?
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