Jerusalem stories: sustainability as detente?

In Jerusalem, a municipal administration rides a pendulum between sustainability and geopolitics. Greenbelts, light rail, complete street-making and the storied demolition orders for Palestinian homes in a floodway: all live on a world stage.

Last week, addressing Pacific Northwest professionals visiting Jerusalem with Seattle-based i-SUSTAIN, Deputy Mayor Naomi Tsur prescribed the ultimate sustainable urbanism, drawing from a Hebrew phrase. Jerusalem must “emerge from its [many] walls”, old and new, she argued, and enhance the city’s diverse, public areas largely already shared by all. The Jerusalem of gathering spaces and neighborhoods is already present, she claimed, and should no longer grow out in rings of settlements, but preserve compact neighborhoods based on affinity, interlinked by public transit and defining connectors such as Jaffa Road and the Street of the Prophets.

The tools? Public process, for one, even in areas annexed after the 1967 six-day war, to help define a collective local voice.

Her systemic analysis of the city is familiar and compelling as she simultaneously seeks to avoid a Nicosia outcome (a reference to the divided Cyprus to the northwest). Arguably, she is peacemaking on a platform of the sustainable city.

For instance, Deputy Mayor Tsur thinks at night about the infrastructure lacking in East Jerusalem, and how the city should rise above the intractable and remedy untreated eastern watershed drainage which flows directly to the Dead Sea. It would be feasible, she says, to pump this sewage to the state of the art treatment plant which already treats the western watershed sewage, and create drinking water through sustainable technology.

Meanwhile, in the East Jerusalem village of Silwan, along the Kidron Valley, just below the City of David and Hezekiah’s water tunnel, resident Fakhri Abu Diab thinks at night about other things–what to tell his children about the potential fate of the family house which still “carries the smell of his mother”. As recently reported by the New York Times’ Ethan Bronner, the Abu Diab house was one of several which received a demolition order, because it was expanded without a permit, and is the potential location of an archaeological park at the base of excavations already mired in the complexities of political archeology–a search not only to document biblical events, but seen by detractors as a Jewish land-claim process in disguise.

In Abu Diab’s view, the post-1967 municipality has ignored him before, and he lacks confidence in the proposed relocation offer which is under negotiation for a move to higher ground.

Walls, sleepless nights, conflict, water, and a future for children. The human condition speaks loudly in this most urban of cities, as the debate over the future of Jerusalem brings a reality-television aura to local land use administration.

myurbanist will feature several pieces on Israel in upcoming entries.

See the refined and updated version of this post in Crosscut, here.

biking a place that matters

All urbanists should bike where history lies waiting.

Welcome to the Christian Quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City by bicycle at night.

elemental land use and first principles: the overview

As a legal commodity, land is controlled and subject to various ownership rights and remedies. At both the human and regulatory scales, land is used, accessed, settled as places called villages, towns and cities. In these places, human stories are told, belief systems flourish and codifications emerge about the relationship between land use and the common good.

This week, we are visiting places of first principles, where biblical tenets, Crusades and conflict merge with the familiar balance of modern sprawl, density and urbanism.

As Seattle and peer cities struggle with how best to wed transportation modes and land use, battle lines form over what modes of transportation should be prioritized and the “who gets and who pays” of public infrastructure provision, consider the same debates against the backdrop of the fundamental human history and a seemingly never-ending search for conflict resolution.

Stay tuned.

avoiding the pitfalls of density, redux

The March 14, 2010 piece, “Practicing Cautionary Placemaking: Urbanism and the Venetian Ghetto”, was featured in Planetizen on March 15, and has been viewed by thousands worldwide. The May 18, 2010 Real Estate Law & Industry Report (a Bureau of National Affairs publication) will include a reformatted version, which is embedded below:

measures of prosperity in a time of change

Megan Dietz in Pittsburgh has written a thought provoking piece in her blog, Bright Green Burgh, about new ways to measure prosperity in a time of change. Thanks to Megan for the myurbanist reference. Her piece, also premised on a recent article by Alex Steffen, is embedded below: