Who tops “Top Urbanist” list?

The Planetizen.com votes are in and – no surprise – Jane Jacobs has topped the voting of the 100 Top Urban Thinkers. If you don’t want to take the time to follow the link to all 100, here are the Top 10:
1. Jane Jacobs
2. Andres Duany
3. Christopher Alexander
4. Frederick Law Olmsted
5. Kevin A. Lynch
6. Daniel Burnham
7. Lewis Mumford
8. Leon Krier
9. William H. Whyte
10. Jan Gehl

Sad to say, Charlotte’s Terry Shook dropped off the list during the voting. And am I being persnickety in wondering if there’s a whiff of sexism in the No. 2 position for Andres Duany and his partner (and wife, and dean of the U. of Miami School of Architecture) Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk is way down at No. 24? Yes, Andres is the showman of the pair, no doubt. But still …

Jane Jacobs’ topping the list provides me with a chance to tout a new book about the Manhattan activist’s battles with Robert Moses (who also made the list, but at No. 23, just below Baron Haussmann, who remade Paris in the 1800s). It’s “Wrestling With Moses,” by Anthony Flint. It’s an excellent and readable account, and since biographies of Jacobs aren’t plentiful it helps to fill some blanks in our understanding of her life and work. Here’s a link to a long and excellent article about the book in The New Republic from Harvard’s Ed Glaeser (who made Planetizen’s list at No. 51).

Back to Jacobs being No. 1 – Here’s one intriguing thought from Rick Cole, city manager of Ventura, Calif.:

“We’re all better off for more attention being drawn to the work of Jane Jacobs — not just ‘Death and Life [of Great American Cities]’ but her later work on economics and cities. While I thoroughly enjoyed reading Tony’s book, I don’t share his view that Jane Jacobs has won the legacy battle. The widespread embrace of her work is often shallow, and developers continue to push megadevelopments that look cute, but are barren monocultures that cannot replicate the ‘complexity’ she celebrated.”

City weapon against big box blight advances

A Charlotte City Council committee today unanimously approved a proposed new code for nonresidential (i.e. commercial) buildings. This isn’t a building code – those already exist. It’s akin to a housing code, only it applies to buildings that aren’t housing. I’ll add a link soon as the city PR folks send me a pdf version. The draft ordinance isn’t posted online.

It’ll likely be up for final action on Sept. 28.

The issue is important for neighborhoods where retailers have left buildings behind and the buildings sit, empty, for months. (Take a look at the photo above, of the old Albemarle Road Upton’s, built in 1978, photo taken in May.) Sometimes the vacancy occurs because a retail chain goes belly up; other times the company opens a new store, typically on a suburban greenfield site, and leaves the older building. Those vacant and decaying stores have the effect of signalling to other retailers: “Don’t move here, retail doom awaits!” And the aura of decay can send a clear signal to other potential investors, too, of an area in decline.

The new code has been in the works since February 2008, when the council told staff to study and develop one. The council’s Housing and neighborhood Development Committee has reviewed it three times: April, May and July, and a public hearing was Aug. 24.

To their credit, the city planners have begun pushing developers of new big box stores to agree to language in the rezoning agreement that puts some requirements on the retailer if the store goes vacant: keep up the building, help market it to new tenants, don’t put a noncompete clause on the property. But that doesn’t give the city any leverage against abandoned commercial properties built without any such requirements.

The city currently requires vacant nonresidential properties to be secure. The new code would extend to occupied buildings, and would require properties to be sanitary and safe, too. It would require property owners to maintain exterior walls, roofs, windows, etc. Broken windows and doors, holes in roofs and walls, garbage on the site and rodent or insect infestations would be potential violations. Near as I can tell, there’s very little opposition to it from anywhere, so it should pass easily in a few weeks.

