t byfield on Wed, 24 Jul 2002 14:16:29 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Reconstruction Report: 7/11 - 8/11 -- Questions |
[what follows is an essay from the first issue of a project i'm working on, _reconstruction report_, dealing with the redevelopment of the WTC site and, more generally, lower manhattan: <http://reconstructionreport.org/>. the essay appeared in a micro-newspaper distributed at the 20 july 'listening to the city' spectacle, whose stated purpose was to elicit public input into redevelopment plans. despite tight strictures on distributing non-official material, we circulated ~1700 copies among 5000 people -- who then were randomly broken up into 10-person discussion tables for the next ~7 hours. happily, the main result of the event was a nearly unanimous rejection of the perpetuation of pre-9/11 commercial leases on the WTC site. a small but good start. misc nettimers (in or around sydney, athens, nagano, calgary, sarajevo, salt lake city, turin, mexico city, etc, etc) might be interested in what, for them, is a familiar saga: the deus ex machina of an olympic bid sponsored by local elites as a means to reengineer the urban fabric for private gain. in months of talks with urban planners and activists in NYC, i've found only a handful of people who grok the Big Picture -- which is alluded to in this essay. this project is funded by the design trust for public space, with additional support from the new school university and the united nations university. kudos to openflows.org for technical implementation and to thing.net for hosting. the slash site _rr_ runs on also hosts slash.thing.net and, soon, might host icannwatch as well. subscriptions to the paper edition of _rr_ are *free*: mail me and i'll sign you up. and if you know of any non-nettimer who have an interest in these issues, please pass this mail along. -- cheers, t] 7/11 - 8/11: Questions Through much of this spring, various elected and appointed New York officials insisted that there was an "emerging consensus" on how to redevelop the former World Trade Center site. Too often, they put more energy into declaring that such a consensus existed than into explaining what supposedly was agreed on. To arrive at a consensus, you first ask questions; and the answers you get depend, in part, on the questions you ask. If you ask someone from the metro area "What should happen at the WTC site?", the answer will probably sound more or less like the LMDC's *Principles and Preliminary Blueprint*: an inclusive and open planning process leading to an idealistic mix with something for everyone. But if you ask the same person "Should the site be rebuilt to give the WTC's two leaseholders everything they expected, like 9/11 never happened?", the answer will probably be *very* different. Yet that latter question fueled *three* of the Port Authority's ten "program elements" -- requirements -- "for onsite development" of the site. As a result, all six "concept plans" produced by the PA and LMDC include 11 million square feet for offices, 600,000 ("or more") for retail, and a 600,000-square-foot hotel. These numbers won't be found in the recommendations of public-interest coalitions such as the Civic Alliance, New York New Visions, Imagine New York, or R.Dot. They're based on the leases the PA signed with Larry Silverstein's investment group for the twin towers, and with Westfield America for the retail area beneath them. (In fact, the proposed retail area includes 170,000 square feet that Westfield *hoped* to build on the WTC plaza.) Even people close to the planning process were surprised to learn so belatedly that the PA was treating these private claims as equal to public desires. Worse, in explaining the planning concepts, the PA insists -- falsely -- that "legal obligations" prevent it from changing the original terms of the leases. Given the City's bleak economic prospects, the PA has good reason to be financially conservative, and ensuring strong revenues from the site is *one* way to do that. The PA could have -- should have -- made that argument to the public. Instead, it has tried to hide behind the skirts of Silverstein and Westfield, while offering dubious black-and-white choices between $120 million per year[1] (the pre-9/11 lease payments) or nothing. [1] http://reconstructionreport.org/article.pl?sid=02/05/06/1743249 But the problem isn't just that the PA and LMDC have failed, despite many promises, to act with openness and transparency. For all the shock and sorrow of the World Trade Center attacks, the blossoming of committed public engagement that followed was more than a silver lining: it prompted civic debates not heard for decades and held forth the possibility of breaking some political gridlock. But the business-as- usual approach taken by the PA and the LMDC runs a very serious risk of squandering this opportunity for innovation -- in exchange for a banal result. More specifically, the PA's and LMDC's design and planning program demotes key issues the public felt very strongly about, such as design excellence and sustainability, to a laundry list of "other programming considerations." And other points on which there *definitely* is a broad consensus -- for example, the need for an international design competition -- are mentioned only in passing as nice possibilities. If this is where we stand at the end of Phase One of the redevelopment process, we should be *seriously* concerned about where Phases Two and Three might lead. The PA and the LMDC have done some extraordinary work, but to date what little openness we've seen in the planning process has mainly been a one-way street of press releases, carefully choreographed presentations, and unaccountable assurances that officials are "listening." And even the supposed cure for these shortcomings, the NYC Economic Development Corporation's hiring of a