What If We Built Our Cities Around Places?

One of the joys for all of us working at PPS is learning from people all around the world about how they’d like to make their communities better. No two answers are the same, but listen long enough and the degree to which people share similar desires is remarkable. “Downtown would be a better place if I felt comfortable walking there,” is a common sentiment. Or we’ll often hear someone tell us, “There should be a place close to home where I can take my kids to play.” Though the specifics vary, a steady current runs beneath the surface of what people say. It’s the same desire for shared, public places that has shaped human settlements since the first cities were built.

The architect and author Christopher Alexander coined a phrase (and authored a book by the same name), “The Timeless Way of Building,” that touches on these common yearnings and how people have intuitively used them to build congenial places to live. The process of building cities today has become so institutionalized, however, that people seldom have an outlet to put their intuition to use anymore. At PPS, we believe this timeless way of building can be reinvigorated, and we offer a common-sense way to do it: by empowering people to initiate improvements to their local neighborhoods place by place. These small steps to enliven streets, parks, and other public spaces are the building blocks of a thriving city.

Volunteerism is a sure sign that a neighborhood is heading in the right direction.

That is the idea at the heart of PPS’s Great Cities Initiative (more on that below). The vitality of any city depends on citizen action such as neighborhood groups reclaiming their local parks and small businesses recharging commercial streets. Many times, communities need just a little nudge in the right direction to set this process of revitalization in motion. And in a short time, the entire neighborhood has undergone a turnaround as residents take comfort and pride in their public spaces.

What sort of “nudge” are we talking about? Imagine, for example, a neighborhood park bordered on one side by a commercial street and on another by a public library. These urban elements work together to form a single place, yet in a typical city that area would likely be managed by a number of public entities, each operating independently of the others. Instead of a unified approach to improving the place, we likely end up with atomized spheres of influence. The Department of Transportation promotes fast traffic on the roadway with little concern for pedestrians, park users, or patrons of local businesses. Park officials don’t factor in library patrons or local shoppers when programming activities. You wind up with a park without popular activities, a street where people don’t feel comfortable walking to the park or library, and local institutions cut off from the surrounding neighborhood.

Atomized spheres of influence: This street, bus stop, and library in San Antonio have no relation to each other except for a shared sense of emptiness.

But if we look upon these elements as interrelated components of a single place, we create more opportunities for local people to collaborate and jointly create a vision of what’s best for the community. How can the street, park, library, and businesses support and strengthen each other? What do business owners, library employees, and nearby residents envision for the area? By simply observing and listening to the people who live or work or play in the area, the solution to what the place needs will become apparent.

Every day, PPS puts these ideas into practice in the cities, towns, and regions where we work. In order for this approach, which we call “Placemaking,” to be effective, we’ve found that professional planners, designers, and engineers first need to move beyond the habit of looking at and shaping cities through the lens of single goals or professional disciplines. Only by adopting a more holistic view can we say goodbye to streets dominated by traffic, parks little-used by local residents, and public institutions and redevelopment projects isolated from local communities.

Fortunately, there is a new wave of interdisciplinary collaboration that adopts a more cooperative approach to knit neighborhoods together, and it brings real economic and social benefits to cities. Parks departments are partnering with transportation officials to create greenways and other transportation networks for pedestrians and bicyclists. Transportation agencies are teaming up with economic development organizations to bring housing, businesses, and a sense of vitality back to downtown streets. And community development groups are investing in parks, plazas, and other public spaces with the goal of reviving urban neighborhoods.

Innovative partnerships are central to PPS’s mission of shaping cities using a multi-disciplinary, place-based approach. In California’s populous San Mateo Peninsula, a string of diverse communities south of San Francisco, we guided a collaborative effort between transit authorities and economic development agencies to create active, walkable downtowns. Plans for housing and mixed use development were integrated with transit stations in seven towns to foster bustling street life and boost light-rail ridership.

In Tucson, Arizona, the once-vibrant retail and cultural district is now struggling to draw people. PPS is working in partnership with the landscape architecture firm Wheat Scharf Associates, the transportation planning firm Transcore, David Tryba Architects, the City of Tucson, and Tucson DOT to help revitalize downtown by growing places around existing assets, such as historic theaters, a bus transfer center, a landmark hotel, and a restored train depot. The city’s historic commercial corridor, Congress Street, will be the spine of the district, connecting the places to each other and to adjacent downtown institutions.

Congress Street will be a corridor linking several revitalized places in downtown Tucson.

Placemaking is not just an urban idea. Small towns are adopting this innovative approach, too, as seen in the region around Littleton, New Hampshire. Business and community groups there partnered with the state Department of Transportation, enlisting PPS to use traffic calming experiments as a way to enhance the quality and popularity of downtown. Several other towns in the region conducted their own workshops and experiments after watching the results.

New partnerships are forming around Placemaking because it is a powerful movement that comes directly from people’s concern about their lives. Now, what if we took this emerging spirit of partnership a step further? To revitalize our cities through the process of making better places, we need even more collaboration–not just between disciplines but also between professionals and the communities they serve. Imagine interdisciplinary teams–park planners, traffic engineers, economic development experts–working together with local residents to realize a vision for the key places in their communities. Strategically implemented throughout the neighborhoods of a city, the cumulative effect of such a program would be enormous.

That’s the crux of the Great Cities Initiative, PPS’ program that applies our 30+ years of experience in improving transportation, parks, public markets and buildings to the wider mission of creating livelier neighborhoods, towns, cities, and regions.

