density
This column originally appeared in the Chapel Hill News on Sunday, January 25.
By Travis Crayton & Molly De Marco
In 2014, “density” might well have been the word of the year in local government in Orange County.
Much of the debate about development in our communities boils down to preferences and emotions about the scale and density of proposed projects. (How tall? How many new units per acre?)
In 2015, the density debate is likely to rage on. But what is it about greater density that evokes such strong opinions?
Change in any facet of life is hard. When it comes to change in our neighborhoods, this is especially true. We become accustomed to a particular way of life and patterns of behavior, and we find comfort in these routines. But sometimes change is necessary. As a community professing to hold progressive values, such as environmental sustainability, socioeconomic diversity, and livability, we sometimes should embrace change to uphold and live out these values.
Vishaan Chakrabarti - A Country of Cities
April 18 @ 7:00 PM (Reception starts @ 5:30)
G-100 Genomic Sciences Building (campus
location - free parking next door)
One
of America's foremost urbanists, Vishaan Chakrabarti is a planner,
architect, real estate developer and educator who-though still in his
40s-has already left
an indelible mark on New York City's built environment. Currently
Holliday Professor and Director of the Center for Urban Real Estate
(CURE) at Columbia University, Chakrabarti is also a principal of SHoP
Architects, whose project portfolio includes the Barclay's
Center in Brooklyn, The Seaport at Pier 17, and master plans for
Governor's Island and the Domino Sugar redevelopment in Williamsburg. He
also advises The Related Companies on design and planning operations
for the vast Moynihan Station and Hudson Rail Yards
projects.
Chakrabarti
was previously Director of the Manhattan Office of the New York City
Department of City Planning, where he played a key role in the
reconstruction of
Lower Manhattan in the wake of 9/11, the expansion of Columbia
University, the makeover of Lincoln Center, the extension of the #7
subway line to Manhattan's far West Side, and the transformation of the
High Line into the city's most innovative new park. Earlier
in his career he was director of urban design for the New York office of
Skidmore, Owings & Merrill and a transportation planner with the
Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.
A
licensed architect, Chakrabarti studied engineering and art history at
Cornell University, and holds an MCP from the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology and
an M.Arch. from the University of California at Berkeley. He serves on
the Board of Directors of the Architectural League of New York, and is a
trustee of the Citizens Budget Commission and emeritus board member of
Friends of the High Line. He is also a member
of the Young Leaders Forum of the National Council on US-China
Relations. Metropolis magazine named Chakrabarti one of the top 12 Game
Changers for 2012. He is a David Rockefeller Fellow and was a Crain's
"40 under 40" in 2000.
In
this year's Robert and Helen Siler Lecture, Chakrabarti will speak on
the subject of his forthcoming book, A Country of Cities (Metropolis
Books, May 2013),
in which he argues that dense, well-designed cities are the key to
solving America's great national challenges: environmental degradation,
unsustainable consumption, economic stagnation, rising public health
costs and decreasing social mobility. A County of
Cities presents a wealth of compelling information about cities, suburbs
and exurbs, looking at how they developed across the 50 states and
their roles in enabling prosperity and globalization, sustainability and
resilience, and heath and joy. In the book Chakrabarti
shows how American cities today are growing faster than their suburban
counterparts for the first time since the 1920s, and that strategically
increasing the density of our cities-and building the transit systems,
schools, parks and other infrastructure to
support them-will both improve job opportunities and put environmental
sustainability within reach. The book closes with a manifesto rallying
us to imagine a new urban America-to build "a country of cities" and
turn a nation of highways, houses and hedges one
of towers, trains and trees.
A selection of Chakrabarti's writings for Urban Omnibus are available here:
http://urbanomnibus.net/author/vishaan/
Date:
Thursday, April 18, 2013 - 7:00pm to 9:00pm
Location:
G-100 Genomic Sciences Building - UNC Campus (free parking)
The Chapel Hill Downtown Partnership is ramping up YOUR involvement in the Chapel Hill downtown with the "Dream Up Downtown Walks." These walks are moving conversations to explore and engage in our downtown. The walks are on the first Thursday of September, October, November and December, beginning at 6 pm at the University Baptist Church Memorial Garden at the corner of Franklin Street and Columbia Street.
The regional transit workshops are continuing to happen and it's more important than ever that folks who care about the future of regional transit attend these workshops. You can stop by at any point during the event and talk to someone. No need to stat for the whole event.
This time, the workshop is being held in Carrboro at the Century Center! Emphasis will be placed on the technical analysis of the different corridor options displayed at the first meeting (back when they met at Chapel Hill town hall last month). How does Carrboro fit in? How will Carrboro benefit? Now is a really crucial time for folks who want to see West Chapel Hill and Carrboro included in a light rail plant, so stop by between 4 and 7PM on Sept. 16, 2010.
http://www.orangepolitics.org/events/public-workshop-on-regional-transit
I read the Town Council candidates' responses to the
League of Women Voters' questionnaire in the Chapel Hill News this morning. (A valuable service, but shouldn't the CHN actually publish reporting on the front page?) I noticed that the candidates were unanimous in their support for putting increased density (if it happens) in transit corridors, but not a single one of them named an appropriate area or an example of how this should be done.
It's easy to be reactionary and rail against tall buildings and vague notions of density or against East 54 in particular. Where are the courageous candidates that can hammer out policies, make the hard decisions, and stand up to the inevitable complaints about change? Evolution of this community's landscape is not optional. We must put on our thinking caps and establish some direction for doing this in the best way for our collective future.
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