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View Full Version : Opinion piece on "Moving Forward" from how we live, David Brooks, NYTimes Columnist



RedStripe
10 December 2008, 01:25 AM
Just an opinion piece I thought was well crafted that touches on points often discussed on this board. Big ups to the fact that Dallas gets a nod in this article. For those not familiar with David Brooks, he has been a NYTimes op-ed columnist since 2003 or so. He is often seen with Mark Shields as a political analyst/commentator in the News Hour with Jim Lehrer. He is generally considered to be be a "moderate conservative". Community bonds and the social aspects of healthy family and neighborhood structures are one of the topics that he writes about every so often. Here is his piece from Tuesday:

December 9, 2008
Op-Ed Columnist
This Old House
By DAVID BROOKS

The 1980s and 1990s made up the era of the great dispersal. Forty-three million people moved every year, and basically they moved outward — from inner-ring suburbs to far-flung exurbs on the metro fringe. For example, the population of metropolitan Pittsburgh declined by 8 percent in those years, but the developed land area of the Pittsburgh area sprawled outward by 43 percent.

If you asked people in that age of go-go suburbia what they wanted in their new housing developments, they often said they wanted a golf course. But the culture has changed. If you ask people today what they want, they’re more likely to say coffee shops, hiking trails and community centers.

People overshot the mark. They moved to the exurbs because they wanted space and order. But once there, they found that they were missing community and social bonds. So in the past years there has been a new trend. Meeting places are popping up across the suburban landscape.

There are restaurant and entertainment zones, mixed-use streetscape malls, suburban theater districts, farmers’ markets and concert halls. In addition, downtown areas in places like Charlotte and Dallas are reviving as many people move back into the city in search of human contact. Joel Kotkin, the author of “The New Geography,” calls this clustering phenomenon the New Localism.

Barack Obama has said that he would start an infrastructure project that will dwarf Dwight Eisenhower’s highway program. If, indeed, we are going to have a once-in-a-half-century infrastructure investment, it would be great if the program would build on today’s emerging patterns. It would be great if Obama’s spending, instead of just dissolving into the maw of construction, would actually encourage the clustering and leave a legacy that would be visible and beloved 50 years from now.

To take advantage of the growing desire for community, the Obama plan would have to do two things. First, it would have to create new transportation patterns. The old metro design was based on a hub-and-spoke system — a series of highways that converged on an urban core. But in an age of multiple downtown nodes and complicated travel routes, it’s better to have a complex web of roads and rail systems.

Second, the Obama stimulus plan could help localities create suburban town squares. Many communities are trying to build focal points. The stimulus plan could build charter schools, pre-K centers, national service centers and other such programs around new civic hubs.

This kind of stimulus would be consistent with Obama’s campaign, which was all about bringing Americans together in new ways. It would help maintain the social capital that’s about to be decimated by the economic downturn.

But alas, there’s no evidence so far that the Obama infrastructure plan is attached to any larger social vision. In fact, there is a real danger that the plan will retard innovation and entrench the past.

In a stimulus plan, the first job is to get money out the door quickly. That means you avoid anything that might require planning and creativity. You avoid anything that might require careful implementation or novel approaches. The quickest thing to do is simply throw money at things that already exist.

Sure enough, the Obama stimulus plan, at least as it has been sketched out so far, is notable for its lack of creativity. Obama wants to put more computers in classrooms, an old idea with dubious educational merit. He also proposes a series of ideas that are good but not exactly transformational: refurbishing the existing power grid; fixing the oldest roads and bridges; repairing schools; and renovating existing government buildings to make them more energy efficient.

This is the federal version of “This Old House.” And this is before the stimulus money gets diverted, as it inevitably will, to refurbish old companies. The auto bailout could eventually swallow $125 billion. After that, it could be the airlines and so on.

It’s also before the spending drought that is bound to follow the spending binge. Because we’re going to be spending $1 trillion now on existing structures and fading industries, there will be less or nothing in 2010 or 2011 for innovative transport systems, innovative social programs or anything else.

Before the recession hit, we were enjoying a period of urban and suburban innovation. We could have been on the verge of a transportation revolution. It looks as if the Obama infrastructure plan may freeze that change, not fuel it.

And not to get all Rod McKuen on you or anything, but the larger point is this: Social change has a natural rhythm. The season of prosperity gives way to the season of economic scarcity, and out of the winter of recession, new growth has room to emerge. A stimulus package may be necessary, but unless designed with care, its main effect will be to prop up the drying husks of the fall.

Hannibal Lecter
10 December 2008, 04:27 AM
^ Many people moving to Downtown Dallas???

Is there any suburb of Dallas that's not already built-out (e.g. Richardson) that has added as *few* people over the last decade as downtown Dallas? Let's get real -- the residential population of downtown doesn't even qualify as a rounding error when you look at the whole Metroplex.

The only reason folks even talk or write about people living downtown is precisely because its so rare -- kind of a man bites dog story. We inner-city dwellers are the weird uncle in the attic....

Hannibal Lecter
18 February 2009, 07:42 AM
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/17/opinion/17brooks.html?th&emc=th

excerpt:

Second, Americans still want to move outward. City dwellers are least happy with where they live, and cities are one of the least popular places to live. Only 52 percent of urbanites rate their communities “excellent” or “very good,” compared with 68 percent of suburbanites and 71 percent of the people who live in rural America.

Cities remain attractive to the young. Forty-five percent of Americans between the ages of 18 and 34 would like to live in New York City. But cities are profoundly unattractive to people with families and to the elderly. Only 14 percent of Americans 35 and older are interested in living in New York City. Only 8 percent of people over 65 are drawn to Los Angeles. We’ve all heard stories about retirees who move back into cities once their children are grown, but that is more anecdote than trend.