In Littleton and several other New Hampshire towns (such as Chocorua, above), PPS worked with teams of residents and traffic engineers to create better downtown places.

As we’ve taken on more citywide and regional projects like those in San Mateo County, Tucson, and New Hampshire, we’ve found that our Placemaking process succeeds at this larger scale precisely because it encourages everyone to think small. Starting at the scale of an individual place allows a broad range of stakeholders to become involved and make meaningful contributions to the process. And by carefully selecting which places to improve with an eye towards maximizing their impact in the community, the effects resonate throughout the city or region. The Great Cities Initiative capitalizes on this phenomenon, expanding our Placemaking techniques into a comprehensive yet flexible process cities can use to improve themselves, place by place, neighborhood by neighborhood.

The prototype for our Great Cities Initiative was pioneered in Omaha, where PPS helped community and economic development organizations create an ambitious strategy to tap the potential of parks and public spaces to revive urban neighborhoods. Following a PPS-led “How to Turn a Place Around” workshop for 123 people, our local partner, the nonprofit Lively Omaha, deputized 22 volunteers to help groups of local residents conduct PPS’s Place Performance Evaluation Game (Place Game for short) in specific spots around the city. The Place Game synthesizes observation techniques and interview skills into a short, user-friendly exercise that people can use to understand the good and bad qualities of a place, and suggest both short- and-long term improvements. The volunteers led 23 of these Placemaking sessions in the first year alone, working with community and civic groups to show how particular places can be improved.

The efforts underway in Omaha illustrate the core principle of the Great Cities Initiative–that instead of approaching the city through the lens of a complex, heavy-handed one-size-fits-all master plan, we should view it as an agglomeration of neighborhoods, each of which contains key places that can have a substantial impact in improving quality of life. These important community places can be identified by conducting a comprehensive Public Space Assessment, similar to the City Commentaries PPS has written for Paris, London, Barcelona, and  New York. Teams of citizens aided by professionals can then evaluate how well these public spaces work according to more specific measures, using the Place Game to identify opportunities for short- and long-term improvements (see step-by-step process in sidebar).

We believe this approach makes a profound impact on communities because its small-scale emphasis naturally leads to collaboration and community involvement. Breaking down the mission of city revitalization into manageable chunks enables citizens to become engaged without feeling overwhelmed. The inertia common to large-scale projects is overcome first by implementing small yet visible changes that can be accomplished without great expense, like the successful traffic-calming experiments in New Hampshire. Strategically carried out throughout a city, these short-term experiments create credibility and enthusiasm for long-term improvements to come.

The time is ripe for a bold idea like the Great Cities Initiative. As we’ve seen, towns and cities are already forging ahead with innovative partnerships and a sharpened focus on how to involve local communities in the process of revitalization. The Great Cities Initiative is the next step, providing a unique framework for professionals from different disciplines to collaborate effectively and for citizens to take part in creating the neighborhoods they really desire. Applied throughout a city or region, PPS’s Placemaking techniques can bring immense positive change to neighborhoods and public spaces, creating the kind of vital public life and community energy that has always been the most compelling reason people choose to live in cities.



Places in the News

Americans Approve Taxes and Bond Measures for Public Transportation
USA Today Despite concerns over the economy, most voters agreed to help pay for new rail systems, highways and bus routes to alleviate traffic congestion. (November 4)

A Sobering Plan for Jets Stadium on Manhattan’s West Side

New York Times The Jets management, with the support of the city, is threatening to create a new stadium on the far West Side of Manhattan that is so crassly commercial it makes the head spin. It may provide the Jets with a home, but it will extinguish any hope of injecting some humanity into the area. (November 1)

Reducing Auto Traffic in Central Park
New York Times A decades-long process of promoting pedestrian and bicycle traffic in Central Park – while reducing access to cars – moves forward. (October 31)

Long-Neglected Battery Park is Undergoing Transformation

Wall Street Journal A plan is under way to transform Battery Park, which was little more than a maze of asphalt paths, into one of the city’s most exciting open spaces. (October 26)

Subway and Light-Rail Stops are Popular Locations for Housing in L.A.
LA Times Public subsidies, new zoning rules and shifting demographics are fueling a housing boom near transit stations, even in car-crazy Los Angeles. (October 25)

Findlay Market is Adding Flavor to Tradition
Cincinnati Business Courier New vendors at Findlay Market are part of an effort to broaden the culinary offerings at the 152-year-old market, traditionally known for vendors selling specialty meats, cheese, poultry and fish. (October 25)

A Tale of Two Hospitals
The Guardian One is a Kafkaesque monolith with endless echoing corridors, the other is a bright, airy child-friendly haven; the right and wrong ways to design a hospital. (October 25)

“Third Places” Provide Havens for Diverse Discussion
Seattle Times Ron Sher, a member of PPS’s Board of Directors, discusses how “third places” cultivate deeper support and a broader range of ideas than people find at their first place (home) or second place (work). (October 24)

Britain’s ‘Worst Building’ to be Demolished on TV

The Guardian TV viewers will be asked to identify Britain’s worst building in a new four-part reality series which will culminate in a live broadcast of the building’s destruction. (October 14)

Gehry Is Selected as Architect of Ground Zero Theater Center
New York Times The selection of Mr. Gehry for the arts center – which is to include the Joyce Theater and the Signature Theater – brings to Lower Manhattan a celebrity architect who has been notably absent from perhaps the most closely watched architectural site in the world. (October 13)




Public Voices

PPS’s city commentaries examine the state of public spaces in global cities. We have completed commentaries for Paris, London, and Barcelona, with New York scheduled for release early next year. Our intention is to encourage discussion about the challenges and opportunities that face major cities today, and what is being done in response. Below, landscape architect Andrea Hamann and PPS’s Fred Kent exchange thoughts on the Barcelona Commentary.


