How a Cincinnati Foundation Is Helping to Build the Next Generation of Civic Leadership

The Haile/US Bank Foundation in Cincinnati has an ambitious goal to transform people in their community from being those with ideas to those who can make those ideas happen to those who are ultimately the next generation of community movers and shakers.

This is being done through a project called People’s Liberty.  People’s Liberty gives cash grants, workspace, support services, and training to people with ideas in the community to help them make their ideas a reality. This hopefully helps them become engaged in community making at the highest levels.

I sat down at the City Lab conference with Eric Avner, CEO of People’s Liberty, who gave an overview of the project and some of the ideas that have come to life through it. If the podcast doesn’t display for you, click over to listen on Soundcloud.

Subscribe to podcast via iTunes | Soundcloud.

from Aaron M. Renn
http://www.urbanophile.com/2016/10/29/how-a-cincinnati-foundation-is-helping-to-build-the-next-generation-of-civic-leadership/

Helping Low Income Cooks Start Their Own Businesses Selling Food to Their Neighbors

I just left Miami where I was at the Atlantic’s City Lab conference. I was delighted to get to moderate a panel on entrepreneurship and regulation with Nick Grossman of Union Square Ventures, Lauren Hood of Live6 CDC in Detroit, and Charley Wang of Josephine.

I wasn’t able to grab everyone I might have hoped to get a podcast with, but I was able to sit down with Charley to talk about Josephine. Josephine is an Oakland based tech platform that helps low income cooks start businesses in their homes selling home cooked meals to neighbors. So it has both a social impact goal but also a profitability goal. Obviously, food is one of the most highly regulated sectors out there at the local level.  In our podcast Charley talks about Josephine, its mission, and the way they’ve navigated through urban regulation.

For those of you who haven’t done so, please click over to leave a rating for my podcast on iTunes because this helps new people find it. If you use another podcast listening tool, please rate it there. If the podcast doesn’t display for you, click over to listen on Soundcloud.

Subscribe to podcast via iTunes | Soundcloud.

from Aaron M. Renn
http://www.urbanophile.com/2016/10/26/helping-low-income-cooks-start-their-own-businesses-selling-food-to-their-neighbors/

Were Urban Freeways a Good Idea?

It’s almost a truism in urbanist circles that construction of urban freeways was a bad idea.

Indianapolis Monthly magazine takes a somewhat more charitable view in its retrospective on the 40th anniversary of the completion of the downtown “inner loop” freeway.

But even before its grand opening, the inner loop—31 miles of interstate within I-465, built at a cost of nearly $300 million—had begun paying downtown dividends. Real estate values around the superhighway increased in the early 1970s, reversing a 35-year decline, and Mayor Hudnut also credited the road with stimulating such projects as the Hilton Hotel, the Indiana National Bank building, and the $150 million expansion of Eli Lilly & Co.

Hudnut predicted the new freeway would spur 20,000 new jobs, and state legislators embraced the spirit: In 1973, when a federal reimbursement slowdown threatened to add 10 years to its completion date, they fronted the money for the last leg of I-65/I-70.

The conventional wisdom is that downtown freeways were unmitigated disasters. It says they destroyed vast tracts of urban neighborhoods, with a racist targeting of black ones, then remained as huge barriers to redevelopment.

The Indy Monthly article acknowledges the downsides of the construction:

But little relief awaited the neighborhoods that were carved up for the inner loop. The project displaced a total of 17,000 residents, including 6,000 from Fountain Square (one-fourth of the population).

Linda Osborne, owner of Arthur’s Music Store, remembers Fountain Square as a vibrant full-service community during the 1950s and early ’60s. “There were theaters, grocery stores, shoe stores—all the things you have in a small town,” says Osborne, whose family business opened in 1952. Interstate construction, however, dug a wide channel that isolated Fountain Square from downtown. Then as now, a Virginia Avenue bridge carried traffic over the chasm, but the commercial district soon tanked, Osborne says.

I previously posted an article documenting the destruction in Fountain Square. It features pictures from Historic Indianapolis, including this one showing the scale of the destruction.

virginia-ave-824-1972-aerial-610x362

I don’t have Fountain Square’s demographics at the time, but what evidence I do have suggests it was a largely white community, which it remains to this day. So in this case the place with the most destruction wasn’t a minority area.

Indy Monthly also points out the example of downtown Ft. Wayne. That city decided to go with a bypass option rather than a downtown alignment. The result was that they did indeed prevent neighborhoods from being destroyed, but those neighborhoods and the city’s downtown severely declined anyway. While there are some interesting things going on downtown Ft. Wayne to be sure, it’s unarguable that Indy’s downtown is on a completely different plane of development, though to be sure Indy is a much larger city.

In fact, this is the pattern we see. Urban decline happened pretty much everywhere, urban freeway or no. When there’s a downtown freeway to blame, people do that. Where there’s not, people blame the bypass. Hence most attributing of blame for decline to urban freeways is simply incorrect.

Indy Monthly argues that the freeway system provided for convenient access to downtown. Without that access. businesses would have fled, it would be impossible to host large events, etc.

There is something to this, I think. If there were no freeway access to downtown Indianapolis, it seems likely it would be a much diminished urban center.  Keep in mind, there was limited transit access and no real prospect of creating it.

But we should separate two things, the freeways that provide access to downtown and the ones that run through it. It’s certainly possible that freeway spurs could have been built into the center of the city without building them as through-routes. This is the idea behind much of the boulevarding advocacy movement.

Twice within the last decade, the state implemented multi-month closures of the Indianapolis inner loop to through traffic. This was a good real world test of whether it was needed at all.

I wasn’t living there at the time but did do some driving around rush hour during one of the closures. The best alternate route for through traffic is to use I-465 to the south. This did get heavily congested, suggesting that this road would need to be widened prior to removing the inner loop. Some folks did say some surface routes near downtown were more congested during rush hour. But there didn’t seem to be any show-stoppers to permanent closure.