PR team to publicize redevelopment-related information, seems imbalanced[2]: the contract was awarded to a two-company team that includes a subsidiary of Parsons Brinckerhoff, Beyer Blinder Belle's urban-planning partner, and was announced with a whisper late in the afternoon before the July 4th weekend. [2] http://reconstructionreport.org/article.pl?sid=02/07/08/2047200 There's good reason to pay close attention to the redevelopment process in any case, but it's now becoming clear how much more transparency is needed. Unfortunately, transparency is rarely given freely; so those concerned with the redevelopment of Lower Manhattan need to be *much* more actively vigilant. To date, neither the LMDC nor the PA has released any of the environmental, land-use, or fiscal studies that, one hopes, support the six concept plans they've published. The LMDC holds weekly meetings, but as of this writing it has only published the minutes -- ccompletely schematic summaries -- of just five meetings, the most recent on April 9th. The disappointing results of Phase One make plain that the PA and LMDC have failed to understand or articulate some of the deeper challenges posed by this redevelopment. In a way, that's understandable: it's hard to fathom how a sixteen-acre site hemmed in by dense urban fabric could support such a symbolic burden. If it can't, then the problem becomes what can be achieved on the site within the larger context of the City and metro region. Even if the PA's supposed legal obligations to Silverstein and Westfield are justified, it's fair to ask whether the "right" to rebuild is tied to the former WTC site. But now that the six concepts have been presented for public response, we can by the same logic ask whether certain elements really need to be rebuilt on or even near the WTC site. Take, for example, the broadcast tower lost when the north WTC building collapsed. All six PA/LMDC concept plans (one "contributed by" Silverstein's architects, Owings Skidmore and Merrill[3]) clearly include a broadcast tower. Jack Beyer of Beyer Blinder Belle insistently described some of them as "sculptural" elements "to create height" instead of frankly stating what they are. On the other hand, in early June, a consortium of New York and New Jersey broadcasters "unveiled" an 1,800-foot broadcast tower proposed for Governor's Island or Jersey City -- the very same design they had unveiled two months earlier as the "NYTTower/NYC 2012"[4] at a convention in Las Vegas. These kinds of evasions about such an immense environmental and aesthetic presence are completely unacceptable. [3] http://reconstructionreport.org/article.pl?sid=02/06/07/192237 [4] http://reconstructionreport.org/article.pl?sid=02/06/05/0529207 At the other extreme, there is strong consensus support for a transportation hub. One element common to all six concept plans is an "intermodal" transportation complex. However, the concept documents are very vague about which modes are involved. Train-to-bus transfers hardly merit the name "intermodal," and the renderings clearly show that ferries are a key element ("an absolute given," according to LMDC boardmember Roland Betts). Expansion of ferry services would be excellent for the city and the region, but any integration of private ferry operators such as New York Waterway into metro transportation systems or planning initiatives such as NYC2012's "Olympic X" *must* be made accountable to the public. Unfortunately, accountability can move slowly, but some events are bearing down on us *very* quickly. On November 3rd, Marathon Day, the U.S. Olympic Committee will announce whether New York is America's candidate for the Olympic games. If so, the surge of developments around the city will inevitably become tangled up with, at the very least, any intermodal transportation project downtown. One of the USOC's twelve- member Bid Evaluation Task Force is Roland Betts, LMDC boardmember and Chelsea Piers owner. NYC2012, the private company spearheading the City's bid (including a showcase stadium[5] near Chelsea Piers), was founded and headed up by Dan Doctoroff, now Deputy Mayor of Economic Development and Rebuilding. NYC2012's urban planner is Alex Garvin -- planner for the LMDC and a member of the City Planning Commission. These overlapping and possibly contradictory roles can't be ignored, and assurances of personal integrity aren't enough; possible conflicts of interest need to be made public and addressed promptly. [5] http://reconstructionreport.org/article.pl?sid=02/07/14/0239245 Two days after the USOC's "decision day" comes the gubernatorial election. Already, imagined electoral pressures have led various politicians to grandstand on redevelopment issues. There's every reason to think that this tendency will worsen as the election rolls on. Amidst this all -- that is, in *five months* -- the PA and the LMDC hope to complete a coherent redevelopment plan worthy of a historical turning point, worthy of one of the world's great cities, and worthy of tremendous public commitment. As they flesh out plans for each component project, the rising costs will collide with sharply escalating fiscal concerns. These concerns are without doubt one of the forces driving the PA and the LMDC to give pride of place to Silverstein and Westfield, who are entitled to hefty insurance payments when construction begins. But those funds are locked in fierce litigation that could potentially drag on for years. In turning to these private parties, redevelopment authorities are turning away from a much broader public. It's our task now to turn them back. Doing so involves more than participating in isolated "events" and contributing "input." More than anything else, what's needed now are commitments from the PA and the LMDC not just to "listen" but to abide by the public will. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net