I have been reading your critiques of public space in Barcelona, and have had a quick read of some of the other critiques for other cities. As someone who has a passion for public, as opposed to private or commercial spaces, I think PPS is a great resource, however I have some serious reservations about these critiques. They seem heavily biased. It seems classic, old-school spaces directly head for the positive critique, and anything contemporary heads for the hall of shame. I challenge you to make some positive critiques about contemporary public space. It seems to me that many of the positive critiques focus on a particular ‘style’ of space, and anything ‘hi-tech’ or contemporary is automatically discarded.

I question whether many of these critiques are based on taste rather than the quality of the space. What are your criteria for judging a good space? It doesn’t need to be full of people and 100 years old to be a good space. I also query this inherent dislike for skateboarders taking over space. I presume you would rather have them competing with you on the footpath?

Maybe you should head to Rotterdam, or Amsterdam next, there are definitely some interesting spaces there. Shouwburgplein in Rotterdam by West 8 (Adriaan Geuze) is a good example. Berlin is also a town with some pretty interesting contemporary public spaces. For industrial spaces, Duisburg North Landscape Park is a good example. It is popular for everything from light shows to rock climbing to bicycling.

I also have some amazing photographs taken outside MACBA Barcelona, which would put your critique of that space to shame. I was wandering through the back streets aimlessly, exploring the city, and stumbled onto that space. It was wonderful how tightly knit urban fabric suddenly opened out to a vast space. It was full of people, with a contemporary dance performance in the middle. Yeah, it was hot, there were no benches trees or lawn, but the energy was amazing. There were all kinds of people there, with food stalls and music. It was perfect for a melding of culture and the arts. The backdrop of the old and new city fabric was fantastic.

On the other hand, Parc Espanya Industrial was a desolate run down place when I visited. I was actually scared of getting mugged whilst I was there, there were discarded needles everywhere, and the place was empty. The lake was smelly, the towers were daunting and seemed meaningless, definitely enhancing the sense of the industrial, but not in a welcoming manner (unlike some of the industrial parks in Germany for instance) — and pretty ugly to boot. If you want to critique a space for being a giant art piece that has gone wrong, then this is it.

If you take my description of the above two spaces, they are almost the inverse of your critiques, which leads me to question just how personal and biased a critique of a space can be? It also seems very dependent on which day you visit the space.

Anyway, I will keep reading, even if I don’t agree.

Cheers,
Andrea Hamann


We are ecstatic when we find contemporary designs for public spaces that work. We believe that modern materials can, if used effectively, be used to create great places, but such examples are rare to non-existent. A number of articles in our September newsletter explored our thoughts on these topics in detail.

We don’t mind skateboarders, but what we do mind is any one user group dominating to the exclusion of others. The MACBA plaza can sometimes be wonderful, but when there is not some festival in it, it doesn’t work. As far as the Parc Espanya Industrial, I can fully appreciate your comments. Maintaining it would be a nightmare.

In the end it is really all about management of the space. Both of the ones you comment on can be great if managed well — and awful if not. But we would go a bit further and say that a great space has to work when there are no events… essentially it should be self-managing.

Fred Kent

Categories: Articles, Newsletter



News from PPS

Ambassador Richard Swett releases new book

Leadership By Design: An Architecture of Trust, the new volume by PPS Board member and former Congressman Richard Swett, will hit bookshelves this January. (Readers of Making Places can order their copies today from Greenway Communications.) Swett is the only architect to serve in the U.S. Congress during the 20th century, and in Leadership By Design he shows why more architects should choose to enter politics and public service.

In Congress, Swett authored the Transportation for Livable Communities Act, coauthored the landmark Congressional Accountability Act, and introduced bills on energy conservation and the use of renewable energy. In the private sector, his experience includes architectural design, project and corporate management, and development. Leadership by Design draws on Swett’s experiences from both aspects of his career to present an eloquent plea to architects, leaders, and citizens alike to expand our tool chest as we seek new leadership to design good solutions for the complex challenges facing our nation and the world.

PPS expands Placemaking efforts in Croatia, Serbia, and Montenegro

For many Eastern European nations, Placemaking has emerged as a valuable strategy to encourage civic engagement, economic development, and community revitalization. Now, following the success of our pilot program in the city of Rijeka, Croatia, PPS is working with the Urban Institute and local governments to create a country-wide program for Placemaking.

Forty participants attended the Placemaking workshop in Slatina this November.

Over the past two years, PPS and the Urban Institute have trained a core group of Placemaking “consultants.” Overall, through presentations and workshops, over 1000 people throughout Croatia have been trained in the Placemaking methodology. Fifteen of these consultants will work with multiple communities throughout Croatia to initiate Placemaking pilot projects.

The city of Slatina is the site of one of the first in this series of pilot projects. On November 9, The Slatina city government hosted a Placemaking workshop facilitated by The Urban Institute and PPS, with the goal of developing a vision for the re-use of two military barracks structures and a neighboring park in the city center. While a technical school is already planned for the larger barracks structure, the city wanted to involve citizens and young people in improvements to the public spaces, including the smaller barracks structure.