In my view, removal of the inner loop is feasible, though highly unlikely to ever occur. But it goes to show that the benefits of freeway access to downtown could have been implemented in ways that were less invasive, using freeway spurs and boulevard distributors. In this scenario, the inner loop itself would no longer be a barrier, and the demolition associated with its construction could have been largely avoided. The freeway spurs could have been build with lower capacity, since no through traffic need be designed for. Some interchange complexes would have been eliminated.

Removing or never building the inner loop would indeed likely add to peak of the peak congestion. The extent to which this dominates local thinking is hard to overstate. It’s revealing that the biggest source Indy Monthly used for quotes was Bill Benner, a sports columnist, and sports and events loom large.

To fully appreciate Indy’s middle-aged expressway, imagine 65,000-plus NFL fans spilling out of Lucas Oil Stadium and heading home on the stoplight-laden likes of Meridian Street, Washington Street, Kentucky Avenue, and other prime thoroughfares of yesteryear. Or don’t imagine it—because without this key piece of infrastructure, there might never have been a Lucas Oil Stadium.

“It was a series of dominoes,” Benner recalls. “Without the interstate, it would have really held back downtown development. So maybe you don’t have the Hoosier Dome, or the Indianapolis Colts, or the Super Bowl. And maybe you don’t have Circle Centre or Victory Field.”

Designing a transport system around sports event peaks, particularly low-frequency ones like NFL home games, illustrates the Faustian bargain Indianapolis made to revive its downtown.

Indianapolis made its downtown America’s most friendly to major events. So you can get people to and from the Super Bowl the one time the city hosts it. (I would suspect getting people to and from the Indianapolis Motor Speedway for so many decades powerfully shaped this mode of thinking).

But the design of the transport system is very hostile to almost everything else, whether that be residential uses or pedestrian access. This has changed somewhat with the Cultural Trail, Georgia St. and others. But to truly change the game would require a major change in psychological orientation to be able to care less about peak of the peak congestion after Colts games and more about the average ordinary experience of the city.  I suspect a similar dynamic is at play in many other places.

 

from Aaron M. Renn
http://www.urbanophile.com/2016/10/22/were-urban-freeways-a-good-idea/

Corporate Mustard Showroom Helps Explain New York’s Retail Rent Crisis

Maille mustard "boutique" on Columbus Ave at 68th St.

Maille mustard “boutique” on Columbus Ave at 68th St.

The story of skyrocketing rents has two components: residential and commercial.

My New York neighborhood, the Upper West Side, features fairly stable residential rents, but commercial rents seem to have been soaring. This has caused the familiar angst over the loss of neighborhood businesses to the ubiquitous bank branches and drug stores.

But today even chains are getting priced out. The quintessential marker of gentrification, Starbucks, was recently forced to relocate in my neighborhood. They vacated their stores at 67th and Columbus when the landlord raised their rent to $140,550/month.

You’ve got to sell a lot of grande’s to cover that kind of rent check. How many businesses can realistically survive at this location? (Maybe none – it’s still vacant).

A block up the street, another store helps illustrate the forces sending retail rents through the roof. It’s the Maille “mustard boutique” at 68th and Columbus pictured above.

Maille is a supermarket brand of dijon mustard. It’s a product of Unilever, the Anglo-Dutch food and consumer products giant. You may not know Unilever, but you know their brands, including Hellman’s, Dove, Lipton, and even Ben and Jerry’s.

This particular location provides mustard tastings, and sells dijon in a variety of flavors not typically available. I believe they also have some vinegars. I was once needed some dijon and purchased a jar of their regular flavor for $7 – which is $3 more it sells for at the grocery store a few blocks away.  They apparently charge as much as $99 for a jar of black truffle mustard.

I don’t know what their monthly rent is. It’s a smaller, mid-block store than the former Starbucks location. Based on square footage equivalents, the rent would be somewhere around $30,000 a month.

Can you really sell enough mustard to cover that kind of rent (to say nothing of the “mustard sommelier” and other employees they have on staff and all the other costs of operations)? I see people in the store, but it’s never crowded. And it’s rare to see someone walking out with a shopping bag.

It strikes me as dubious that this store could even break even, much less turn a profit that would earn the required return on invested capital.

But ultimately it doesn’t matter if this store makes money or not. The rent isn’t even a rounding error to Unilever and can easily be justified as a marketing expense.

If there’s one thing it’s not hard to find in this world, it’s gourmet mustard. This neighborhood needs a corporate mustard showroom like it needs a hole in the head.

But we have one anyway. And there’s actually a second location in the Flatiron. These are the only Maille stores in the US, save for what appears to be a popup going into a Connecticut mall.

You can tell a lot of amazing “only in New York” stories. But this is an example of a bad one. These showrooms may be exclusive to the city, but they put upward pressure on retail rents and make it harder for actual neighborhood serving businesses to make it. (This location was closed over the summer for a sidewalk replacement project and I was hopeful it wouldn’t reopen – alas, it was to be denied).

Multiply two Maille mustard showrooms by all the other major corporations who use NYC as a branding platform, and it’s easy to get a sense as to why retail rents are so high in Manhattan.

from Aaron M. Renn
http://www.urbanophile.com/2016/10/17/corporate-mustard-showroom-helps-explain-new-yorks-retail-rent-crisis/

William H. Whyte’s Original Plan to Save Bryant Park

Photo Credit: Jean-Christophe Benoist CC BY 3.0

Photo Credit: Jean-Christophe Benoist CC BY 3.0

William H. “Holly” Whyte, the former Fortune magazine editor best known in urban circles for his classic book The Social Life of Small Urban Spaces, famously did a report on Bryant Park in the 1970s that was ultimately used as a basis for transforming what was then known as “Needle Park.”

