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Urban
Planning Now: What Works, What Doesn't? Number
22, Spring/Summer 2005
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Democracy Takes Command
New Community Planning and the Challenge to Urban Design
by John Kaliski
Town meetings are to liberty what primary schools are to science; they bring it within the people's reach, they teach me how to use and how to enjoy it....In America the people form a amaster who must be obeyed to the utmost limits of possibility.
—Alexis de Tocqueville (1)
When Alexis de Tocqueville, author of Democracy in America, traveled through the United States in the 1830s, he was struck by the
high level of citizen participation in local decision-making. He also
noted a “vast number of inconsiderable productions [buildings]” that populated
the landscape of this democracy, a few monuments, and what he called the
“blank” between these two extremes.(2) This could also be a description
of Los Angeles today: City Hall, Moneo's cathedral, Gehry's Disney Hall,
Mayne's Caltrans building, a visible suburban landscape, and in between
a vast but swarming void. Exploring this void, however, reveals that democracy,
at least in Los Angeles, is now designing the middle zone into a clear
reection of the needs and aspirations of the people who live there.
Three situations in Southern California illustrate the state of this type
of planning: the expansion of Los Angeles International Airport (LAX),
the building of a new shopping mall in Glendale, and the uproar caused
by the city's clipping of overgrown front yard hedges in Santa Monica.
These demonstrate that citizen experts rather than planners or designers
are €rmly in charge of the evolution and design of the city. Most critically,
these circumstances are typical of the state of infrastructure planning
in the United States, and they challenge planners, architects, landscape
architects and, last and least, urban designers, to reassess their roles
with regard to the planning, design, and production of contemporary urbanism.
LAX
The expansion of Los Angeles International Airport affects all people
in Southern California. Since the last round of improvements was completed
for the 1984 Olympics, the city has been planning to expand LAX to accommodate
ever-increasing passenger trips and cargo. Scenarios for growth, some
of them quite fantastic—such as expanding runways thousands of feet
west over the ocean-were at €rst quietly explored. In the late 1990s,
the previous mayor, Richard Riordan, €nally went public with a $13 billion
proposal. His plan, promoted as a stimulus for the local economy, increased
runway capacity and safety and proposed to replace the existing horseshoe
of dispersed satellite terminals with a mega-facility. Riordan's plan
was infrastructure wrought extra large and, with the exception of the
mayor's circle, hardly anybody, particularly the adjacent communities,
liked it. Riordan's airport was thought to accommodate too many passenger
trips and too much cargo, generate too much noise and too much traf€c,
and offer economic bene€ts at the expense of too many surrounding communities.
Despite an aggressive top-down public outreach effort, the plan was close
to failing.
The current mayor, James Hahn, used the events of September 11, 2001 to
reframe the issues and the plan. Instead of tearing down the existing
facility, his team suggested building a consolidated check-in facility
near an adjacent freeway and connecting this facility to existing terminals
using a people mover. The idea was to keep terrorists away from active
airplane gates and terminals. By reducing the square footage that needed
to be rebuilt, the price tag was lowered from $13 to $9 billion. Nevertheless,
adjacent communities still perceived that the capacity for additional
passenger trips and freight was unreasonably large. Many safety experts
also saw the consolidated check-in facility as an even more opportune
terrorist target than the existing terminals. At public meetings, the
plan was still opposed by both the surrounding communities and the now
mostly bankrupt airlines.
"DECISIONS AND CONSEQUENT
DESIGN ARE DEBATED AND CRAFTED BY CITIZENS ACTING AS DESIGN AND PLANNING
EXPERTS. IDEAS, INDEED DESIGN IDEAS, MUTATE AND COALESCE THROUGH EITHER
THE THREAT OF A DIRECT VOTE OR A PENDING VOTE."