The ultimate goal is to create a country-wide, self-sustaining Placemaking network.

Over 40 people, including about 20 youth, attended the three-hour workshop. Participants agreed that the smaller barracks should be redeveloped as a community activity center for all age groups. They proposed transforming the underused open spaces with play areas, a skateboard park, a summer stage, and game areas — with better landscaping, seating, and gathering places, including a cafe. Participants also identified low-cost projects that could begin immediately, including a clean-up, a mural project, a New Year’s Eve Celebration, and a festival in the Spring to raise awareness of the space’s potential as a community center.

As more pilot projects get underway and more Placemaking consultants are trained, the Urban Institute and PPS will seek to attract additional partners and funding. The ultimate goal is to create a country-wide, self-sustaining Placemaking network — modeled on PPS’s successful program in the Czech Republic — in which U.S. involvement is phased out and a local NGO continues the work of providing technical assistance to communities and small grants for implementation.

A map of the proposed Path of Peace. Serbia is to the east, Croatia to the west, and Hungary to the north.

Elsewhere in the region, the initial PPS workshops in the Serbian province of Vojvodina have yielded major results. Our local partner, the Green Network of Vojvodina, received a large grant from the Balkan Trust for Democracy to begin work on “The Path of Peace,” a bike path and greenway that will link a diverse group of communities in both Serbia and Croatia along their shared border.

Meanwhile, in neighboring Montenegro, PPS Vice President Steve Davies spoke to 40 representatives of local towns and NGOs on November 5th. The response was very enthusiastic, and we expect to work in partnership with the Urban Institute on future projects there.

In New Jersey, highway improvements lead to better places

Sometimes the opportunity to create great public spaces presents itself in the most unexpected situations. Such is the case in Newark, NJ, where PPS is helping the New Jersey DOT and other local partners translate a convergence of transportation improvements along the Route I-280 corridor into a network of pedestrian-friendly streets and public spaces. The projects are part of a very encouraging trend in which transportation agencies are consistently choosing to employ a context-sensitive approach to street design.

Newark's North Broad Street.

The predominantly Latino North Broad Street neighborhood stands to gain immensely from the proposed improvements. Bounded to the south by I-280 and the east by Route 21 and the Passaic River, the neighborhood is located along the north end of Broad Street (Newark’s main street). It also happens to be the nexus for an extraordinary combination of transportation improvements, including:

While North Broad Street is at the center of the proposed changes, the full scope extends from downtown Newark to the neighboring town of Harrison. PPS has worked with local transportation agencies, the firm Parsons Brinckerhoff, and local residents to create a vision for how these various improvements can result in a cohesive network of walkable streets, lively public spaces, and enhanced transit facilities. Altogether, the proposed changes signal a major advance toward adapting the goals of transportation planning to the more holistic goals of Placemaking.

Two Seattle parks look to recapture former splendor

This year the city of Seattle set its sights on turning around two very different downtown parks that are both suffering a similar fate. Occidental Park and Freeway Park couldn’t look less alike, but they share a lack of visitors and activity that has locals pining for the parks’ original glory days in the 1970s. First up for PPS was Occidental Park, a place that few people choose to visit even though it occupies a square block in the heart of downtown’s historic Pioneer Square district.

City officials sought out PPS because they recognized that Occidental Park had untapped potential to serve as a dynamic neighborhood anchor. In the spring, PPS led community workshops to evaluate the park and develop short- and long-term strategies for improvement. City officials acted quickly upon PPS’s recommendations to implement a series of experiments in the park over the summer. From small additions like chess and other games to large productions like outdoor movies and musical performances, the huge variety of experiments helped officials see which times of day and which activities were most effective.

Nighttime movie screenings were a big hit in Occidental Park this summer.

The major events, including the “First Thursday” art market and a festival called “Discover the Klondike” that celebrated an 1897 gold rush, delivered a large boost in visitors. The adjacent Grand Central Bakery noticed the difference, attributing an increase in their sales to the new programming in the park. Now, the Parks Department is determining ways to market Occidental Park’s activities, such as matching particular days of the week with recurring events.

Meanwhile, the revival of Freeway Park–still in the early stages–presents another intriguing case study. Famously built over I-5 to “heal the scar” created by the highway, Freeway Park was a celebrated place immediately after its completion in 1976, yet gradually sunk into a decline that reached its nadir with the murder of a blind and deaf homeless woman in broad daylight in 2002. Since that time security has improved, but visitors are still rare.

This year, Seattle Parks and Recreation hired PPS to work with local stakeholders to evaluate the park and generate ideas for short- and long-term improvements. Following a series of community meetings and public workshops, the vision that emerged positioned Freeway Park as the active focal point of a larger district that encompasses part of the residential First Hill neighborhood and part of downtown Seattle.

One of Freeway Park's many concrete structures.

Freeway Park’s complex design–characterized by an array of concrete partitions and edifices–presents many hurdles to achieving this vision, yet much could be accomplished in the near term to address its shortcomings. Simply making its hard-to-find entrances more visible would greatly improve access to the park. In lieu of major design changes, which are neither feasible nor desirable in light of the affection many people still possess for the park, simple physical improvements like adding pedestrian scale lighting, seasonal horticultural displays, and brightly colored benches and movable seating would make the park a more welcoming place.

Long-term improvements, like creating better connections between the park and surrounding neighborhoods, will require more time and effort. But with the continued dedication of Seattle’s leaders and the consistent involvement of all the people who care deeply about it, Freeway Park could become downtown Seattle’s premier public space.