Andrew Manshel used to work for Bryant Park Corporation, the entity that actually did transform and still runs the park. (If you get a chance to see Bryant Park Corp. CEO Dan Biederman give a talk, be sure to take it). He now runs an excellent web site on placemaking called The Place Master.

I connected with him for coffee last week and he mentioned having a copy of Whyte’s report. I begged a copy, which I’m told was commissioned by the New York Public Library – it covered the library steps as well as Bryant Park – and funded by the Rockefeller Brothers Fund. Since this was a library commissioned document, I am treating it as public and publishing it here, since I don’t believe it is online anywhere else.

The full text is below. Scholars can consult a PDF of the original document, as I have corrected several spelling errors, etc. Thanks to Gabriel Castro for his assistance in converting this document.


To: The Rockefeller Brothers Fund                                     November 26, 1979

From William H. Whyte

 

Revitalization of Bryant Park-Public Library front

Gist: Bryant Park and the front of the Public Library are now dominated by dope dealers. But they are not the cause of the problem. The basic problem is under-use. It bas been for a long time. It ante-dated the invasion of the dope dealers and in part induced it.

Access is the nub of the matter. Psychologically, as well as physically, Bryant Park is a hidden Place’, and so, to a surprising degree, is a large part of the Library’s space. Relatively few people use these spaces, nor are they invited to.

It is the thesis of this report that the best way to meet the problem is to promote the widest possible use and enjoyment by people. To this end there is recommended a major program with concurrent action on four components: (1) structural changes to open up access; (2) programming to induce use and build a constituency; (3) A beefed up maintenance effort with supplementary crew; (4) A broadened policing effort to include supplemental guards and other full time personnel.

There is a great opportunity for action. The situation is bad, yes, but so bad it’s good, and from this level even modest actions can have a dramatic effect on these spaces and peoples’ perception of them. It’s not just a matter of reclamation. Both of these spaces have potentials that have never been realized and there is every reason they should be among the greatest and most enjoyable of spaces.


First, let me document the charge of under-use.

Back in 1971 and 1972 – comparatively good years for Bryant Park – my group was doing a comparative study of public spaces. At that time the average number of people to be found at Bryant Park during the noon period on a nice sunny day was about 1,000, with peaks up to about 1,400. In 1974, as the very thorough Wentworth-Nager study showed, usage was at about the same level.

The figures are lower today. I have no summer counts but to judge by the sightings over a number of very warm and pleasant days in October, usage is off by a third to a half. Interestingly, so is the proportion of females – always a valuable indicator. In the early and mid seventies it was about 42%. Now it’s about 29%. Conversely, the number of undesirables has risen, but in absolute terms by not so very much. As a very rough estimate, I would put the hard core of regulars at about 100. But they sure look like more. They are the constant and when nobody else is in the park they are very, and menacingly visible.

Let’s go back to the comparatively good days. A thousand people sounds like a lot. For a place the size of Bryant it is not. In our comparative study of space use we found that the bottom end of the scale for little used places was about five people per thousand square feet. In Bryant’s 237,000 square feet , a thousand people on a good day comes to about that density. While the comparison may be extreme, it is in order to note that Paley Park has a density of about forty per thousand feet, and for a very high quality experience. Were Bryant’s space to be put to the same density of use, there would be about 9,500 people at lunchtime. Big spaces, I hasten to note, generally have lower densities than small ones, but the comparisons are worth thought.

Clearly, the carrying capacity of Bryant Park is enormous. To make a rough calculation, I would put 2,500 people as the very minimum that should be expected at peak use times on ordinary summer days. As the constituency builds up, the number could easily be doubled, and with no overcrowding.

There has been some concern that easier access would under-cut the sanctuary and refuge quality that people cite as a reason for coming. I see no merit in this charge. In the first place, if people really wanted a walled off sanctuary, Bryant would he a great success. It’s a walled off sanctuary. But it isn’t a success and there’s some fairly obvious evidence that they come, say, to enjoy the lawn because of the lawn, and not because there’s a wall and iron fence around the outside.

Well used places accommodate all sorts of use, all sorts of people, and in varying moods. Because of the many good elements in its design, Bryant offers many different kinds of experience; for the rather raffish group of young swingers who brave the place now there is the lawn; for the contemplative, a spot under the plane trees to read a book; for the chess players, the north end of the upper terrace. When the squalid crew that now encircles it is gone, the fountain should function as an activity area much like Grand Army Plaza.

The Library front has had a more consistent use. In 1971-72 the number of people sitting on the steps averaged about 78 at peak use times, sometimes going up to 100-110. Today, the usage is about the same, though there bas been a marked drop in the proportion of women. As with Bryant, carrying capacity is much greater. With the kind of improvements recommended, the number of sitters on good days ought to be at least triple the current figures.

Structural Problems

If there’s one lesson to be learned from studying how people use space, it is that the key factor in whether a place is used or not is it’s relationship to the street. Bryant Park has a very bad relationship.

In the first place it is unseen. Here and there across the country there are a number of hidden parks and plazas and without exception they are little used. Most are hidden inadvertently. In the case of Bryant Park, however it was by design. When the plan was drawn up in 1934, it was done so with the idea of walling off the park as a sanctuary. The intentions were of the best and the design was widely praised.

Now we know better. If you were to apply the principal findings of research in reverse and strive to create a park that would be little used you would.

  • elevate it four or five feet above street level
  • put a wall around it
  • put a spiked iron fence atop the wall
  • line the fence with thick shrubbery

This was exactly the kind of design Frederick Law Olmsted warned against. He believe the streets around a park should be conceived as an “outer park.” When the Commissioners of Central Park asked him to put a wall around it he responded vigorously. “It is not desirable,” he said, “that this outer park should be separated by any barrier more than a common stone curb from the adjoining roadways. It is still more undesirable in the interest of those who are to use it that it should be separated more than is necessary from the inner park…The two should be incorporated as one whole, each being part of the other.”