Third, Americans still want to go west. The researchers at Pew asked Americans what metro areas they would like to live in. Seven of the top 10 were in the West: Denver, San Diego, Seattle, San Francisco, Phoenix, Portland and Sacramento. The other three were in the South: Orlando, Tampa and San Antonio. Eastern cities were down the list and Midwestern cities were at the bottom.

Finally, Americans want to go someplace new. The powerhouse cities of the 20th century — New York, Los Angeles, Chicago — are much less desirable today than the ones that have more recently sprouted up.

Spjz
18 February 2009, 10:53 AM
The problem with the way Lecter and Pew see things is that it's not simple urban v. suburban. I just flew into DFW the other day and what I saw only corroborated what I've seen on drives through Collin and Denton counties. We (DFW) are becoming more urban, not just in DT Dallas and Fort Worth, but in the burbs as well.

Multiple burbs are pushing for newer denser development, better pedestrian infrastructure, more localized business, and (gasp) mass transit. Are they going to look like NYC or Chicago? Of course not. But with the direction that cities like Arlington, Garland, Plano, Irving, etc. are taking, DFW is going to look much different from the metroplex where I grew up.

Some changes that are at this point inevitable:

1. Regional rail. It's not a matter of if, but when.
2. Smaller front yards and narrower spaces between houses. This is the biggest difference between places like Arlington where I grew up and newer, middle class, suburban neighborhoods.
3. More mixed-use development. It's not exclusive to Dallas. Just about every suburb with 50,000 people ore more in DFW has plans to bring more mixed-use development to its tax base.
4. Pedestrian facilities. It goes hand in had with mixed-use development and regional rail.

Will everybody be crowding into skyscrapers and lofts? No, but the DFW suburbs that I grew up in are rapidly fading away. And for the better.

mjblazin
18 February 2009, 11:26 AM
2 and 4 don't translate to urban. Drive through most of University Park and Highland Park, away from the estates, and you'll see they had always been that way. Those two cities come perilously close to being in league with the AntiChrist to many users on this urban forum.

The fundamental traits of Americans, unchanged since WWII, are:
- I want mine
- I don't want to share it (it ranging from doing what I want in my space to avoiding other people's problems)
- I'll move to get it

The model for the suburbs is not downscaled versions of urban cores. The model is upsized versions of small towns. Remember Mayberry RFD had mixed use development too (Floyd lived over or behind his barbershop). The words may be the same, but the desired end result is quite different.

Spjz
18 February 2009, 11:49 AM
2 and 4 don't translate to urban. Drive through most of University Park and Highland Park, away from the estates, and you'll see they had always been that way. Those two cities come perilously close to being in league with the AntiChrist to many users on this urban forum.On a continuum with "Mayberry" on one end, Plano in the middle, and Dallas on the far end, University Park is about half way between Plano and Dallas. The fact that the residents are wealthy and the property exclusive is meaningless as to whether or not the city urban or suburban.


The fundamental traits of Americans, unchanged since WWII, are:
- I want mine
- I don't want to share it (it ranging from doing what I want in my space to avoiding other people's problems)
- I'll move to get itTwo things: (1) I agree and (2) that's evident in the most urban places in America just as it is in the country side.


The model for the suburbs is not downscaled versions of urban cores. The model is upsized versions of small towns. Remember Mayberry RFD had mixed use development too (Floyd lived over or behind his barbershop). The words may be the same, but the desired end result is quite different.Is the zebra white with black stripes or black with white stripes? I'm not sure it even matters.

KBilly
19 February 2009, 11:55 AM
David Brooks is infamous for positing stuff, then throwing down arguments/opinions about someone/something (this case Obama) based completely based upon his own conjecture, then solving the equation.

Makes him look good in every article. Never makes him right, though.

downtownguy25
19 February 2009, 01:01 PM
Is the zebra white with black stripes or black with white stripes? I'm not sure it even matters.

"It is generally believed that zebras are dark animals, with white stripes where the pigmentation is inhibited. The pigment of the hair is found solely in the hair and not in the skin. The reasons for thinking that they were originally pigmented animals are that (1) white horses would not survive well in the African plains or forests; (2) there used to be a fourth species of zebra, the quagga (which was overeaten to extinction in the eighteen hundreds). The quagga had the zebra striping pattern in the front of the animal, but had a dark rump; (3) when the region between the pigmented bands becomes too wide, secondary stripes emerge, as if suppression was weakening. "

http://www.madsci.org/posts/archives/nov99/941836717.Zo.r.html

aygriffith
20 February 2009, 02:58 AM
Barack Obama has said that he would start an infrastructure project that will dwarf Dwight Eisenhower’s highway program.

No Thank You...

His current performance on letting Congress just wing it with alittle over 550ish billion dollars of his 750 billion dollar plan didn't work to well. I'd hate to think what sort of dollar amount would be up to Congress to decide on in a DWE Highway size plan. But I'm sure we'd get some more North Dakota electric golf carts and Hollywood tax cuts so everyone's favority champion of the left Rob Rheiner can still afford to be rich in California. But you know what Chuck Schumer says... Americans don't really care about pork.

What is the total cost of the Eisenhower highway program adjusted for inflation? I'm sure that number isn't really printed even in the Times because even the Times readers might drop their jaw at what I would guess would probably be Trillions of dollars in expenditures.

Helping cities build town centers? Seriously this forum lives to rake the Southlake towncenters of the world over the coals but the readers of this forum would champion an idea like this because???