In Brief:

New park opens in downtown Detroit

Campus Martius Park, dubbed “Detroit’s Town Square,” will celebrate its grand opening on Friday November 19th. PPS led the visioning process for the park, which was initiated by the Mayor’s Office and the Detroit 300 Conservancy. With carriage rides, ice sculpting demonstrations, guided tours of historic downtown, and a “Wassail” tent with food and drinks, our readers in the Detroit area won’t want to miss this momentous occasion.

For more information visit www.campusmartiuspark.org.

City of Hartford begins implementation of Farmington Avenue revitalization

Farmington Avenue, an historic downtown thoroughfare in Hartford, CT, will soon undergo major changes based on recommendations from a 2001 report by PPS. The report envisioned a renewed Farmington Avenue that would serve as “a vital urban place that serves the residents of the neighborhoods it passes through.” The City of Hartford has funded final design and implementation for the first phase of improvements, working in partnership with the Farmington Avenue Alliance.

For updates and more information visit www.farmingtonavenue.org.

There’s still time to apply for 2005 Rudy Bruner Awards

Applications for the 2005 Rudy Bruner Award for Urban Excellence are now available. The Award is given to urban places that demonstrate the successful integration of effective process, meaningful values, and good design. RBA winners are distinguished by their social, economic and contextual contributions to the urban environment, and often provide innovative solutions to our cities’ most challenging problems.

The RBA awards one Gold Medal of $50,000 and four Silver Medals of $10,000 each. The application deadline is December 13, 2004.

For more information and to download the application, visit www.brunerfoundation.org.

Categories: Articles, Newsletter



The 20 Best Neighborhoods in North America

There’s nothing in this world more subjective than rating neighborhoods. One man’s peaceful enclave is another man’s Dullsville. The hoppin’ heart of the city that thrills the soul of one woman, would drive another insane. But great neighborhoods everywhere do have some things in common.

We decided to brave the storm of reader reactions by drafting a list of what we think are the best neighborhoods across North America (at least some of them). You won’t completely agree, we know. That’s why we’re doing it.

Granville Island in Vancouver tops our list of the best neighborhoods in North America.

The linked items below are already posted in the new “Neighborhoods and Districts” category on our Great Public Spaces website. We are working on creating listings for the rest. If you know one of these places well, feel free to submit a write-up or a comment for us. If you don’t see your favorite neighborhood or district on this list, nominate yours to share with our online community.

  1. Granville Island, Vancouver, British Columbia
  2. East Village, New York, NY:
  3. North Beach, San Francisco, CA
  4. The East Village

  5. Camden, ME
  6. Coyoacan, Mexico City
  7. Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia, PA
  8. The Plateau, Montreal, Quebec
  9. Kensington Market, Toronto, Ontario:
  10. Center City, Ponce, Puerto Rico
  11. Kensington Market

  12. Fells Point, Baltimore, MD
  13. Lower Garden District, New Orleans, LA
  14. Atlantic Avenue, Delray Beach, FL
  15. Lake Street, Oak Park, IL
  16. NW 23rd Avenue, Portland, OR
  17. South Beach, Miami, FL
  18. Federal Hill, Providence, RI
  19. Downtown Northfield, MN
  20. Chautauqua, NY
  21. Venice Beach, CA:
  22. Adams Morgan, Washington, DC
  23. Venice Beach

Around the world in 20 places

A few of our favorite neighborhoods abroad

These are some of the great districts overseas that came up in an informal polling of the well-traveled PPS staff. They offer insight and inspiration about how to create great places anywhere in the world. Let us know your favorite spots around the world by making a recommendation for the new “Neighborhoods and Districts” category on Great Public Spaces

Categories: Articles, Newsletter



Town Square: A Tale of Two Cities

by Jay Walljasper

It all came down to Cleveland. After 18 months of heated combat, countless millions of dollars, and 24-hour-a-day media attention, the presidential election was decided in this town on the shores of Lake Erie.

And I sincerely hope that when it was all over–after the last ballot, cast by someone standing in line for five hours, had been counted–the packs of reporters and camera crews who descended on the place took a good look around. Because Cleveland is a surprising, interesting city that shows us a lot about what’s gone wrong in urban America and offers some glimpses of what we can do to make things better.

Wandering around town for a few days, I was surprised how much there was to love about Cleveland.

When the vice-presidential debate was held here in October, journalists and candidates both somberly noted that it was America’s poorest city. The town that launched the Rockefellers on the road to fortune, and where rock ‘n’ roll was first embraced as the soundtrack of teenage America, is now widely dismissed as “the mistake by the lake” — a dull, decaying industrial burg that no one would visit without a very good reason.

So why was I there a few months back? To give a talk at the city’s majestic Trinity Episcopal Cathedral on “How to Fall Back in Love with Our Cities.” And wandering around town for a few days, I was surprised how much there was to love about Cleveland. The downtown and residential districts were full of handsome old buildings. Inner-ring suburbs exuded turn-of-the-20th-century charm. Trees line the streets, even in the poorest areas.

The West Side Market, located in the now-hip neighborhood of Ohio City, is one of Cleveland's hidden assets.

I saw handsome, affordable townhouses rise on what were once notorious housing projects. I soaked up the energy of Wade Oval, a town common of sorts on the East Side that was brought back to public life with help from PPS. I relaxed in sidewalk cafes, visited a bustling public market, rode efficient trains, heard a locally-based music legend play the blues at a downtown club, and generally sampled urban experiences you would associate with any great city.