At Bryant Park the two are quite separate. So are they at Union Square, and with the same effect. The problem is not merely the walls but the excrescences above: the shrubbery and the iron fences. The block what view there is, and, like the “NO” signs posted on them they do not invite but deflect.

 

william-h-whyte-bryant-park-report-no-signs-on-park

Olmsted hated them. “I consider the iron fence to be unquestionably the ugliest that can be used.” he said, “In expression and association it is in the most distinct contradiction and discord with all the sentiment of a park. It belongs to a jail or the residence of a despot who dreads assassination.”

What is tantalizing about Bryant is how close it comes to being seeable. Another foot or so of elevation and it would be beyond redemption save at tremendous cost. But it’s close. If you are just over six feet tall you can see over the top of the steps on the Avenue of the Americas, if you are five feet eleven inches you can get occasional glimpses along 42nd Street. Only for want of a few inches is it bidden from most people.

Bryant Park is so cut off from the street as to accentuate another defect. There is a very meager pedestrian flow through the park. The eastern and western steps on 42nd Street, for example, average only 540 and 480 people per hour respectively at lunch time. Again, this is the result of a definite design decision. Various recommendations made for paths to encourage pedestrian flow were rejected, it being felt that this would detract from the sanctuary aspect of the place. But we now know that healthy pedestrian flow is a great asset; it enhances the activities and acts as something of a magnet. Characteristically, the most favored places for sitting, reading, schmoozing, are apt to be athwart to the main pedestrian flow, rather than isolated from it.

For lack of openings, the long balustrades confine the walls and bar easy pedestrian flow; they also give the park a labyrinthine quality. It’s not an easy place to get out of in a hurry. You get a certain sense of entrapment here, and a shuffling wino coming at you poses a menace that be would not out on the street. On the attached plan note that in certain spots you have to take a very circuitous route to reach the street. This lack of easy exit has bad a definite effect on usage, and it is one of the reasons certain areas have been shunned.

Now let’s turn to the library. In contrast to Bryant Park, it has a good relation to the street. It is elevated from Fifth Avenue but in easy, inviting stages and the sidewalks functions as part of the over all space. The pedestrian flows on the sidewalk run around 4500 people per hour at lunchtime. As our timelapse studies demonstrate, even on days when the library is closed, any kind of event or attraction will quickly draw a big crowd from the street. On the upper terrace pedestrian flows are fairly meager. One reason is the gauntlet of dope-dealers almost permanently stationed on the northern end of the terrace. Another is the simple fact that access to the terrace from 42nd Street involves a complicated dogleg.

But the cardinal problem is that half of the upper terrace lies unused, sealed off by the privet hedges in front of the unused flood lights. This now functionless space is dark and gloomy.

william-h-whyte-bryant-park-report-library-schematic

Structural Recommendations

Bryant Park: with top priority to access along 42nd Street

  1. Remove the iron fences atop the walls.
  2. Remove the shrubbery.
  3. Open up access with new steps midway between the existing ones on 42nd Street. They should be inviting; broad and of an easy pitch. The broad steps on the Avenue of the Americas are a good model; a step or two too many, yes, but their low rises and long treads seem just right.
  4. Provide ramps for the handicapped. The new steps should have a ramp, and eventually there should be ramps on all sides of the park. As Andrew Heiskell bas suggested, there might be no better way to dramatize the issue of access. The handicapped can be helpful allies. In the campaign for new open space zoning they helped obtain easier steps, ramps, clearer pathways – i.e. easier access for everyone. And ramps are also useful in providing access for special maintenance equipment, such as vacuum trucks and snow plows.
  5. Open up access to the upper terrace with new steps. This could not only induce more pedestrian use, but provide an avenue vista that the design seems to call for but leaves unresolved. The upper terrace is the best used part of the park and changes here would he building on strength.
  6. Rehabilitate the restroom structures. There are several new uses they could be put to, such as a café adjunct. Revolutionary as it might seem now, it is possible the undesirables problem can be cleaned up enough that the structures can be considered for another much needed use: restrooms.
  7. Improve the visual access from the steps on Avenue of the Americas. This is the best, most inviting view of the park, but just out of sight. Bronson Binger wants to explore the possibility of raising the sidewalk level to open up the sight lines.
  8. Rehabilitate the fountain. When this territory is reclaimed, it should be a fine gathering place – like Bethesda has and can be, with flows and counter flows.
  9. Cut openings in the balustrades for easier pedestrian circulation within the park. Done well, the openings would look part of the original design and would not disturb the axial layout. The point would be to provide choices. People like short cuts. The more choices, the easier the flow.

Library

  1. Open up the terrace. Remove the privet hedges, the floodlights, and the trees at the rear; plant new trees on the front of the terrace. This is the recommendation of the landscape architects in the Cambridge Seven proposal. To the basics of it, Amen.
  2. Promote use of the terrace with chairs and tables and an attractive food facility.
  3. Clean the front of the It would be a grand thing to do in any event, but now there is particular reason. With the cleaning of Grand Central and the new amenities in the area there is going to be a dramatic transformation in the feel of the area. It would be great if the Library could anticipate this, and strengthen it, with its own clean up. Since it would be part of a larger effort to revitalize the area it would be no cosmetic move, but an act of affirmation.

There are a number of other projects to be considered: for one the proposed new entrance to the Library on 42d Street, with provisions for the handicapped.

This is fine, but could not some thought be given to a connection between Bryant Park and the rear of the Library? Obviously, the constraints are enormous now and the location of the stacks would seem to preclude any such entry. But must this always be so? Some imagination seems called for. Even trompe l’oeil would he better than the present bleak back the Library turns to the park.

The fountains on either side of the steps are splendid. The Cambridge Seven proposal bespeaks the restoration of their sound, effect, and ambiance, but put in no budget item for this. Is something in the works?

