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The Golden
Mean
By: Richard Carson - writer, editorialist, practicing
planner member of the American Planning Association.
Date: 2003/07
Context: The American Experience
Freedom of choice is at the heart of the American experience.
The further you get from the eastern cities, where the European
immigrants lived in overcrowded tenement buildings, the more powerful
is the desire for a freedom of choice in architecture, transportation
modes and the use of the land. Many Americans embrace this freedom
of choice with every fiber of their being. For this reason many
of them find the increased regulation of their property, lives
and cities to be anathema to their belief system.
So it was no accident that the original antithesis to the crowded
eastern cities, called "sprawl," was born in the postwar
settlement patterns that growth fueled. Cities like Los Angeles,
Atlanta and Phoenix each became a poster-child for the failure
to do rational planning.
Situation: Paradigm Shift or Trendy Fad?
Rapid population growth and inefficient, costly leapfrog development
in the 1960s and 1970s drove some states to act legislatively.
The first state-mandated land use planning laws were created by
Florida, Oregon and Washington. The intent of these planning goals
was to comprehensively address the myriad of complex issues inherent
in planning for rapidly growing urban areas. It was not meant
to be social engineering. These progressive national models were
concerned with the functionality -- and not the psychology --
of the urban environment, and mitigating the impacts of growth
on both the natural environment and natural resources such as
farm and forest. The reasons for using such comprehensive planning
techniques as the urban growth boundary were simple. It helped
define the edges of a community and created a compact urban growth
form that optimized infrastructure delivery.
In the 1990s, new buzzwords started to appear in the societal
discourse. Growth management, neo-traditional town planning, smart
growth and new urbanism became the latest planning catch phrases.
All of these movements had one thing in common they believed
they could improve on the comprehensive planning process. The
promoters of these "new and improved" approaches to
urban planning presented their products as more environmentally
sensitive, having better urban design, and solving the traffic
congestion conundrum. For the most part, all of these movements
have added some value to how we plan for our cities. However,
all of these in total did not go far enough in actually solving
the real issues of growth. Edward Abbey said that, "Growth
for the sake of growth is the ideology of the cancer cell."
The truth is we did not cure the cancer. We merely slowed the
progress of a disease that may still kill us.
Solution: The Golden Mean
So where do we go from here? New Urbanism is an intellectual
solution that makes density more enjoyable through design, but
it not a practical solution to rapid growth. Smart Growth in reality
only slows growth by incrementally moving urban growth boundaries.
Both use higher densities to try and slow the geographic expansion.
Neither doctrine has found a home in the nation's psyche because
of our belief in freedom of choice and our disdain for social
engineering. Neither doctrine alone can change the fact that growth
in metropolitan areas will result in overcrowding, traffic congestion,
and poor air quality. Gridlock is simply a function of too many
people living in an area, and no concurrency policy or dollar
outlay can fix it. The same can be said of air quality.
Nor can either policy stop the expansion of cities. It's inevitable,
for instance, that the West Coast will eventually evolve into
a massive megalopolis stretching along Interstate 5 from San Diego,
California to Seattle, Washington. There are similar examples
all around the country.
There are a few urban theorists who suggest that cities may have
an optimum size and population. They tell us that an ideal city
is a sustainable one, where economic, social, and environmental
systems are in balance, and where residents feel that they are
part of a definable, understandable community. Writers like Ian
McHarg in Design with Nature have pointed out that urban areas,
like natural areas, have an inherent carrying capacity. Others,
like Carl Sagan in Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors described the
pathological effect of population size on urban areas and individuals.
Yet planners rarely talk about limiting growth. That's because
we don't have a politically marketable alternative that allows
for rational growth. Even in the states where urban growth boundaries
are a way of life, the urban areas keep expanding.
Daniel Kemmis theorized in The Good City and the Good Life, that
a city's optimum size could be determined by using the ancient
Greek "Golden Mean" formula. The Greeks devised the
Golden Mean as a tool to solve a problem of something very large
(the earth's population) relative to something very small (a single
human being). The formula A/B=B/C reveals that the earth's population
(now 6.3 billion) would ideally result in 80,000 cities with 80,000
individuals in each city (1/X=X/6.3 billion). Christopher Alexander
in A Pattern Language also argued for a hierarchy of size and
space, and Constantine Doxiadis articulated a similar taxonomy
in his influential 1968 book, Ekistics.
Certainly there is credible evidence that smaller metropolitan
areas like Eugene, Oregon and Santa Fe, New Mexico are livable
precisely because of their size and sense of place. This is not
a No Growth strategy. When new towns are needed, they should be
established at a minimum distance from existing settlements. Such
towns would never outgrow their urban growth boundaries or intrude
into their greenbelt buffers. This is a model that has existed
in Europe for centuries.
A basic tenet of planning is that we plan for 20 to 25 years
-- the equivalent of one generation. If our life span can be 80
to 90 years, then shouldn't we be planning our cities for four
or five generations? So why not have 100-year plans?
Conclusion:
We need to manage our cities wisely and there are three basics
for city planning. First is to understand a city in the context
of the space-time continuum already discussed here. Second is
that the city function effectively and cost-efficiently. Third
is that the city should grow organically. That is to say it has
to be a place the people of the place want. It has to reflect
the city's unique geography, geomorphology, history and society.
Quite frankly, the special interests (i.e., building industry
associations, environmental group, new urbanists) should butt
out. The citizens should be allowed to democratically divine their
own future. A city should be the creation of its citizens because
only they can build a city for the purpose of providing for their
happiness.
.
Author
Richard Carson. Former elected official of the American
Planning Association, Oregon Planners' Journal editor, maintains
the American Planning Association's Planning Publications website
and is the Urban Studies editor for Zeal/LookSmart, the Web's
largest Internet directory, with 2.3 million websites, used by
search engines including Microfsoft's MSN, AltaVista, Netscape,
InfoSpace, Excite, Dogpile, MetaCrawler and WebCrawler.
"Urban
Realism: What is past is prologue" by Richard Carson in
Planum Forum
Richard
Carson article "Another Tale of Two Cities" in Plan
Net
Read
comments on "The Golden Mean"in Planetizen

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