Sensing the collapse of the process and wanting to improve runway safety,
Los Angeles Councilperson Cindy Miscikowski brokered a compromise—to
bifurcate the Hahn plan into two phases. In the €rst, a consolidated rental
car facility, a people mover connected to an adjacent light rail line,
and runway improvements to address safety would be completed at a cost
of $3billion. A subsequent phase would include the rest of Hahn's plan,
which would require yet more studies, environmental review, and public
input.
At the penultimate City Council meeting, amid a gaggle of protesters,
one councilperson rolled out a string €fty feet from his desk to a row
of seats near the front of the council chamber. He then intoned with frustration
that despite ten years and $130 million of planning and community input,
decision-makers were still having trouble approving a plan that in essence
moves one runway €fty feet south. Here at last was clear demonstration
of the scale of the enterprise in contrast to the size and duration of
the public process. While the plan passed that day, the protests did not
end. In fact, within weeks, the airport announced $1.5 billion of additional
measures to mitigate noise and traf€c problems in surrounding locales.
Always seeking a better deal, the public continues to protest.
MIXED-USE MALL
IN GLENDALE
While the airport expansion impacts a region of 16.5 million people, the
“Americana at Brand” mainly affects Glendale, a city of 330,000 just north
of Los Angeles. The developer of this project, Rick Caruso, is best known
for transforming Los Angeles's “Farmer's Market” into “The Grove,” an
outdoor mall linked by a neo-historic trolley to a 1930s era market of
stalls selling food and tourist trinkets. When The Grove attracted more
than three million people a year, Caruso was courted by cities eager to
realize similar success for their communities. In Glendale, Caruso promised
to deliver an “American” town square de€ned by cinemas, restaurants, and
stores with housing above, all wrapped around a new “green.” To build
this open-air downtown mall, Caruso also negotiated a $77 million city
subsidy.
While some questioned the €ndings of blight required to promulgate the
Americana, public opposition to the project was cemented when the owners
of the Glendale Galleria, a competing mall located across the street,
€nanced an alternative design. This design, perhaps disingenuously (given
its chief advocate), included less retail and less development intensity.
A public spat between developers ensued. Sensing that the City Council
would support the Caruso project, the Galleria owners €nanced a citywide
referendum: an up or down vote on the Americana. Expert designers, consensus
planners, or even informed decision-makers were not going to determine
the future use of downtown Glendale. After an intense campaign lasting
several months and costing several million dollars, Caruso won with 51%
of the vote: the Americana at Brand was approved in an exercise of direct
democracy.
SANTA MONICA
HEDGES
In Southern California even the smallest design details are now subject
to the propositions and will of the voters. In Santa Monica, a city of
100,000 just west of Los Angeles, a little known and unenforced ordinance
has restricted the height of front yard hedges for decades. Reecting
a late 19th- century townscape ideal, the ordinance was meant to maintain
the open sensibility of a once sleepy and somewhat seedy seaside resort.
Today Santa Monica is a redoubt of wealthy homeowners who seek to shut
out their urbanized surrounds.
Citing urban concerns (“People are living on top of each other”), privacy
concerns (“People are always peering at us”), environmentalism (“Greenery
should never be cut down”), safety concerns (“Our children can no longer
play in the streets and must stay in the yard”) and property rights, many
homeowners grew tall hedges to wall themselves off from the city. However,
not everybody in Santa Monica felt comfortable with the change to community
character. Some complained that city ordinances should be enforced. When
the issue was brought to city of€cials, the city €rst acknowledged and
then enforced its laws; it issued citations to property owners with high
hedges and eventually cut down some of the offending greenery.
"SINCE I MOVED TO LOS
ANGELES IN 1985: THE AIR IS CLEANER; THERE ARE MORE GOOD PLACES TO HANG
OUT; HISTORIC PRESERVATION HAS BECOME A FACT, NOT AN ABERRATION; INNOVATIONS
OF NATIONAL IMPORTANCE SUCH AS THE INTRODUCTION OF BUS RAPID TRANSIT HAVE
BEEN ADOPTED; AND MIXED-USE PROJECTS ARE REINVENTING THE LOOK AND FEEL
OF SUBURBAN COMMERCIAL STRIPS."