There are other worthwhile projects: cutting additional steps to provide through access from 42nd and 40th to the Library terrace; improvements to the constricted defile along the 42nd Street side of the Library.

What gives one pause is the enormous differential in costs between many of these projects and the basics that are called for. The basics are relatively inexpensive. Take the terrace. Of the $415,000 estimated in the Cambridge Seven proposal for the exterior, the basics of the terrace re-do come to $45,000. It’s the paving and the stone work that are the costly items – some $155,000 for the terrace re-do. Granite is great, but at $13 a square foot it does seem deferrable.

First things first. A few thousand dollars worth of chairs and tables and food facilities would do more to liven up the front than hundreds of thousands worth of marble and paving, And they can be immediate.

The experience of the Metropolitan Museum of Art is relevant. Its front space is inherently no more attractive than that of the Library, and the pedestrian flows on Fifth are lower there. But usage is much higher. At a time when there will be about a hundred people sitting in front of the Library, there will be three to four hundred or more at the Museum.

They are there because the Museum invited them there. Among other inducements, it puts out up to 200 movable chairs-and leaves them out 7 days a week, 24 hours a day. It finds it cheaper to buy replacements than cart them in and out every day. The museum welcomes musicians and entertainers. It does not ask cops to shoo away food vendors. It is a most congenial place and there are remarkably few problems of security or vandalism.

It could be argued that Fifth Avenue and 42nd is a much more difficult location and that a similarly hospitable approach wouldn’t work there. There is evidence quite to the contrary. A block nearer Times Square is the New York Telephone building. For several years after it was built nobody sat on its plaza. They couldn’t. There was no place to sit. But bums liked it and there would usually be one or two lying up against the sloping walls. After he became president of the company, the late John Mulhearn decided to liven things up by turning the Plaza into an outdoor cafe with movable chairs and tables and a food buffet. It was an immediate success, well used by employees and passersby. But not by the bums. As John Mulhearn was happy to note, the cafe proved the best of security measures. (Thought: it would be fitting indeed if one of the improvements to Bryant were named in his memory. He felt it highly salvageable.)

Programming

The Parks Council has drawn up an excellent set of proposals and is ready to provide the supervision to carry them out. They propose an upgrading of the present food concession, the possible addition of a cafe concession, flower and plant stalls, book carts and stalls, information and ticket booths. They plan to develop a schedule of entertainments, with particular attention to afternoon and evening performances to broaden the hours of use. They propose a full-scale marketing and promotion campaign to build a large constituency for the park in the surrounding area.

They also propose an activity that is generally left out of programming projects – evaluation. They want to have the changes and activities monitored to find out which work, which don’t, and what the lessons are for the next steps. Such evaluation will be equally important for the structural changes. Since they will be incremental there’s a great opportunity to learn from each step. People are very quick to show what works for them; through such techniques as time lapse photography, and direct, systematic observation the lessons can be quickly learned. If I may stick in a commercial for my colleagues, a group well qualified for such a task is the Project for Public Spaces.

There has been some apprehension that the structural work recommended may undercut and dilute support for the programming effort. It is more likely that it will strengthen it. While there has been no programming effort of the breadth the Parks Council is recommending, there have been some excellent programs in Bryant Park in the past. But they haven’t taken. The effect on park use has been transitory. While the band is playing, splendid. Lots of people. Few undesirables. Twenty minutes after the band has packed its instruments, they’re all hack. The place reverts. And it will continue to unless basic changes are made.

The improved access and stronger pedestrian flows that structural changes can bring about are crucial to the Programming attractions recommended. Bookstalls, for example. Who’s going to buy the books? As the experience at Grand Army Plaza has demonstrated, it takes time to build a market and strong pedestrian flows are vital. True, amenities like bookstalls and food kiosks help induce pedestrian flows. But there’s no need to get hung up on the chicken-or-egg argument. The structural improvements and the programming efforts should be concurrent, and they should be mutually supporting.

Maintenance

A good word is in order for the job being done by the Park Department people. Considering the odds they are working against, it is a very creditable one. But there are not enough of them; they lack first rate equipment. The addition of a small supplemental force would lead to significant improvement and there is an excellent precedent at hand.

At Madison Square Park Donald Simon bas set up, with Ford Foundation backing, a revitalization program. Operating as Urban Parks Plaza, his group bas enlisted the support of the neighboring business community in a program to make the park a safe, comfortable, and enjoyable place. One of the components is a small supplemental force to work with the park people and provide them specialized equipment and supplies. The program works and the park people are enthusiastic supporters.

For Bryant Park Simon proposes two additional service employees to work on weekdays from March to November; one man on weekends from April through October. The estimated budget includes $47,000 for personnel; $2,000 for supplies; $5,000 for overhead, and $12,000 for management and supervision.

There are economies of scale in a program which embraces several parks; availability of special equipment on a rotation basis, for example, such as vacuum trucks and motorized snow plows. Most important, management and supervision should be more effective on a joint basis. This would be all the more so if, as recommended below, a supplemental guard force is also included.

Policing

It is clear that there is a severe policing problem. But it is also clear that the police alone will not resolve it.

If a strong police presence were the answer, there would be no problem in front of us. Right now the police are all over the place. They walk up and down the pathways in Bryant. They stand at the entrances. They walk up and down in front of the Library. And so, just as obviously, do the dope dealers. In the films I’ve been taking of the activity you can usually see in the same scene both the cops and the dealers, the latter often openly soliciting trade as they go from person to person. Time lapse coverage of entrances indicates that dealers will move away when cops stand there, but as soon as they leave, it’s only a matter of minutes before the dealers are back.

To say this is not to denigrate the importance of police; they have plenty of-problems of their own – in the courts, the cumbersome processes of bringing anyone to book, and the like. Certainly they are necessary. There is a truly vicious element in the park and night will pose special dangers for a long time to come.