Yet in spite of these assets, Cleveland faces big problems. New jobs are scarce, racial divisions persist, the public schools are in sorry shape. It is also one of the few cities that is actually losing population. Cleveland was once America’s fifth largest city but now ranks 33rd — right behind Las Vegas, Nevada.

A strip of Las Vegas at night.

Las Vegas, by contrast, is America’s fastest growing city. As an entertainment Utopia designed to let tourists escape the cares of everyday life, Las Vegas is exciting. But so many of its attractions try to confuse you into believing you are somewhere else, like New York or Italy. Cleveland, on the other hand, is a place that doesn’t pretend to be something else. It has vital street life all its own, including a colorful Little Italy district complete with old guys standing on the corner telling stories, which actually feels like Naples or Rome. Meanwhile, Bellagio, the Las Vegas hotel that spent tens of millions of dollars conjuring an Italian seaside town out of the Nevada desert, is ultimately fake. As a lover of cities, I find it hard to accept that Las Vegas stands as an urban success story while Cleveland is widely considered a lost cause.

Even some Clevelanders seem to have given up on the place. When asking one well-connected local authority where he saw hope for the city, he answered, “sea monsters.” Seeing my puzzled look, he explained how rumors of a Loch Ness-style monster in Lake Erie could revive the local economy with tourism. It was a joke, of course, but he volunteered no further sources of hope.

Glitzy Las Vegas will always attract throngs of thrill-seeking newcomers, but I believe Cleveland can thrive in a different way.

Cleveland seemed finally to outlive its bad image a few years back when it was hailed as America’s comeback city–based largely on the success of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the Jacobs Field ballpark, and the Flats, a stretch of trendy bars along the once-flammable Cuyahoga River. But the comeback didn’t stick. The Flats appear to have washed out as an entertainment zone. As nice as Jacobs Field is, it only brings life downtown on summer nights. And the Rock and Roll Hall is an island apart from the city, rising between the lake and a waterfront freeway. Tourists can pop in to see Jimi Hendrix’s guitar without setting foot anywhere else in Cleveland.

Glitzy Las Vegas will always attract throngs of thrill-seeking newcomers, but I believe Cleveland can thrive in a different way: by inspiring its own residents to pitch in to revitalize neighborhoods, boost small businesses, and create great places that make local folks proud once again. I met an interesting array of Clevelanders who were doing just that–revitalizing the Slavic Village neighborhood, creating a new school for ghetto kids based on the principles of citizenship; establishing a network of local entrepreneurs committed to environmental principles; opening new shops and an inviting public garden at Trinity Cathedral in a part of town that hadn’t seen any significant commercial development for thirty years; launching a jam-packed web magazine covering all that’s happening in arts and culture (see coolcleveland.com).

That’s why I hope the national media took some notes on what was happening around town before clearing out after John Kerry’s concession speech. I’m rooting for Cleveland. It’s a gutsy, real place that can show the world the only mistake would be to give up on this city by the lake.

Categories: Articles, Newsletter



Purple Places Majesty: Transcending Politics through Placemaking

The issues and rhetoric of politics leave many people feeling afraid, angry, divided, or isolated. If America stays that way, we all lose. It’s easy to forget that progressives, conservatives, and everyone in between share common ground every day–literally. They cross paths in parks, commercial streets, coffee shops, markets, libraries, houses of worship, trains and buses, community centers. Public places are the heart of our democracy — not only where we vote in November, but where we meet neighbors and exchange ideas the rest of the year.

We at PPS believe that public places, and the pride and value they bring to widely diverse communities, offer a key lesson about the way our country needs to move forward. Cooperation, tolerance, and careful attention to people’s well-being–precisely the things that define a successful public place–are what’s missing from our political debate and public policies today.

We’re reminded of the importance of these values everywhere we work–in “red” communities like Anchorage and Omaha, or “blue” strongholds like San Mateo County in California and New Jersey. These don’t have to be liberal or conservative causes, but simple common sense that benefits everyone.

We’ve seen over and over again how a community-oriented process to create or improve public places–we call it “Placemaking”–can bring people together in new ways. We’ve found this to be true in areas more deeply divided than the United States, through our work in Serbia, Croatia, and Montenegro.

We deeply believe that Placemaking can shape a new social and political agenda that transcends the divides in our country.

Placemaking is a practical method to discover common ground in a community by encouraging a diversity of opinion toward the goal of building a better place for everyone. This same spirit can guide our national political conversation. What makes places great, makes nations great — and makes the world more peaceful and prosperous.

We deeply believe that Placemaking can shape a new social and political agenda that transcends the divides in our country and transforms American society. Looking at public issues, ranging from the environment to economic policy, through the new lens of place can build a bridge to the future that everyone wants

Please help us bring Placemaking to the table as a significant social and political issue by joining PPS as a member and becoming a placemaking activist in your own community. America needs Placemaking, and we need you to help Placemaking succeed.

Categories: Articles, Newsletter



Cities of Joy

By Jay Walljasper

Reprinted from Ode magazine, an international news and culture magazine published from the Netherlands. www.odemagazine.com

Enrique Peñalosa, former mayor of Bogotá, believes that one day cities of the developing world will offer us lessons about providing everyone with equal access to happiness.