City workers cutting down hedges on private property of course outraged
hedge owners. Others were put off by city rationales—“The law is
the law.”—as well as the seeming rudeness of City Council members
who in public meetings initially dismissed the issue as a nuisance impacting
only a few. The hedge-owners organized and broadcast a critique of the
city leadership and policies. A new leader emerged, Bobby Shriver, the
nephew of the late Robert F. Kennedy. Shriver promised to forge a compromise
that allows people to keep their hedges. He also announced that he was
running for Santa Monica City Council.
Hedge policy was debated at City Council meetings leading up to the general
election. At one, statements on the traditions of American townscape,
the beauty of Latin-inspired courtyard housing, the sanctity of green
lawns—in short a compendium of design logics—were introduced
into the record. Several councilpersons apologized for their and the city's
culpability in fanning the controversy and further resolved to develop
new guidelines for hedges. Notwithstanding this gesture, Shriver was the
top vote getter in the recent election, changing the political landscape
of the Council and in the near future, no doubt, the landscape features
of this city.
Santa Monica hedges, the Americana at Brand, and the expansion of LAX—what
these situations have in common is the intensity and comprehensiveness
of their associated public planning discourse. No doubt this intensity
is in part an expression of both fear of change and a desire to preserve
myopic and sel€sh interests. But the exhaustiveness of the processes described
does not allow narrowly drawn interests to survive. In each case, a broad
range of constituencies and interest groups considers a wide array of
ideas in full public view. Decisions and consequent design are debated
and crafted by citizens acting as design and planning experts. Ideas,
indeed design ideas, mutate and coalesce through either the threat of
a direct vote or a pending vote. Democracy, in which “the people form
a master that must be obeyed,” once again takes command of the design
of neighborhoods, streets, the city, and the region.
This democratic planning and design process, far from being ad-hoc, is
increasingly institutionalized through new layers of mandated public input.
Voters in the City of Los Angeles have recently approved two means to
facilitate public planning review. The €rst, a network of city-sanctioned
neighborhood councils, was an outcome of a 1999 voter-approved change
to the city charter. Charter reform also spawned the new Department of
Neighborhood Empowerment (DONE), which oversees self-organizing neighborhood
councils that are locally elected and partially funded by the city. While
the neighborhood councils are only advisory, they do have mandates to
comment on all planning, development, and design issues. While the power
to comment without the power to approve is limiting, the existence of
their mandate shapes Council debates and decision-making. The viewpoints
of the neighborhood councils, given their propensity to highlight alternative
approaches and breed visible leadership challenges if their viewpoints
are ignored, keeps elected decision-makers listening, coordinating, and
cooperating.
Los Angeles has also created a stew of public planning checks and balances.
Dozens of advisory boards oversee speci€c plans, historic preservation
zones, community design districts, and specialized overlay zones throughout
the city. Where these plans are in effect, all but the smallest projects
are reviewed at open meetings for a wide array of use, bulk, and general
design criteria. Many of these boards pass their work products to the
neighborhood councils; democratic micro-incrementalism results. Power
is distributed. No one group has the ability to realize unreasonable demands.
The net result is an organized planning €lter that in aggregate is bending
the development and design direction of the city. Individual developers
and homeowners may bemoan the process when they are caught in its web,
but so far the voters, as well as many pragmatic politicians, seem perfectly
content to arrive at a regional de€nition of the good city through a consciously
conversational system that micromanages from the bottom up.
THE RISE OF
CITIZEN EXPERT
One result of the public's insistent micromanagement of urban production
in Los Angeles is additional physical fragmentation. Small is indeed beautiful.