(And an aside, to forestall the inevitable suggestions that abandoned big box stores should be turned into public schools: School architects have studied that suggestion and concluded that state building requirements for schools make renovation of old big box stores more expensive than building from scratch. A charter school on North Tryon went into an abandoned K mart, but charter schools don’t have to follow the same building rules as regular public schools. )

Coming Tuesday …

Much good stuff to write this week, but I was buried with Charlotte City Council endorsement research and writing. I’ll dive back into blogging after Labor Day. ‘Til then have a good holiday, everyone.

Updating U-City transit, street projects

As I’m spending much of today interviewing City Council candidates and editing tomorrow’s Viewpoint page, I’ll just offer a couple of links to information available elsewhere.

First, here’s an overview from University City Partners about the planning for the northeast light rail line. It’s a good summation of some of the fine point design issues they’re wrestling with, such as how to deal with the North Tryon Street, Harris Boulevard intersection. The next big public meetings on the plans:

• 6-8 p.m. Sept. 29 at Sugaw Creek Presbyterian Church at 101 W Sugar Creek Road

• 6-8 p.m. Sept. 30 at the Oasis Temple, 604 Doug Mayes Place in University Place

Also, thanks again to University City Partners, here’s an overview of the planning for overhauling “the weave” – where N.C. 49 (North Tryon and University City Boulevard), U.S. 29 (North Tryon) and I-85 all come together.

No more ‘roads’ talk, OK?

I found out earlier today that my Saturday oped on “roads” vs “transportation” is getting picked up by Planetizen.com – Maybe that’ll make the comments section a bit more, er, balanced.

Other tidbits:

NYTimes looks at LEED buildings and finds not all of them are all that “green.” I’ve been hearing for some time about dissatisfaction with LEED ratings.

• New blog, “The Avenue” is a collaboration between the Brookings Institution Metropolitan Policy Program and The New Republic magazine. It’s about “policies and places in America today” and “will explore what it means to be a metropolitan nation.”

Kiplinger.com declares North Carolina one of the most tax-friendly states for retirees. Check it out.

• My buddy Joe Urban (aka Sam Newberg of Minneapolis) writes about Charlotte and its light rail for Urban Land Magazine. Check it out.

Who’s the anonymous symphony lover?

I’m just back from the noon rally at Trade and Tryon for the Charlotte Symphony, which was fun in a too-much-sun, humid sweat kind of way. Especially since I not only got to hear some professional musicians play, but I got to hear former Gov. Jim Martin play the tuba. Who can’t love that?

For the record, he played “Asleep in the Deep” on an instrument he said he borrowed from the Salvation Army. It did indeed have a beat up, well-used look to it. I missed his performance before the official rally started, but he was nice enough to play when I asked him, afterward.

The snoopy journalist in me, of course, required that I ask around about to try to get some clues to the identity of the anonymous donor who just gave the symphony a $500,000 challenge grant. The symphony has until Dec. 31 to raise its matching money, although I was told the challenge grant will be given out in increments, as the matching money is raised.

Meg Whalen, the symphony’s public relations director, told me no one at the symphony knows the donor’s identity except the CSO executive director, Jonathan Martin, and board chair Pat Rodgers. But, Whalen said, the donor intends to remain anonymous forever. So we’re left to speculate about local philanthropists. Leon and Sandra Levine might be atop the list, except they apparently have been busy wiring up a $1 million challenge grant to the United Way of Central Carolinas, announced this morning. And they’ve already been generous to the symphony, with a $25,000 grant in May.

The symphony has to give its financial turnaround plan to the Arts & Science Council on Sept. 2. If the ASC doesn’t like the plan, the symphony gets only a $150,000 in ASC funding, down from $1.9 million last year. If the ASC approves, the symphony gets $900,000.

I’m obviously cheering the symphony on. I’d hate to see Charlotte become one of the largest cities in America without a symphony. Here’s a column I wrote on that topic a couple of weeks ago.