It is in order, then, to press for stronger police efforts and undoubtedly when a joint program is announced there will be a great flurry of police activity, vows to really crack down, and so on. These seem to come along in two or three year cycles and it’s time for another go.

But improvement of the policing of the park – in the broad sense of the term – will most likely be achieved by an increase in the number of full time regulars in the park. Most successful places have “mayors”; they can be building guards, maintenance people, people who run food concessions. They are familiar faces, a point in one’s journey, reassuringly there.

The most effective would be supplemental guards. They would operate much as do the uniformed guards of Rockefeller Center: friendly types who like to keep everything normal but who are in walkie-talkie communication with a security base and thence to the police. At Bryant Park it might be possible to tie in with the security set-ups of New York Telephone and the City University Graduate Center.

Initially, there could be two on duty for the March-November period; with, perhaps, additional guards for special occasions. Personnel costs would probably be in the range of $60-65,000. Management and supervision costs would be integrated with those for the supplemental maintenance people.

Choice of personnel for the various installations planned will be important. Their job is not fighting crime, but along with the guards and the maintenance men they will greatly affect people’s perception of crime – and that’s a big part of the battle.

Landmark Status

Bryant Park has been declared a landmark by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission. It has been assumed by a number of people that the Commission would consider structural changes such as we contemplate a violation and would not grant the necessary permit. I made an informal presentation of the possible changes to Commission Chairman Kent Barwick. He was most sympathetic; indeed, enthusiastic. It happens he has been a long time user of the park himself and is well aware of the isolation problem. He feels the changes proposed are a case of making a landmark more accessible. He feels the changes proposed are a case of making a landmark more accessible. He believes the other members of the commission might be positively disposed also, but emphasizes that it will be important to present the changes in the context of the full programming, maintenance, and policing effort.

Preservation groups should be sought as allies. The board of the New York Landmarks Conservancy, the leading private group, has been briefed on the proposals and responded affirmatively. Testimony by the members at the hearings should be most helpful.

The Case for Immediate Action

The funds needed for launching a broad program are relatively modest, and, indeed, could be justified as a hard-headed business investment that will be repaid many times over in a better employee environment, property values, and human values. The programming effort is estimated at about [blank space in original report]; the maintenance, security and supervision component, about $150,000. These efforts will probably stimulate the provision of many additional services in kind by the various sponsoring organizations.

The largest costs will be those of the physical rehabilitation of the park. But government funds should be available for this. Within several weeks it is likely that the Park Department will announce that it is embarking on a major capital improvement program for the revitalization of Bryant Park. The funds to be committed will be upwards of $[blank in original report] million dollars over a three year period. In addition to the changes discussed here, many other projects are under consideration for the long term. (Among them: a glass walled café proposed by Robert Zion for the fountain area).

Cranking up such a program will take time. In the meanwhile, there are high priority projects that do not require large sums and which ought to be undertaken now.

To recapitulate:

Library: Clean out the upper terrace and liven it up with amenities

Bryant Park: Remove the iron fences and shrubbery. Cut a new set of steps on 42nd St.

The Park Department has bad a budget of $400,000 for 1979-80 improvements for Bryant Park. Until recently, all of this was earmarked for rehabilitation work on existing features. As an earnest of its long range plans, the Park Department should consider allocating some of its current funds to the removal of the fences and shrubbery, along 42nd Street at least.

There is another possibility for immediate action. Why not go the permit route? If the design is in consonance with the Park Department’s plans, a donor can give a project directly: hire the designer, hire the contractor, and set his own deadlines. This procedure has cut the usual project time by a half or more and has been successfully used for the Delacorte sculpture in Central Park, fountains and the like.

If a corporation of the community or a consortium of them wanted to get things going a set of steps would be a high leverage gift. They don’t have to cost a great deal; the important thing is that they be broad and easy and they can be made this way in concrete as well as granite. And they can be made soon; if a good bead of steam is built up, by June first.

So many things are in place. Even the dope dealers are helping. If you went out and hired them you couldn’t get a more villainous crew to show the urgency of the situation. Most importantly, by a fortuitous set of circumstances some very good people are in most of the key spots – a constellation that was not in place several years ago. They understand the breadth of the problem and they are keen for action. It is a great moment to be seized.

 

from Aaron M. Renn
http://www.urbanophile.com/2016/10/12/william-h-whytes-original-plan-to-save-bryant-park/

A Conversation with the Urbanophile

In addition to hosting my own podcast, I’m also privileged to get to be a guest on other people’s shows from time to time. When I was in Austin, Texas a couple weeks ago for the launch of our City Journal special themed issue on Texas, I joined Ryan Streeter from the Center for Politics and Governance at the University of Texas in his studio for a podcast about my work. Our conversation is below. If the audio player doesn’t display for you, click over to listen on Soundcloud.

Subscribe to podcast via iTunes | Soundcloud.

from Aaron M. Renn
http://www.urbanophile.com/2016/10/11/a-conversation-with-the-urbanophile/

The Rival Future Visions of Peter Thiel and Scott Adams

Our mental model of the world shapes our behavior at fundamental levels in ways we often can’t even recognize. I was struck by this when reading two books almost back to back, Scott Adams’ How to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big and Peter Thiel’s Zero to One.

Both authors lay out a schema for modeling the future and how to behave relative to it, but come to very different conclusions.

Scott Adams, creator of the Dilbert comic strip, has a simple model: systems over goals. That is, it’s better to have a good system with high odds of success vs. setting a concrete goal and working towards it. In other words, get your lifestyle right when it comes to diet and exercise, don’t focus on losing X pounds to reach Y weight.

This strategy implies a single worldview axis: goals-systems, with a preferred end of the axis on which one should align his personal decision making.