Yet this is a different type of small than the 1960s Jane Jacobs or the
1970s ecological versions. If those were based on an ef€cacy formed by
Modernism—smaller is healthier—today's small is dominated
by quests for personal convenience, safety, and comfort. This again parallels
an evolution of the landscape anticipated by de Tocqueville who suggested
that democratic nations will “cultivate the arts that serve to render
life easy.”(3)
When de Tocqueville was writing, information about what shaped city design
was either nonexistent or accessible to a few. In a digital age, the democratization
of planning is accelerated through ever-increasing availability of information
that laypersons use to interpret and manage the impacts of projects. For
instance, at LAX, citizen groups pour over noise studies that measure
the effect of moving the runway €fty feet south. Or in Glendale, alternative
designs, real estate pro formas, and tax increment projections accompanied
electioneering for and against the Americana. With the capacity to view
information comes the ability to micromanage planning from the public
dais or voting booth. This does slow the development and design of urbanism
to a crawl. Yet despite the sluggish pace, inexorably Los Angeles mass
transit gets built, the Los Angeles River reimagined, storm sewer systems
constructed, master planned developments projected, and ten of thousands
of housing units erected. With all this, it is easy to overlook the most
critical infrastructure being formed: the participatory planning frameworks
that consume the statistics, weigh the alternatives, and direct the shape
of Los Angeles's urbanism.
In this environment, the planning discourses of everyday life and professional
plans for the form of the metropolis gradually become one. “Everyday”
people are asked to consume and form opinions about everything from large-scale
infrastructural decisions to tot lot beauti€cation. Information is posted
online and citizens—particularly those that are obsessed—know
that armed with this data they too can be experts. Even with the consequent
focus on the local and the self-interested, this process nevertheless
sets up the planner to play a key facilitation and brokering role. This
is not easy given the microscopic viewpoint of much of the citizenry,
but it is possible, even as it demands new planning practices and frameworks,
in essence the construction of a “New Planning” for consensus building
and decision-making.
COLLABORATIVE
PLANNING AND L.A.'S URBANITY
The more the process of creating the look and feel of Los Angeles becomes
subject to an institutionalized and multi-layered discourse, the better
this landscape gets, the less it is a “blank.” This is not Pollyannaish
optimism. Since I moved to Los Angeles in 1985: the air is cleaner; there
are more good places to hang out; historic preservation has become a fact,
not an aberration; innovations of national importance such as the introduction
of bus rapid transit have been adopted; and mixed-use projects are reinventing
the look and feel of suburban commercial strips. On the present agenda
of the city are grassroots demands for inclusionary housing and the reclamation
of the Los Angeles River. Ten years after voters banned further construction
of below-grade €xed-rail subways, advocacy groups and a smattering of
local politicians are even calling for the construction of new underground
lines, a seemingly glance apostate L.A. position that has been calmly
received—all this progress even where the driver is supposedly NIMBYism.
Under these conditions, Los Angeles is accepting an urban caste. Reyner
Banham's sunshine-€lled suburban sprawl of freeways, beaches, mountains,
single-family houses, and middle-class desires, as de€ned in his Los
Angeles: The Architecture of the Four Ecologies, is slowly fading.
A new generation wants walkable urban experiences and a mix of dwelling
types in neighborhoods. They are willing to ride public transit and even
believe in public schools (over the past ten years voters in Los Angeles
have consistently approved bond measures that now add up to billions of
dollars for construction of new schools). Their fears about the limits
of acceptable urbanization are, of course, always present.
Southern Californians in general continue to resist overarching regional
and metropolitan place-making. Nevertheless alternative urban models and
planning knowledge are emerging—particularly those of new urbanism—and
are widely distributed by planning of€cials and citizens seeking alternatives
to sprawl. The New Urbanist model provides an unambiguous tool for starting
discussions regarding urban density and form, mass transit, city- and
town-based lifestyles, and even abstract policy choices such as those
concerning the sub-regional balance between jobs and housing. Yet, the
amalgam that increasingly forms the look and feel of contemporary Los
Angeles stretches the de€nition of any found model or ideology. Angelinos
want their urban villages. They also want their freeways. What comes to
be is a Los Angeles urbanism made up of a little bit of this and a little
bit of that.
