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ADDRESSING
ISSUES:
SAFETY & SECURITY IN PUBLIC SPACE
"So-called
'undesirables are not the problem. It is the
measures taken to combat them that is the problem...
The best way to handle the problem of undesirebles
is to make the place attractive to everyone
else." --William H. Whyte
Fear
is a great motivator. It has been used for centuries
to control the way we build and live in our
communities, almost always to bad effect.
On
a large scale, fear of nuclear attack was a key factor
in motivating the country to build the Interstate
Highway System after World War II, which devastated
city neighborhoods by facilitating the suburban
sprawl that characterizes so much of our landscape
today. On a smaller scale, fear of "undesirables"
causes park after park and sidewalk after sidewalk
to be remodeled without seating, shade, vendors, or
other amenities that might encourage the positive
public activity that discourages crime and disruption.
Time and again these lessons are forgotten or abused,
to the extreme detriment of our quality of life.
What
we end up with are downtowns and "edge
cities" that are alienating, dull and inhuman.
They are built on fear, fear of "negative
activity," fear of interaction with any
other people, fear of crossing the street, even
fear of the weather! This fear is self-reinforcing
and locks us into a world that is disconnected,
difficult, and uninviting.
Blank walls
and giant buildings out of scale with the street
are designed to intimidate, to proclaim the
ego of the designer instead of nourish a sense
of place among residents.
Now we have
a new fear to add to the list: fear of terrorist
attack. The danger is that this fear can translate
into a kind of fortress mentality. In Chicago
after September 11, for example, the managers
of one federal building immediately put concrete
dividers up in their formerly bustling plaza,
blocked passageways between spaces and cancelled
the farmers market and other events. Another
federal building, however, is open and thriving
- the displays and exhibits still run, and people
find it reassuring to be able to come together.
Mayor Daley has promoted this latter approach.
From our perspective
at Project for Public Spaces, the safety and
fear factors are real, but the methods to counter
them do not necessarily have to result in sterile,
alienating places. The way to revitalize a plaza
is to invite the public to share in its design
and planning. And people in communities, from
merchants to business leaders to residents,
have many creative ideas for programs and activities
in public spaces, if they could only be given
a voice and proper forum to be heard.
These spaces
need to be designed with flexible uses in mind,
always taking into account that a mixture of
sun and shade, food, water, and a good view
of the passing scene are essentials. We have
found that a good place provides a range of
things to do ("uses and activities");
is easy to get to and connected to the surrounding
community ("access"); is safe, clean,
and attractive ("comfort and image");
and, perhaps, most important, is a place to
meet other people ("sociability").
Security officials we have worked with on federal
buildings across the country agree with us that
an actively used, thriving public plaza is much
safer, and easier to police in the long run,
than an empty one.
The public's
need for gathering places is evident, now more
than ever. New York's experience is telling.
In the weeks after September 11, all over New
York City, people gravitated to public places.
Along the Brooklyn Heights Promenade, with its
views of the now-incomplete Manhattan skyline
clouded by dust and smoke, a quiet, uninterrupted
vigil goes on, a month after the initial attacks.
In Union Square and Washington Square, people
offered comfort and stories to each other, and
set up makeshift memorials along storm fences
and on the pedestals of statues. Most of these
memorials are wiped away by the city every morning,
but people return to rebuild them every night.
In addition, firehouses have become memorials
themselves, their entranceways filled with candles,
flowers and notes from schoolchildren.
All of these
people, all of these places, help us to re-affirm
the value of public life in the face of such
overwhelming violence. The need to gather, to
share stories, to celebrate, protest and grieve
in a common place is a basic, human, and universal.
We must continue to allow - and encourage -
the diversity, culture and commerce of New York,
and all our communities to thrive in healthy,
livable cities, markets, parks and neighborhoods.
We cannot afford to react by building higher
fences. Instead we must come together on common
ground to re-establish our communities as the
foundations of a civilized, compassionate society.
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