Thiel, founder of PayPal, has a more formal framework, but adopts the same axis of decision making. In his case, he labels it definite-indefinite. He then combines this with an axis of optimist-pessimist to produce the following 2×2 matrix:

Peter Thiel future model matrix. Image via Will Price's Zero to One review.

Peter Thiel future model matrix. Image via Will Price’s Zero to One review.

Both Thiel and Adams are American, so reside in the top half of the chart, so let’s focus there. To Thiel, a goal is a definite view of the future. That is, you have an exact idea of what the future should be, and set about making it happen. A system would be an indefinite future. In this view, we can’t fundamentally control the future, so we put ourselves in the best position to benefit from the chance that comes our way.

Now these two don’t have perfect alignment. Adams’ systems are in many cases designed to achieve results that could be viewed as a goal (e.g., a ripped physique). Most of what Adams would call goals Thiel would still label indefinite because they present incremental improvement vs. revolutionary change (e.g., lose 15 pounds vs. “We chose to go to the moon.”)  But there’s a rough correspondence.

Adams, as we saw, comes down firmly on the indefinite/systems side of the equation. Thiel says that the would be startup founder should be in the definite/goals quadrant, and believes that part of the reason America has gone off course is that we’ve shifted from a definite to indefinite view of the future.

In the 1950s, people welcomed big plans and asked whether they would work. Today a grand plan coming from a schoolteacher would be dismissed as crankery, and a long-range vision coming from anyone more powerful would be derided as hubris.

In addition to his more formal framework for thinking about the future, Thiel also tries to explain why people like Adams have an indefinite view of the future:

But perhaps you can’t understand Malcolm Gladwell without understanding his historical context as a Boomer (born in 1963). When Baby Boomers grow up and write books to explain why one or another individual is successful, they point to the power of a particular individual’s context as determined by chance. But they miss the even bigger social context for their own preferred explanations: a whole generation learned from childhood to overrate the power of chance and underrate the importance of planning. Gladwell at first appears to be making a contrarian critique of the myth of the self-made businessman, but actually his own account encapsulates the conventional view of a generation.

Adams is a baby boomer, putting him squarely within this generational psychoanalysis.

Is one of the two right? I think it’s more complex than that, and in part comes down to what you want and what your temperament is.

Thiel obviously has gargantuan Silicon Valley ambitions and an ego to match. And he’s got over a billion dollars to show for it.

Adams’ success is much smaller scale – but still well into the millions of dollars, plus a significant amount of fame. He appears to be fully satisfied with his life.

So at the individual level, you can succeed either way. At a societal level, Thiel may have a point, though Robert Gordon and others posit different explanations for the economic growth slowdown.

In any case, the key is that how you think about the future, particularly the degree to which one can shape the future, determines a lot about the strategies you are going to use for your life. On the one hand perhaps a concentrated bet and effort to sculpt the future. On the other a more open or diversified strategy to try get the best result in in uncertain future. (I should note that Thiel says this kind of diversification is a myth, saying, “Life is not a portfolio”).

I also recently read and reviewed Antifragile by Nassim Taleb. While I’m not familiar with his full corpus, his high view of randomness suggests that he’s favors a more Adams-like approach. He advocates that people should adopt what he calls a “barbell” strategy. That is, on one end you try to derisk your core life as much as possible. And on the other you place multiple, small, high risk bets with a chance of a significant payoff. This sounds like a system to me. On the other hand, Taleb also says that entrepreneurs who risk the definite should be treated with honor as heroes, even if they fail.

In any case, it’s worth thinking about how we view the future. Is it something that’s primarily within our control or something that’s more dominated by outside forces or even chance? How we answer that question will determine a lot about how we go about living our lives.

from Aaron M. Renn
http://www.urbanophile.com/2016/10/06/the-rival-future-visions-of-peter-thiel-and-scott-adams/

The Places Where We Work

Scene from Workplace. Image via film announcement page on Hustwit's site.

Scene from Workplace. Image via film announcement page on Hustwit’s site.

Gary Hustwit is a New York based filmmaker known for his various documentaries on design, including Helvetica, Objectified, Urbanized, and a forthcoming documentary on legendary Braun designer Dieter Rams (a project I backed on Kickstarter).

I really liked Helvetica, which told the story of typography through the lens of that ubiquitous font.  Objectified I have not seen, but I did see Urbanized and gave it a pretty tough review.

Hustwit’s current project is a film called Workspace about the design of the office. This is a bit of an unusual project. It was originally a corporate documentary, commissioned by the digital agency R/GA to document the process of designing and building its new New York headquarters in collaboration with the New York office of Foster+Partners.

R/GA started as a computer aided film making company in the 1970s and has worked on over 400 feature films. The company, still headed by co-founder Bob Greenberg, has changed its business model every nine years, morphing into a major global digital agency that’s part of IPG. But with Greenberg’s and R/GA’s heritage in film, they clearly still understand the power of film and what it can do for their own brand.

R/GA’s goal for the new office space was to blend the physical and digital in a way that highlights their professional expertise such that the office itself would become a part of their portfolio to use in selling themselves to clients. In that regard, commissioning the film was likely an unstated part of this strategy of showcasing their own marketing savvy.

Hustwit took the resulting project and updated it into a relatively short (77 minute) feature-length documentary for the Venice Architecture Biennale. He kept the R/GA office build as a spine, and added to it shorter segments about Gensler’s design for Etsy’s Brooklyn HQ and Studio O+A’s design for Yelp’s HQ in San Francisco, along with talking head segments from Nikil Saval, author of the book Cubed: A Secret History of the Workplace.

The result is a smaller scale and less ambitious effort than Helvetica or Urbanized, but perhaps because of that is largely successful. Helvetica succeeded in part because the use of that typeface provided a spine or anchor that helped give a sense of coherence to the whole, despise the vastly divergent topics discussed. Urbanized, by contrast, lacked such a central axis and so did not hold together nearly as well.

Because Workplace is primarily a documentary about R/GA’s office project, this allows the supplementary material on the history of office design and the other building projects to fall into place as natural complements that offer needed variety.

I saw the film with someone who spent several years overseeing construction projects. She didn’t feel the film really gave us insights into the design and construction process. There is something to this. Much of the up front segments are sort of general, conceptual discussions. The actual mechanics of the designs, creation of the construction documents, etc. are largely skipped over.

I saw this film at New York’s Architecture and Design Film Festival. Hustwit was there and talked to the audience briefly before and after. He talked about the challenges of filming a project like this, where there was 100 times as much footage shot as included in the final product. He had to choose what to show, and inevitably some aspects would get short changed. In this case he, probably wisely, chose to leave out a lot of technical and production work. But he does manage to give a least a mention of the various stages of this (client discussions, concepts and drawings, models, construction documents, permitting, furniture selection, timeline and budget considerations, etc).

On the whole it was an enjoyable, smaller scale work. What will become of it is unclear. I’m not certain if this will actually get distribution. The film is not even listed on IMDB. Is it the property of R/GA somehow? Hustwit’s web site suggests limited screenings plus a “global internet release,” so all I can say is keep an eye out for it.

Also at the screening were people from Gensler, Studio O+A, and R/GA. One question the moderator asked is something I think merits more study (or exposure to existing work). He said that the super-cool open office concept originated on the West Coast, then asked how the East Coast varieties differed. The most interesting response came from the woman from Gensler. She said that New York had a more vertical and neighborhood integrated concept of design, whereas the West Coast orientation was more horizontal. I gather that she had in mind projects like Apple’s HQ. That was an interesting framing, and I wouldn’t mind reading more that contrasted coastal styles in office space design, and how things might be changing in the Bay Area with the rise of city tech in San Francisco.

The film also highlighted some other interesting things.  R/GA, hardly a household name as a company, employs 950 people in New York. It’s one of many high value companies in NYC that many people have never heard of, but which collectively employ huge numbers of people. These are in industries that basically don’t exist in other cities, or which exist almost entirely to support the local market. These are the kinds of producer services that power the global city economy.

Another point is that R/GA CEO Greenberg appears to see Google as his competition, not just other ad agencies. In the film he was worried that Google would snap up the office space he hoped to rent. And in an appearance with Hustwit in Venice, he talked about his office space as part of his battle with Google (which he says plans to add 4,000 new NYC employees in the next couple years) for talent.

As a tech powered digital agency, it’s obvious that Google is a competitor for talent. But Greenberg is very right to be thinking about non-traditional competitors and the danger tech giants pose to established industries. He does not underestimate the ambition of Silicon Valley to take over everything.

R/GA’s new offices appear to be at 450 W. 33rd St.  This is on 10th Ave. not far from the new 7-train stop at Hudson Yards. While the location is walkable from Penn Station and the 7th and 8th Ave. subways, it would appear that the 7-train extension is already helping fuel more redevelopment in the area, including this building, whose owner undertook its own major renovation work.

What about the actual design of R/GA’s new offices, then? I haven’t been there, but from the film we can see that it’s a large, mostly open floor plan space, done in a high tech, mostly white scheme. Their goal was to showcase technology, and some of what they built has to be experienced to be judged (e.g., their bluetooth enabled app that provides context specific information depending on where you are). They hung a number of angled screens from the ceiling, giving it a sort of “mission control” feel, at least in the main entry area of it. R/GA is obviously pleased with it, since Bob Greenberg and others continue to participate in the promotion of the film. So from the ultimate perspective of client satisfaction, it appears to be a winner.

from Aaron M. Renn
http://www.urbanophile.com/2016/10/04/the-places-where-we-work/

Carnegie Deli and Other Bad New York Restaurants

Photo Credit: Jtmichcock CC BY-SA 3.0

Photo Credit: Jtmichcock CC BY-SA 3.0

When you’re a kid, there are certain cartoons you just love. That love remains over time as your warmly think back on childhood memories. It lasts, that is, until you foolishly go back and watch an episode of two of a favorite show, what which point you say, “Holy cow! That show is terrible.”

I was thinking of this as I read the surprisingly large press that greeted the news that New York’s Carnegie Deli will be closing. It even made the front page of the Financial Times print edition this weekend.

About 10 or 15 years ago I decided to go check Carnegie Deli out. The food was awful.

I couldn’t finish my sandwich – not because it was so big, but because it was so bad.

As all these old line NYC businesses go under one by one, replaced by something suitably gentrified, everybody is bemoaning the loss of places they used to patronize over the years.

What you don’t get from reading these is just how terrible most of these businesses actually were.

Carnegie Deli was a case in point. When’s the last time your average New Yorker actually ate there? How much of this sentimental attachment to these places comes from people who used to go them long ago but never patronize them anymore building them up in their minds the way we build up our childhood cartoons? A lot, I suspect.

Not every genre of old-school NYC business is bad. The hardware stores I’ve been in have been solid. But restaurants in particular are mostly awful.

Crain’s New York did a big piece on the disappearance of the New York diner. There’s a reason for this. Diners in New York are horrible, at least the ones in Manhattan. I’ve never once been to a good one – and I keep trying new ones. My benchmark dish is the turkey club. In Manhattan the turkey is invariably so dry I can’t finish it, even with a glass or two of water. (The outer boroughs may fare better. I’ve had great diner food on Staten Island, for example).

I don’t have the sentimental attachment to these places because I’m a newcomer to the city. I would still love to see places like Carnegie Deli survive, but ultimately the quality is just not there.

These places are failing the marketplace test, not just because of rising rents, but because they are selling a product that might have worked in the 1970s but is no longer up to par in the 21st century.

from Aaron M. Renn
http://www.urbanophile.com/2016/10/03/carnegie-deli-and-other-bad-new-york-restaurants/