Kids, cities, diversity and social trust

Update on Thursday, Aug. 27: I have a request from reporter Ann Doss Helms: She’s trying to find parents of kids who’d be switched from the Myers Park High School attendance zone to East Mecklenburg. Would the person who left the comment on that effect – or anyone else in that category – please contact her at ahelms@charlotteobserver.com or at 704-358-5033? She wants to hear from people on all sides of the issue.

The comment thread about Best Cities for Kids took an interesting turn last night and this morning. Take a look (link).

Several commenters made the valid point that the U.S. News & World Report rankings appeared to favor relatively affluent, mostly white suburban-ish areas with well-funded schools and low crime. “White flight” someone said, shouldn’t be rewarded.

Indeed, I believe a community with many different ethnicities is a lot more interesting, and I agree that the rankings look as if they hadn’t taken into account the reality that an affluent suburb is probably going to compare well for schools and crime stats. One commenter said, “Diversity is a city like Charlotte that has a 33% black population, a large Hispanic population, and a large white population. That in itself presents quite a challenge.”

Then faithful reader/commenter “Cato” brought up Robert Putnam, a Harvard professor. His recent studies have shown that as ethnic diversity in an area rises, social trust goes down. This is true, he says, for all races and ethnicities. I’ve heard him lecture on this phenomenon several times, and each time he said he didn’t like getting those results and kept double-checking his data and coming up with the same result.

So whoever thinks Cato is misquoting Putnam is off-base.

But I think Cato, too, is off-base in saying, “Why is this [less social trust] a desirable trait in a city? Especially if you get more crime and worse schools in the bargain? Or is it that the intangible benefits of white liberal self-congratulation are enough to coutnerbalance it?”

Putnam thinks it’s a good idea to be aware of the tendency toward lower social trust and figure out how to counteract it. To say, “Especially if you get more crime and worse schools in the bargain,” seems to me to ignore some realities:

One: Bernie and his hedge fund ilk as well as all the toxic loan purveyors and mortgage fraud perps have proved there’s plenty of crime in rich areas too, and it’s certainly not “victimless.” It’s not someone taking your CD player. They’re taking your investments, or driving up your taxes by not paying theirs, or destroying the companies in which you own stock. I’d rather have my car stolen than the worth of my 401(k).

Two: Poverty correlates with higher crime, no question. Yet to say that you get “more crime” when a city area is more ethnically and economically integrated might really mean “more crime where I live in what used to be an all white, all middle-class area.” The crime is already there, and many low-income people suffer horribly from it.

Three: “Worse schools.” Again, the kids with the bad teachers, crappy home lives and falling down schools are already out there, so racial and ethnic and economic mixing doesn’t cause those problems, but rather brings them to the attention of people heretofore not having to deal with them.

White flight – or to be more accurate, wealthy and “bright” flight – makes public schools worse, as parents with time, means and enthusiasm to help the schools disappear from the support base. That leaves schools with disproportionately more kids from bad situations, and fewer parents able and willing to fight for better resources. So more of the parents who care about their kids’ school then leave, which causes a downward spiral. But it isn’t as if racial/ethnic diversity by itself “causes” bad schools, rather the effects of people fleeing the effects of poverty can cause schools to start spiralling downward.

But Cato’s right in saying that an economically and ethnically integrated city will indeed have to deal with those problems more than a bedroom community of affluent educated residents.

And for the record, I’m a proud parent of a high school senior who’s been at CMS since kindergarten and has top-notch schooling at Charlotte’s racially and ethnically diverse public schools. Many CMS schools are excellent, safe and well-run. And yes, some aren’t. But just because you see some brown faces doesn’t automatically mean the school’s a bad place for your child.

Best cities for kids

Now this is a list I wish Charlotte were on:

U.S. News & World Report’s list of the 10 best U.S. cities and towns in which to grow up (link here) does not, sadly, include Charlotte. Here are the criteria the magazine said it used:

“First off, you’d probably want a low crime rate. A strong school system would also be key. From there, you’d need lots of other children, expansive green spaces to play in, and plenty of nearby family events. Toss in an abundance of artistic and recreational activities, and all of a sudden you’ve got one heck of a place to grow up.”

