| How
cities renew, rebuild & remember
Perhaps it was just a little ironic that, at a
time when the bombing of Baghdad was in the offing, a conference
should be held in The Lighthouse, Glasgow, Scotland on Sense &
the City. Addressed by speakers representing Glasgow, Amsterdam
and Rotterdam, and New York, the conference was accompanied by an
exhibition called Information Exchange: How Cities Renew, Rebuild
& Remember organised by the Van Alen Institute in New York.
The cities examined were Berlin, Beirut, Kobe, Manchester, Oklahoma
City, San Francisco, Sarajevo and New York. Some had been devastated
by war, some by terrorism and one (San Francisco) by an earthquake.
Berlin was the exception. A city divided by a wall that, after 38
years, had finally come down, the former capital of Germany has
been given an opportunity to renew itself in a way that symbolises
the reunification of the country.
Since Glasgow hosted both the conference and the exhibition, it
was not surprising that the regeneration of the city should be the
first topic examined. Various speakers, including Councillor Charles
Gordon, Leader of the City Council, presented an historical account
of Glasgow's growth from a medieval crossing on the River Clyde
to a centre for the tobacco trade and then to Britain's 'second
city' of the Empire noted for its shipbuilding, railway locomotives,
engineering and textiles. However, despite optimistic remarks about
its 6,000 design jobs and 600 enterprises, it remained unclear as
to how Glasgow is going to recover from its long, industrial decline
- or break out of the boom and bust cycle that has accompanied the
Garden Festival of 1988, the Year as European City of Culture of
1990 and its Year as European City of Architecture & Design
of 1999. Business tourism seems the main answer.
A much clearer plan of action was presented by Esther Agricola
of KEI Rotterdam, an organisation founded in 2000 which now has
180 participants, including local authorities and private companies,
devoted to renewing the city. During the 1980s, she said, the focus
on the New Towns led to the stagnation of the cities whereas now,
in the case of Rotterdam, massive government investment is leading
to the redevelopment of its waterfront with architects like Sir
Norman Foster and Renzo Piano playing their part. Similarly, renewal
has also been introduced in Amsterdam. At the same time, the 'top
down' decision-making on planning and design adopted after the Second
World War is being replaced by local consultation and decision-making
which is especially important as some two million houses (one-third
of the country's stock) are in need of renewal. Nevertheless, she
admitted that it is much easier to find solutions for waterfronts
(inspired by Barcelona and London) than for some of the country's
huge, run down housing estates.
Speaking about the US, Ray Gastil, Executive Director of the Van
Alen Institute, said that America has no policy for its cities -
a situation that might have been different had Al Gore been elected
President. Indeed, as Mike Davis says in his new book, Dead Cities
(not cited by Gastil), Americans are currently paying no attention
to the threats to their cities which, he says, range from gang culture
to deregulation, and from local government corruption to the dumping
of toxic waste.
Of all the cities in the US, it seems that Seattle is the best,
a place where, said Gastil, its citizens will ride on a bus because
it's the right thing to do. New York, on the other hand, is in a
worse state than it was when the I Love New York campaign,
with its logo designed by Milton Glaser, was introduced in the early
1970s. Today, it is on the brink of bankruptcy and is faced by rising
unemployment. What the Van Alen Institute is doing is to promote
the renewal of specific areas such as Governor's Island, Pier 40
(a 16-acre site which is mostly parking lot), the East River Project
(aimed at putting right 40-50 years of neglect) and Queen's Plaza
(an area beneath an elevated railway that is reminiscent of a scene
out of Kojak).
And, of course, there is the site of the World Trade Center. Gastil
said that Daniel Libeskind's winning design was not his choice (he
would have preferred THINK'S two, latticework towers) and how exactly
the Wall of Remembrance, the sunken plaza and the garden in the
sky will materialise remains to be seen. But it is certainly a bold
and dramatic concept and, as the exhibition accompanying the conference
showed, the natural or man-made devastation of cities has enabled
some very positive and imaginative renewals to be put in place.
Dead Cities by Mike Davis is published by New Press. The
catalogue on Information Exchange: How Cities Renew, Rebuild
& Remember is published by the Van Alen Institute, 30 W
22 Street, 6th floor, New York, NY 10010, www.vanalen.org.
Richard Carr
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