In Southern California, textbook planning that promotes an idyllic landscape
of neatly separated villages clustered about downtown-like concentrations
of mixed-use development, all integrated with €xed-rail transit—indeed
any type of rationalized and smoothly ef€cient urban system—are
run through the grinder of public process and always end up looking and
functioning differently and better than originally imagined. The recently
opened master planned beachside community of Playa Vista and new in€ll
development in downtown Los Angeles demonstrate this point. At Playa Vista,
the planning efforts of New Urbanism's elite, millions of dollars of planning
expenditures, and city regulation that sought to codify master plan intentions
have culminated in the creation of a “town within a town” as well as the
restoration of one of the last wetlands along the regional coastline.
On paper this result bespeaks success, yet it was not developers, planners,
or designers, but citizen opponents who worked their way through a twenty-year
public review process and lawsuits that €nally encouraged the state to
intervene, purchase the signature feature of the development—a park
constituting half the site—and force the restoration of both fresh
and saltwater marshes.
Meanwhile in downtown Los Angeles—an environment full of never-completed
if not quite foiled urban renewal projects—tweaks of the building
code relieving parking and €re requirements that were long demanded by
preservation groups and development interests helped usher in the adaptive
reuse of dozens of older and historic buildings. With the changes in regulation,
a 10,000-unit building-by-building residential rehabilitation boom occurred
within the con€nes of the central city. Dwar€ng Playa Vista's 5,800 projected
units, this boom at €rst seems an unmitigated planning success. Yet like
Playa Vista this most recent downtown renaissance involved twenty years
of hard work and endless conversations, dialogues with developers and
property owners, occasional lawsuits by preservationists, and the input
of politicians and public of€cials who believed that the premises of downtown
redevelopment focused too heavily on the new.
Even with success that demonstrates the development leverage achievable
through incremental approaches, planning proceeds on two old school mega-redevelopment
projects in downtown. One of these projects is adjacent to Disney Hall,
the other integrated with the downtown sports arena, Staples Center. Both
will reportedly feature internally oriented “experiences.” Given that
these projects will be constrained by the voice of the recently formed
Downtown Neighborhood Council, a relationship to context will likely be
grafted if not forced on both. The most likely end result will be a hybrid,
neither this nor that, and thereby consistent with the larger emerging
Los Angeles urban landscape.
To further the potential of this hyper-incremental planning dialogue,
the most important infrastructure that needs to be improved in Los Angeles,
indeed in most cities, is the process itself, making it more ef€cient
and providing that it is inclusive of many viewpoints—both of which
the City of Los Angeles is working to address. The Department of Neighborhood
Empowerment now sponsors an ongoing Neighborhood Empowerment Academy and
once-a-year neighborhood congresses in which all the councils gather,
meet with elected of€cials, discuss the issues, and seek to better organize
their processes and learn from their failures as well as their successes.
After an initial rush of neighborhood council formation in communities
where interest was high, the city also found that to ensure inclusiveness
it needed to make a concerted effort to seed councils in poorer neighborhoods
and communities of color that did not initially self-organize. At this
point, €ve years after the organizing began, the city is almost completely
blanketed by active councils.
Regardless of the increased means for local input, too many people still
do not participate. Lack of participation is in part the result of cynicism
about the potential of politics in general and local planning politics
in particular, particularly when implementation takes so long. Lack of
input may also be due to the fact that people's lives are busier than
ever. The number of issues that get vetted at simultaneous meeting opportunities
is vast. There are simply too many meetings. Long-term success for the
neighborhood councils may depend on their ability to usurp the need for
so many overlapping efforts. The city will have to make a concerted effort
to channel most public planning discourse toward the councils, thereby
increasing their pro€le and role. In essence, the neighborhood councils
have to become the modern day equivalents of the New England town meetings
de Tocqueville observed 175 years ago. With over ninety councils formed
(in a city with only €fteen council districts), increased participation
is guaranteed. The large number of geographically dispersed councils now
ensures that a wider range of viewpoints will emerge, lessening the potential
for one group or type of stakeholder to dominate.
