commentary: the urban stage of election day in Seattle

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It’s 11th hour politics  in my hometown of Seattle. This year, incumbent Mayor Mike McGinn—who some call the most progressive mayor in America—has faced an election challenge focused more on provocative, pluralist style than the issues themselves.  In general, our mayor’s race has been local in focus, without ample attention to how McGinn reflects, if not leads, the trend lines of changing cities everywhere.

A case-in-point comes from this morning’s Seattle Times editorial, a regional piece about the role of policing and mental health reform in perceptions of street safety downtown.

In the quixotic headline: “Street disorder makes downtown Seattle feel like a mansion with dry rot”. The editorial proceeds in support of the challenger, state Senator Ed Murray, and without full regard to the world-stage idea of what Seattle is.

Seattle’s liberal moniker may actually predicate the iconic New York City mayor’s race, a post-Bloomberg defining moment more closely watched than our own.  At issue there is a model of governance that will predict the voting outcomes for evolving American demographics, as well as a decided tilt toward equity and the new urban populism.

Often, it takes such icons to remind us of who we are.

In a New York Times article, candidate Bill de Bliaso’s wife, Chirlane McCray, pointed to Seattle in the context of her husband’s post-Bloomberg focus, hoping to restore New York’s reputation as what she called “a progressive capital”. She showed concern that New York “has trailed behind cities like San Francisco, Seattle, even Cleveland”.

And, in the last few days, the Washington Post framed another attention-getting national story:  if McGinn loses, the article implied, one of his signature 2009 campaign issues, daylighting dark wire broadband in the City on a widespread basis. might never be realized because of Comcast’s financial support of his opponent (an implication which Murray later denied, criticizing McGinn’s implementation and not the premise itself).

I have made no secret of my belief that Seattle—once a tip-of-the-tongue “livable city”—has growing pains around the undeniable playing fields of urban change— transit, safety, education, climate change, energy sources and broadband, to name but a few.  But I prefer the creative over the Seattle Times‘ quixotic to make my point.  My well-documented focus on the “sit-able city” last month grew as much from our mayoral debates over downtown public safety concerns as it did from overseas photography and inspiration.

In Seattle, the progressive ideals already on the map are not so much at issue.  The mayor’s race has been more about the delivery of those ideals, and the challenger has really not brought new content to related discussions surrounding social justice, education, safe urban places for all or other vanguards that typically fall under the progressive flag.

As noted, it’s late in the game and we are onstage, partly because of the provocative conviction of the mayor we have.   Using sensational words, such as the “dry rot” of downtown in today’s Seattle Times editorial, does nothing to advance admiration of who we already are.

 

Image composed by the author in Seattle. Click on the image for more detail. © 2009-2013 myurbanistAll Rights Reserved. Do not copy.

For more information on the role of personal experience in understanding the changing city, see Urbanism Without Effortan e-book from Island Press.

placemaking masters, part 3

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Senior placemakers ascend to the entry of  a former Roman amphitheater, providing human contrast to indigenous colors of the morning light.

Image composed by the author in Arles, France. Click on the image for more detail. © 2009-2013 myurbanistAll Rights Reserved. Do not copy.

For more information on the role of personal experience in understanding the changing city, see Urbanism Without Effortan e-book from Island Press.

finding urban ‘tethers’ in city places

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In London’s Russell Square one recent morning, I saw the human-scale “tether” illustrated above. Whether for safety or togetherness, parent and child traversed the square, each with strap in hand.

“Is this a cultural thing?”, I wondered while watching. Or was this just big-city caution on display, during travel from here to there?

In contrast, just days before, in Bastia, on the French island of Corsica, a more removed and indirect “tether” was clearly at play. In the wide-open Place Saint-Nicolas, two boys, seemingly alone, consulted without fear.

Unlike the Russell Square example,  the physical distance between parent and child in Bastia seemed surprisingly trusting, fully immersed in the surrounding urban environment.

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In the tradition of the open square, “eyes on the street” were everywhere in Bastia. If Russell Square was a path across green, then Place Saint-Nicolas was stage without curtain.