It feels a bit strange to be sitting in the middle of one of the world’s wealthiest neighborhoods, and to be so thoroughly engrossed in conversation about the prospects of poor cities across the planet. But here, in an office building at New York University on the island of Manhattan, is where former Bogotá mayor Enrique Peñalosa is working on a book about how life can be improved for people in mega-cities of the developing world. That is, when he’s not in Beijing or Delhi or Dar-es-Salaam or Jakarta or Mexico City sharing his visionary plans with local leaders.

Peñalosa’s ideas stand as beacon of hope for cities of the South, which will absorb much of the world’s population growth over the next half-century. These are places with the usual complications of rapid urban expansion–pollution, public health, slums, crime, unemployment, sprawl, corruption, traffic, all of which are aggravated by the fact that most of these cities’ citizens live in deep poverty. Based on his experiences in Bogotá, however, Peñalosa believes it’s a major mistake to give up on these places, no matter how out-of-control their problems appear.

Some observers claim that this city of 6.6 million offers practical lessons not just for helping poor cities, but for upgrading the quality of life in Western cities.

“If we in the Third World measure our success or failure as a society in terms of income, we would have to classify ourselves as losers until the end of time,” declares Peñalosa, a tall man in casual clothes with salt-and-pepper hair and trim beard, who looks more like a coach than a politician or professor. “With our limited resources, we have to invent other ways to measure success. This might mean that all kids have access to sports facilities, libraries, parks, schools, nurseries.”

This is exactly what Peñalosa set out to do as mayor of Colombia’s capital city. And the results were impressive enough that Colombia finally got international press about something other than drug trafficking, guerrilla kidnappings, and bloody civil war. Indeed, some observers claim that this city of 6.6 million offers practical lessons not just for helping poor cities, but for upgrading the quality of life in Western cities.

In just three years, 1998-2001 (terms limits prevented him from seeking a second term) Peñalosa’s Administration accomplished the following:

PPS has named Peñalosa to its great “placemakers” list alongside such giants in the field as Jane Jacobs. David Burwell, a strategic analyst with PPS, who has long experience working on environmental, transportation, and community issues, calls Peñalosa, “One of the great public servants of our time. He views cities as being planned for a purpose–to create human well-being. He’s got a great sense of what a leader should do–to promote human happiness.”

Let’s just imagine how you want your home to be. How you want your kids to live. Do you want to walk or drive to get bread?

No one can accuse Peñalosa of thinking small. As we sit in his office at New York University’s Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, looking out on the bustle of Greenwich Village below, he muses about the day when cities of the developing world might surpass New York or Paris in terms of sheer joyfulness in urban living. As he confides this, his reserved manner gives way to a broad and infectious grin, which I assume has proved very useful through the years in helping him get things done.

“You must remember that Third World cities are still two-thirds unbuilt,” he tells me, explaining that by 2050 most of these cities will be three times larger than today, which means there is still a lot of city planning to do. “We can take advantage of what’s been done–mistakes and successes–by cities in the developing world.”

Opening the window and gazing down at sidewalks filled with people, he says, “I love New York. I feel so much energy here. But there is so much more that you could do: pedestrian streets, more parks, bikeways, open up the waterfronts. The old sections of European cities are very beautiful. The closest thing you’ll see to what I am talking about are Danish or Dutch cities, but even they could be improved. They need a network of pedestrian streets through the whole city, not just the center, and they need more sports facilities and parks and green space. We could do all these things in Bogotá and other developing cities. I think you can have a city that combines the best of suburbs and the best of old cities.

“In Spanish we have this saying that it doesn’t cost anything to dream,” he notes, “So I say let’s play. Let’s just imagine how you want your home to be. How you want your kids to live. Do you want to walk or drive to get bread? That’s the basis of thinking about cities. We have not given enough thought to how we live. We have left too many of these decisions to others.”

A more serious look now crosses his face. “Ninety-nine percent of Third World people have never seen a Dutch or Danish city, where you see people on bikes everywhere. A city full of cars is not a good model for us.”

“The images we get from the United States are a very damaging model to Third World cities,” he continues. “We need to avoid undesirable developments such an urban sprawl. People in the U.S. now recognize there are problems with building cities for cars and not for people, and we in the Third World need to know that. Pedestrians and bicyclists should be given as much importance as motor-vehicles; even more so in developing country cities, where most households don’t own cars.”

It’s not that Peñalosa hates cars. It’s that he loves lively public places where people of all backgrounds gather to enjoy themselves and each other – places that barely exist in cities where the car is king. These places are even more important in poor cities than in wealthy ones, he says, because poor people have nowhere else to go.

“We all need to see other people. We need to see green. Wealthy people can do that at clubs and private facilities. But most people can only do it in public squares, parks, libraries, sidewalks, greenways, public transit,” he declares, turning back for another look out the window. He reminds me of a caged animal here inside the office, ready at any moment to break away for the freedom of the city outside.

“The least a democratic society should do is to offer people wonderful public spaces.”

Enrique Peñalosa has become an international star of sorts among green urban designers, so I automatically assumed he was trained as a city planner and inspired by long involvement in the environmental movement. But the truth is that he arrived at these ideas from a completely different direction. “My focus has always been social–how you can help the most people for the greater public good. But if you are thinking constantly about how to help the environment, you come to the same conclusions.”

Growing up in the ’60s, when revolutionary fervor in South America was strong, Peñalosa became an ardent advocate of social justice and income redistribution at an early age–views that were solidified upon moving to suburban Washington, D.C, where the only other Latinos he encountered worked as bus boys and maids. “I was obsessed with socialism,” he recalls.

