Foodies get their due, in new urban study

Foodies around the N.C. Piedmont visit downtown Shelby, for Alston Bridges Barbecue. Photo: Nancy Pierce

Foodies can take a bow. A new report released by Sasaki Associates says it found that 82 percent of city-dwellers appreciate their city’s culinary offerings, reports Anthony Flint for CityLab.com. Almost half the respondents said a new restaurant is the top reason they’d explore different parts of their city. And the majority said they consider food and restaurants the most outstanding aspect of cities they love to visit.

Sasaki is a Boston-area architecture, planning and design firm. Its report was a survey of 1,000 people who live and work in Boston, Chicago, New York, Austin, San Francisco, and Washington. They were asked what they like and don’t like about the area where they live in terms of architecture, activities, parks and open space, and transportation.

Architects might not want to read this next paragraph:

When asked what kinds of buildings people admire as they’re walking down a downtown street, 57 percent said they stop to admire buildings that are historic. Only 19 percent admire buildings that are modern. And in a rebuff to the mine-is-bigger-than-yours tower developers, just 15 percent said they admire the tallest buildings. In addition, 54 percent of respondents said they agreed the city should invest in renovating historical buildings as a way to improve their city’s architectural character. Only 22 percent “would like more unusual architecture (get Frank Gehry on the phone!)” and only 17 percent said they’d like to see more skyscrapers and iconic buildings.
East Charlotte offers many ethnic options.

And Charlotte’s stadium- and arena- and ballpark-besotted uptown boosters might be interested in this:  

When asked what would make them want to visit a new part of their city, participants overwhelmingly (46 percent) said “a new restaurant.” Just 16 percent said they would do so for a sports event.

Coincidentally, I’ve been having an email exchange with Nancy Plummer, one of the founders of the now-venerable Taste of the World festival in east Charlotte. You buy a ticket, board a bus and visit three or four of the ethnic eateries in and near Central Avenue. Next one is Oct. 2. To learn more, click here. Plummer and her colleagues on the Eastland Area Strategies Team founded the event in 2005, a time when many local residents were worried about the influx of immigrants into neighborhoods in east Charlotte, among other areas. To counteract the fears, Plummer and others decided to use food as a way to bring visitors to their part of the city. It worked remarkably well. The most recent tour sold out in 14 days.
People, cities and food. It must be a good recipe.

An urbanist’s gift-book list

Planetizen.com has released its annual list of the Top 10 urban planning books. Take a look.
I haven’t yet read and thus can’t in all honesty recommend any of them but one – “What We See: Advancing the Observations of Jane Jacobs,” a collection of essays by well-known urban writers looking at cities and the issues cities face. The idea was to put into practice Jacobs’ technique of looking at the real world and how it functions instead of letting your view be clouded by insisting on applying theories, whether of planning of economics, regardless of whether the facts showed something different.

Mary Rowe’s piece on getting to know Jacobs, who died in 2006 in her adopted home of Toronto, is filled with warmth and close-eyed observation.

Roberta Brandes Gratz writes, in vigorous prose, about the crucial importance to “green” building of preserving buildings instead of demolishing. Ans she quotes one of my favorite passages from Jacobs’ masterwork, “The Death and Life of Great American Cities” about how creative entrepreneurs and new business start-ups must have the inexpensive space that new buildings simply can’t offer:

“Cities need old buildings so badly it is probably impossible for vigorous streets and districts to grow without them. By old buildings I mean not museum-piece old buildings, not old buildings in an excellent and expensive state of rehabilitation – although these make fine ingredients – but also a good lot of plain, ordinary, low-value old buildings, including some rundown old buildings. … Old ideas can sometimes use new buildings. New ideas must use old buildings.”


I haven’t finished the book; it’s a good one to dip into when you need an urban-writing fix.

If you missed it, here’s the 2010 Planetizen book list. I can recommend Anthony Flint’s “Wrestling with Moses” as an exceptionally readable history/biography of New York’s parks/highways/everything czar (and you thought Obama’s czars had too much power?), and Jacobs and their struggles to shape New York. In addition, “The Smart Growth Manual” by Andres Duany and Jeff Speck is a readable little handbook with simple prescriptions, such as “Design public places around existing trees,” and ” Designate civic sites in each neighborhood.” Under the heading, “Price parking according to its value,” is this: “Of course there is never enough parking. If pizza were free, would there ever be enough pizza?”