The inset in the photo above (as well as the larger photo below) show aerial views of the square, with arrows depicting viewpoints of parents who elected the more permissive, visual “tether” on that late summer day.

Notably. the flanking cafés along Boulevard du Général de Gaulle enhanced this captive, stage effect.  The outcome honored any urbanist’s nostalgic quest for a livable public place. In the Place Saint-Nicolas, the  view from its many vantage points stood in for the physical “tether” in the London example.

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These photos and Google Earth aerials illustrate how culture, weather, purpose and urban form combine to define particular  “tethers” between parent and child in the city.  Sometimes literal and sometimes more subtle, such relationships are key to the rhythm of urban places today.

Images composed by the author in London and in Bastia (Corsica), France. Overhead views courtesy of Google Earth. Click on each image for more detail. © 2009-2013 myurbanistAll Rights Reserved. Do not copy.

For more information on the role of personal experience in understanding the changing city, see Urbanism Without Effort, an e-book from Island Press.

how places survive, the movie idea

Earlier this week, in “contrasting two models of how places survive“, I compared two ways town forms can survive—by idea and in actual physical form—and underscored  the truly critical ingredient, the people.

If that post (which also appeared in The Huffington Post, here) could be put to film, the trailer would look something like the recently updated, embedded video below.

Perhaps it’s time to take the idea to fruition, and produce the real thing.

Video composed by the author in Eastern Connecticut. Click on the image for more detail. © 2009-2013 myurbanist. All Rights Reserved. Do not copy.

For more information on the role of personal experience in understanding the changing city, see Urbanism Without Effortan e-book from Island Press.

why the “sit-able city” is the next big idea

At TEDCity2.0 in New York City the week before last, urban redefinition, reinvention, and reimagination ruled. Among the presentations:  that urbanist stand-by, the most walkable cities in the world.

Mind you, I don’t want to upset the gurus and nabobs of urbanism.  But I’m just back from southern France and Corsica, with contrasting images galore and a new point of view.

Simply stated. walkable is good, but sit-able is better.  And it’s time for the next big focal point and idea, The Sit-able City.

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Why would this shift lead to an enhanced understanding of place?

The sit-able realm is a place of human universals, broader than the walking that transports us there or passes through. And the sit-able is about far more than street furniture and sidewalk dining, pop-up urbanism, and Parking Day.

Rather, sit-able places are key, interdisciplinary focal points where the delight of “placemaking” and cultural traditions of “watching the world go by” merge with the sometimes conflicting domains of law and politics, economic development, public safety, gentrification and the homeless.

Frequently, the public dialogue debates who sits where and why.

In my city, the Seattle Mayoral race has focused on perceptions of center city safety and approaches to enhance public confidence downtown.  And across Washington State, the Spokane City Council has joined cities wrestling with the Constitutional aspects (in the United States, at least) of “sit and lie” ordinances and associated government efforts to enforce civility in the public realm.

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I know.  A new focus on the “sit-able” spaces in the public realm sounds more like cultivating couch potatoes than great cities.

But consider the purposeful, contemporary images shown here.  Sitting to rest, converse, beg and sell is what people have always done, and it captures a significant part of urban life.  Sitting with style, grace, safety, and reflection is a major element of “place capital”—an increasing buzzword for urban success.

In summary, a greater focus on the sit-able invites rich discussion and ready illustration based on human tradition.  The sit-able is where those walking home meet the homeless.  It embraces parks and park users, places to read, and those benches where we offer a place to rest to someone who has a better reason to sit down than you or me.

A focus on “sit-abilty” could be a game-changer and encourage a richer conversation about why, ironically, we sometimes have second thoughts about a rest stop in the reinvented, walkable cities of today.

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Images composed by the author in 2011 and 2013 in France (Bargemon, Provence and Bastia, Corsica) and Italy (Florence, Tuscany, and Gallipoli, Puglia). Click on the image for more detail. © 2009-2013 myurbanistAll Rights Reserved. Do not copy.

For more information on the role of personal experience in understanding the changing city, see Urbanism Without Effortan e-book from Island Press.