Thursday, February 25, 2016

More Bookworming: the social city subject



Some books stay relevant even for those of us who are grappling spatial and social problems in the current urban environment. Some of the books in my bookcases I've had since my student days, others I have come across and read more recently.



"The Death and Life of Great American Cities" (1961 - Jane Jacobs) with "The Image of the City" (1959 - Kevin Lynch) peeking from behind on the left."Cities and People" (1985 - Mark Girouard) in the middle and "Cities for people" (2010 - Jan Gehl) on the right.

The seminal book by Jane Jacobs has received praise, but has also been much maligned. The book is more a polemic than a textbook and uses many literary devices to get the point across. As the book is exclusively focussed on the American Grid Cities, its story can't be simply transplanted onto European cities. Jane Jacobs writes passionately about the high density urban environment that -in her opinion best caters for urban living- as opposed to the then current planning practice advocated by architects, which she amalgamates under the term Radiant Garden City Beautiful. She basically advocates the slow-paced city with people walking. Her city comprised of mixed-use blocks between streets with buildings some 4 to 6 storeys high (so by no means a very high density urban environment). She rejects both high-rise living (based on the New York Social Housing Projects), low-density suburban living (based on American urban sprawl) and formal assemblage of special functions (which she equates to City Beautiful). She is especially dismissive of modernist architecture. When she speaks of modernism she means the post 1945 CIAM International Style and not early 20th-century European modernism, however. This is something one always has to keep in the back of ones mind when reading Anglo-Saxon books on the subject!

The subtitle of "Cities and People" "a social & architectural history" makes quite clear what the subject matter of this book is. With a broad overview and laced with anecdotes Girouard takes the reader on a journey through the ages to show how social, political and economic conditions shape the urban environment. His book focuses mainly on Europe with some excursions into the USA thus blatantly disregarding any non-English colony in other parts of the world. The book is a good start to get some inkling on the way politics and economy are interwoven and often impact on the way people are able to make decisions on their lives and the projects undertaken by city administrators. The book is, however, to Anglo-Saxon in approach to clarify the differences between the self-governing trade cities of the Low Countries and the independent cities of the Hanseatic League, not to mention residential cities within the Holy Roman Empire or Mediterranean trade cities and city states. As an introduction into urban sociology from a historic perspective the book is still quite useful.

The idea(l) of a social city that is laid out to enhance the lives of its inhabitants as advocated by Jacobs has remained a strong force in thinking about the urban environment in the Post-Modern Era and after. (Personally I see post-modernism as an eclectic vein of modernism still mostly occupied with function, form and planning for an expected future and not so much an opposite of modernism per-se.) Jane Jacobs remains as the inspiring force behind many urban renewal attempts, social engineering by supplying grants to resident for home improvement and architectural experiments on a so-called human scale. As a result of these ideas on a social city on a human scale, many experiments were made to pedestrianise parts of city centres, especially in Europe. Her ideas form the foundations of Jan Gehl's approach for a slow-paced city where walking and cycling have primacy. His 2010 book is much less a pamphlet but -as could be expected from an architect- a vehicle for showing his project portfolio. Both books owe much to the book by Kevin Lynch on how people view the city and how they get about using functional and visual cues from their urban environment. The principles he describes also apply to Unwinesque urban design as advocated by Garden City adepts and favour no scale or style of architecture in particular. It is certainly clear on the other hand that Corbusier-inspired architecture makes it difficult for people to create a mental image of their surroundings. Several writers and designers have used Lynch's findings and appropriated them to fit with their own ideas.

In contrast to the American writers where the modes of transport for the social city of human scale are confined to walking and the bus, Gehl shows himself thoroughly European by insisting on walking and cycling. To satisfy decision makers he includes statistics and charts showing the effects of pedestrianisation, changing shop fronts and street facades on the ground floors, laying out new squares and public gardens and creating safe bicycle lanes. He mainly focuses on his own projects thus excluding many interesting examples from The Netherlands and Germany. The core of his -valid- argument is that the human dimension has been neglected over the past decades; something he blames on modernism (he again means post 1945 International Style after CIAM principles). In his book he often mentions the "human landscape" a weird term in English that stems from a literal translation from Danish and should be read as the human dimension. Similarly when he speaks of the "city landscape" he means the appearance of streets: the city at eye level.

The proposals for a slow-paced urban environment are often simplified to mean a bicycle-friendly city. Jan Gehl has been much maligned -especially in Anglo-Saxon countries- for his proposals to convert space dedicated to car traffic to space for walking and cycling. The protests in London Boroughs against the cycle super highways are a case in point. To counterbalance the argument that these bicycle-friendly cities are only suitable to continental Europe he includes examples from the USA, Brazil, Australia, New Zealand and Europe (mainly from his home town of Copenhagen).

As I myself cycle most short distances, I can only concur with his emphases on promoting slow moving traffic to improve the urban living environment and improve the quality of life. Also, one views the urban environment completely different whilst walking or cycling as opposed to driving a car or being on a bus or train (trams are somewhat in between). A city with a high number of pedestrian and cycle traffic is a liveable city!

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