City Renewal

Ghosts of New York

By John Freeman Gill (The Atlantic, June 2010)

New York has always been a very dynamic city that is always changing and looking for the next new thing, and this article is about the destruction of the evidence of one of its most vibrant periods. As many older buildings are being torn down, hundreds of statues, carvings, and friezes that decorated the buildings are being destroyed as well, meaning that the city is losing hundreds of handcrafted pieces of history as many of the pieces depict scenes of everyday life in New York in the Victorian era. The article details the efforts of one man, Ivan Karp, as he attempts to save as many of the pieces as possible from destruction and the auction block.

 

 

A (Radical) Way to Fix Suburban Sprawl

One of America's most notorious commuter hubs has unveiled a plan to redevelop along urbanist lines. City planners in Tyson's Corner, Virginia argue that a new high-density mixed-use city center will use land more efficiently, promote a vibrant community, and reduce automotive traffic. The plan calls for mass transit, public works, and traditional mixed-use residential and commercial units to fix the massive traffic problems associated with the city's suburban sprawl.

 

 

New Urbanism and the Christian Faith
by Philip Pugh

A review of Eric Jacobsen's Sidewalks in the Kingdom.

Mapping the Middle of Nowhere
by Philip Pugh

Is suburban life sustainable? Are we destroying our landscape? James Howard Kunstler gives answers in his book The Geography of Nowhere.

The Harlem Miracle
by David Brooks (New York Times)

How charter schools are doing phenomenally well in Harlem.

"How the City Hurts Your Brain ... and What You Can Do About It"
by Jonah Lehrer (The Boston Globe, January 2009)

On quashing the mental noise of cities: "The city has always been an engine of intellectual life, from the 18th-century coffeehouses of London, where citizens gathered to discuss chemistry and radical politics, to the Left Bank bars of modern Paris, where Pablo Picasso held forth on modern art. Without the metropolis, we might not have had the great art of Shakespeare or James Joyce; even Einstein was inspired by commuter trains.

"And yet, city life isn't easy. The same London cafes that stimulated Ben Franklin also helped spread cholera; Picasso eventually bought an estate in quiet Provence. While the modern city might be a haven for playwrights, poets, and physicists, it's also a deeply unnatural and overwhelming place ...

"One of the main forces at work is a stark lack of nature, which is surprisingly beneficial for the brain. Studies have demonstrated, for instance, that hospital patients recover more quickly when they can see trees from their windows, and that women living in public housing are better able to focus when their apartment overlooks a grassy courtyard. Even these fleeting glimpses of nature improve brain performance, it seems, because they provide a mental break from the urban roil."  Click here to read the entire article.  Click here to respond to this article once you have read it.

The City and Its Renewal
by Dr. David T. Koyzis (Comment, November 2005)

This article explains how the cultural phenomenon of cities provides a unique opportunity for citizens, civic organizations, churches, businesses, and political leaders to make thoughtful, significant contributions to the flourishing of community life.

The Case for Paleo-Urbanism
by Eric Jacobsen (Comment, November 2005) (Work Resource Foundation)

Why Conservatives Should Care about Cities
by Dr. Wilfred McClay (First Things On The Square, November 2007)

This article explains that great cities are "much more likely to carry material vestiges of the past, and the memories those vestiges hold, than is most any American suburb or small town ... They serve as sources of continuity in my life, and the life of the nation ... [C]onservatism cannot be merely an attachment to certain abstract principles. It is also an attchment to real and tangible things, and to the past out of which those things, not to mention we ourselves, have emerged. Cities are, and remain, the chief places where these meanings are conserved and cultivated." From firstthings.com's "On The Square."