NEW ROLES FOR
PLANNERS AND DESIGNERS
If eliciting a broad spectrum of public input leads incrementally to better
urban form, then planners and designers will need to participate in more
of the events (and, properly, be paid to do so) that people are already
attending—not only the neighborhood council meetings, but also the
school meetings, church events, local festivals, and block parties constantly
on the calendar of daily life. The resources demanded for this enterprise
need to be understood as equivalent in importance, if not in €scal impact,
to infrastructural projects like airport expansions, downtown revitalizations,
or even the proper height of hedge rows. Promoting the development of
the infrastructure of process in turn suggests new opportunities for planners,
additional roles for architects and landscape architects, and challenges
for urban designers.
"FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE
THE 1930S, PLANNING IS BECOMING MORE FORM-BASED. WITH NEW COMPUTERIZED
TOOLS, PLANNERS ARE ABLE TO BY PASS THE DESIGN PROFESSIONS AT THE CONCEPTUAL
STAGES OF PROJECTS. IT IS JUST A MATTER OF TIME BEFORE PLANNERS THEMSELVES
ARE BYPASSED BY COMPULSIVE CITIZENS WHO WILL INSIST ON PLAYING THE VIRTUAL
PLANNING GAME. PLANNERS WILL PLAY THE ROLL OF EXPERT ASSISTANTS."
As the advocacy models of the 1960s lost their currency in the '70s and
'80s, planners were increasingly reduced to performing the driest forms
of zoning and land-use entitlement administration. By the 1990s, one heard,
at least amongst some architects, that planning was dead.(4) Today, with
the need to manage the collection and interpretation of data, administer
and facilitate on-going public processes, and generate policy in response
to public demands, planning again assumes a central role in the development
process. In essence, planning has evolved from a generalist's occupation
that sought to lead people to environmentally based solutions—utilize
a bit of physical design, sprinkle it with a bit of law, and spice with
facilitation—to a highly specialized and demanding profession that
partners with communities to manage the complex ins and outs of a transparent
and public development process. That this process is often confusing and
contradictory reinforces the idea that planners are needed to better manage
the assumed discursive process.
Interestingly, as the process becomes more conversational, visual representation
and physical design are once again becoming key tools of planning. As
the public demands more information about alternative futures and accessible
means to understand the data, planners are increasingly using digital
software and visualization to allow real-time explorations of the relationships
between social, environmental, economic, and land-use data with built
form proposals. Newer GIS based programs, such as CommunityViz,(5) allow
walkthroughs of prospective environments. Building envelopes as well as
cityscapes can be instantaneously related to an endless menu of criteria
such as vehicle trips generated, optimal energy utilization, or desired
tax streams. For the €rst time since the 1930s, planning is becoming more
form-based. With these tools, planners are able to bypass the design professions
at the conceptual stages of projects. It is just a matter of time before
planners themselves are bypassed by compulsive citizens who will insist
on playing the virtual planning game, much as they already play Sim City.
Still, the citizenry that is willing to manipulate the simulator will
need active and ongoing support—planners will play the role of expert
assistants.
With the new visualization tools, architects and landscape architects
may no longer be the natural leaders for the conceptualization of planning
ideas. However, as demands for visualization increase, they too, like
planners, will play key support roles in the New Planning. Professional
designers will maintain a deeper knowledge and understanding of the relationships
between planning conceptualization and the craft and science of physical
construction. A continuing need will exist to integrate the knowledge
and experience of licensed professionals of building systems, codes, life-safety
issues, and construction execution into the process of citizen-based generation
of visual urban alternatives. While overlap exists between landscape architecture
and architecture, each profession also has a speci€c history and legal
responsibilities separate from planning or citizen processes. The design
professions can maintain a contributory role within the public planning
process. What is not as clear is the place of urban design.