Attending Duke University on a soccer scholarship, he studied economics and history and later moved to Paris to earn a doctoral degree in management and public administration. Paris was a marvelous education in the possibilities of urban living, and he returned home with aspirations of bringing European-style city comforts to the working-class of Bogotá. The experience of his early years out of school, managing a greenhouse operation, working in an investment banking firm, and dabbling in politics, redefined his political views, as seen by the title of his first book, Capitalism: The Best Option. But this does not mean, he hastens to tell me, that he abandoned the quest for social justice.

“We live in the post-communism period, in which many have assumed equality as a social goal is obsolete,” he explains. “Although income equality as a concept does not jibe with market economy, we can seek to achieve quality-of-life equality. Urban policy can be a powerful means to achieve equality in quality-of-life.”

So over the last 20 years, Peñalosa – greatly influenced by his father, a one-time Bogotá city council member and official of the Inter-American Development Bank in Washington, D.C., who became the Secretary General of the United Nation’s first Habitat conference on human settlement – has been looking for new ways to level the playing field between poor citizens and wealthier ones. “The least a democratic society should do,” he says, “is to offer people wonderful public spaces. Public spaces are not a frivolity. They are just as important as hospitals and schools. They create a sense of belonging. This creates a different type of society – a society where people of all income levels meet in public space is a more integrated, socially healthier one.”

“In Bogotá, our goal was to make a city for all the children. The measure of a good city is one where a child on a tricycle or bicycle can safely go anywhere. If a city is good for children, it will be good for everybody else. Over the last 80 years we have been making cities much more for cars’ mobility than for children’s happiness.”

Peñalosa has been taking this message throughout the world in lecture tours sponsored by the World Bank; the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy (ITDP), a New York-based group promoting sustainable transportation in the developing world; and Interface for Cycling Expertise (I-CE), a Utrecht, Netherlands-based group promoting bike transportation.

“You cannot overestimate the impact Peñalosa has had, on a personal level, in ten or twelve countries,” notes Walter Hook, director of ITDP. “He takes these ideas, which can be rather dry, and speaks emotionally about the ways they affect people’s lives. He has the ability to change how people think about cities. He’s a revolution that way.”

Bogotá’s Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) system is of particular interest to public officials in the developing world who want to defuse traffic jams but don’t have funds to build a metro or tram system. Hook gives Peñalosa major credit for the decision to build a new busway in Jakarta, Indonesia, which opened to great acclaim last February. He also played a role in getting things rolling for busways in Bejing, Delhi, Capetown, Lima and Dar-es-Salaam in Tanzania, as well as ambitious bikeway projects in Mexico City, Capetown and Dakar, Senegal.

Where new areas are being urbanized, large networks of such pedestrian and bicycle roads can easily be incorporated.

Peñalosa outlined his vision for developing cities of the 21st century city in appealing detail as part of a speech last May for the Association of Sustainable Mobility in Switzerland: “I invite you to imagine for a minute a 20-mile long, 50-feet wide road only for pedestrians and bicycles through your neighborhood, regardless whether you live downtown or in a suburb. At intersections there could either be bridges, underpasses for motor vehicles, or simply traffic lights. Ideally it would link your neighborhood to a waterfront, a large park, a shopping area, a library and schools, just to mention a few examples. You and your neighbors could ride bicycles with your children to the beach or the library, go jogging. Older citizens could walk to a café, and babies could be taken out for fresh air in their carriages. It could completely transform a neighborhood’s life and even significantly increase property values. Yet the cost of creating such a road would be minimal, if done at the time of laying city plans. Where new areas are being urbanized, large networks of such pedestrian and bicycle roads can easily be incorporated.”

After several hours of conversation, interrupted once by university maintenance men coming in to fix the loose window that Peñalosa favors for surveying the city below–a moment in which I saw the mayor’s charm and persuasiveness in full blossom as he inquired if they were going to seal it permanently shut–it is now time for lunch. Peñalosa tentatively suggests we could go to the faculty club, a presumably swank spot. I counteroffer that Washington Square Park is only two blocks away, and see a smile light up his face. We swing by a local deli, where Peñalosa holds his own in simultaneous Spanish conversations with two clerks from the Dominican Republic while continuing to answer my questions in English, and then stroll over to Washington Square to enjoy a lovely summer afternoon.

The park, the heart of Greenwich Village and ground zero for any number of international social trends from ’60s folk music to break dancing, was saved from plans to run a highway right through it by protests from the neighborhood. As Peñalosa and I sit down on a bench with our sandwiches, we stop talking for the first time all day and just watch the show. Kids play. Mothers chat. Students read. Construction workers sip lattes. Business executives nap. Street people sing. When a pretty woman glides by on her bike, Peñalosa nods his head and laughs, “Bikes are a wonderful thing in cities. They’re sensual. You can watch all the other people on their bikes, meet your friends, stop to talk.”

“All these issues we’re talking about are from the soul,” he adds. “Economics, urban planning, ecology are only the means. Happiness is the goal. Places like this make people happy. We have a word in Spanish, ganas, which means a burning desire. I have ganas about public life…”

Bicycles on a Copenhagen street.

Just then a young couple walks by pushing their bikes. He looks over at me, his brown eyes shining. “Have you seen all the bikes in Copenhagen?”

Penalosa concluded his visiting professorship at NYU a few weeks after this interview and moved back to Bogotá to work with a foundation he started Por el Pais Que Queremos (For the Country We Want and Wish). He is considering a run for Colombia’s presidency in 2006.

Categories: Articles, Newsletter, Urban Parks Institute