Obviously, different people value different things. I might have put a bit more weight on the attributes of a large city, which can offer plenty of things to do without having to drive everywhere. San Jose, Boston and Denver are on the list. Public school problems probably kept New York and Washington off the list (I’m speculating, I don’t have inside info). Green space probably hurt Atlanta and Charlotte. Crime probably hurt Charlotte – the city has had, comparatively speaking, a high crime rate for decades.

It’s hard to tell if the list is in order of No. 1 to No. 10, but here are the cities, in order:
1. Virginia Beach, Va.
2. Madison, Ala. (a bedroom suburb of Huntsville)
3. San Jose, Calif.
4. Overland Park, Kan. (outside Kansas City, Mo.)
5. Boston
6. Denver
7. Rochester, Minn.
8. Cedar Rapids, Iowa
9. Plano, Texas
10. Edison, N.J.

They’ll choose next CATS chief

Who’ll choose next CATS (Charlotte Area Transit System) chief? The four-member selection panel will consist of Charlotte City Manager Curt Walton, County Manager Harry Jones, , Matthews Town Manager Hazen Blodgett and Davidson Mayor John Woods (named by Charlotte Mayor and Metropolitan Transit Commission chair Pat McCrory).

According to a memo from Jones:

“The four members of the selection panel have conferred and agreed to move forward with the recruitment process as follows. Advertisements will be posted electronically with all national transit-related organizations, with a closing date of September 25, 2009. A profile of the Chief Transit Official position, updated during the 2007 recruitment process, will be subjected to a series of focus groups for input. The profile also will be posted on the city/county website for additional public input. The process is designed to name a new CATS CEO by November 30, 2009.”

Jones’ memo also notes that in 2015 Charlotte will host the national convention of the National Association of Counties. Hmmmm. Whole lotta politicians will be treading our sidewalks. (Lock up the silverware?) But Charlotte hosted the event in 2000 and no mass outbreaks of oratory or political skullduggery were reported.

Charlotte architect one of ‘Greatest Urban Thinkers’

The late Jane Jacobs leads the vote so far with at least 660, but Lewis Mumford (270) and Kevin A. Lynch (281) are virtually neck and neck. The horse race? An online contest by the Web site Planetizen.com for Greatest Urban Thinker. Here’s a link.

I was cheered to see Charlotte architect Terry Shook (below) on the list, though rather far down it, with 7 votes last I looked. S.C.-based developer Vince Graham is also on the list, with 5 votes.

It’s an interesting list and provocative intellectual exercise, because you have to ponder whether some of the anti-urbanists, such as New York’s Robert Moses and Le Corbusier, were more influential than urbanists such as Mumford and Jacobs.

The Planetizen gang decided to leave a bit muddy the issue of whether “influential” should mean “brilliant thinker about cities” or “had the biggest impact.” Here’s what they say:

“What about Le Corbusier, who remains an influential figure in architecture but has been labeled Enemy Number One by urban planners? Like Time Magazine, we’ve left the definition deliberately vague to encompass those who’ve had the most influence on the way we think about cities and/or how cities are shaped, for better or for worse. “

I e-mailed Shook (a UNC Charlotte alum) to alert him to his appearance in company of Mumford, Lynch, Daniel Burnham and other Big Names. He replied: ” Really? … Any idea on how I got on there?” (Which I’m pretty sure means he wasn’t voting for himself … )

You can vote for up to 15. Have at it.
One last note: If you’re interested in reading about how Jane Jacobs and Robert Moses fought one another in New York over a series of urban redevelopment projects (Jacobs won the battles) look for “Wrestling With Moses,” by Anthony Flint of the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy. I’ve read it; it’s well-researched, well-written and quite entertaining.