Urban design, as a perusal of most urban design curriculums will con€rm,
remains committed to imparting general knowledge about law, planning,
real estate economics, and design of places to engender urban sociability.
The expectation is that graduating students, with their ability to see
the big picture, are the obvious people to make critical connections and
lead design and planning efforts. Yet much of what urban design promised
when it was formulated in the mid-1950s and now imparts at increasing
numbers of programs—mainly the need to make places and buildings
that respect the synergies of the street, neighborhood, and city—is
now accepted knowledge that lay people, at least in Los Angeles, understand
and act on. These people do not need urban designers to advocate these
ideas for them. Urban designers can't continue to be educated as generalists—in
fact urban design as a professional pursuit is in crisis—when the
activist layperson's understanding of the city and how to act within it
is equivalent to the purported professional's.
For designers who would be urbanists, the challenge is to move beyond
the general knowledge of citizens engaged in planning their communities.
The future of urban design now lies in the development and use of information
systems and tools that all players in the community-making process will
use. Understanding and supporting these knowledge bases and tools so they
are integral parts of the democratic planning process is one of the great
opportunities for the planning and design professions and portends a shift
of historic proportions with regard to the means by which cities are planned,
designed, and built, a shift as important as the design of any piece of
infrastructure. As opposed to advocating urban design education for the
masses or leading the people to the city on the hill of good design, planners,
architects, and landscape architects, acting as urban designers, must
associate themselves and their specialized activities with everyday people
to do everyday planning.
Gropingly, the public in Los Angeles has already used this nascent process,
this New Planning, to get cleaner air, cleaner water, better traf€c management,
less development intrusion into single-family house neighborhoods, greener
streets, better designed projects, and more vital urbanism in select locations.
However, the challenge is also qualitative, highlighting another dilemma
for the generalist urban designer. Quantitative expertise, good planning
processes, and generalized knowledge of urban design does not ensure the
production of good, innovative, or progressive urban environments. It
is the details of design that citizen experts never draw, that planners
necessarily abstract, and that urban designers, if not expert in design
implementation, defer to architects and landscape architects who remain
the professionals that best integrate citizen-based planning concerns
and practices into the actual bricks and mortar of qualitative place making.
The challenge of the New Planning for urban “designers” is that it insists
that they remain €rst and foremost creators and makers of urban environments.
De Tocqueville noted that Americans “habitually prefer the useful to the
beautiful.”(6) Perhaps this explains well the sense that much of the Los
Angeles landscape, indeed the American landscape, has been exploited to
the point of permanent degradation. In opposition to processes that led
to an overemphasis on the useful, we now see in democratic planning situations
a consciousness that calls for the beautiful as well as the useful. Both
criteria now guide Los Angeles towards a planning process that needs the
knowledge and skills of architects and landscape architects as integral
elements in citizen-based decision-making. With both criteria operational,
these professionals again have a clear role, not only as the designers
of urban landmarks, but also as substantive contributors to the never-ending
planning and design debates in the always evolving everyday city.
NOTES
1. Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, Volume
I (New York: Vintage, 1990, €rst published 1835), 61, 62.
2. “Democracy not only leads men to a vast number of inconsiderable productions;
it also leads them to raise some monuments on the largest scale; but between
these two extremes there is a blank.” Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy
in America, Volume II (New York: Vintage, 1990, €rst published 1835),
53.
3. Ibid, 48.
4. Thom Mayne, who is known for his strong and heartfelt commentary, has stated to me on several occasions that there is no planning. Rem Koolhaas has surely also advocated a version of this argument. The gentler version of this critique, mainly the assertion that there is no planning despite the presence of it as an activity in municipal government, was long the topic of conversation during the time participated in the Urban Design Committee of the Los Angeles Chapter of the American Institute of Architects.
5. www.communityviz.com
6. De Tocqueville, Volume II, 48.
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