Two Good Reasons to Oppose Letting Big Boxes into New York City Without Legal Constraints
On Big Cities Big Boxes, I argue the conservative position against untrammeled entry of the big boxes into New York City. This post presents two main arguments that if the big boxes are to come into the city, we should insist that they act like New York City businesses. Otherwise, I think, our uniquely creative, transit-oriented, neighborhood-oriented, walkable, way of life, in which small shops set immigrants on the escalator to the middle class, and in which our 400 neighborhood high streets are among the city's chief amenities, will be destroyed. For another conservative view in opposition to the big boxes, see Professor Bainbridge.
One key argument. Automobile-dependency, which many Americans take for granted because they are not New Yorkers, is in fact inconsistent with the traditions of New York City. In response to posts on the City Comforts blog, here, I wrote roughly as follows. In Manhattan, where I live, 78 per cent of the households do not own a car. The big boxes, however, are inherently automobile-dependent, not just because each one normally--there are obviously a few in-city exceptions--sits in 10 or more land-blighting acres of asphalt parking lot, but because each one is stocked by 18-wheelers on computerized schedules demanding numerous tractor-trailer trips per day, and because each one not only takes up so
much space, but has such a damaging effect on local retail, that consumers eventually have to buy a car in order to shop for daily necessities. As numerous economists have demonstrated, once the big boxes arrive, local shopping districts die.
A second key point. Whatever they think about socialism in other connections, I think that not many New Yorkers would agree with David Sucher on City Comforts that we should substitute the big boxes,' or the socialists,' economic efficiency for New York's bustling economy. Contrasting Manchester with Birmingham, Jane Jacobs in fact demonstrated long ago that maximal urban creativity and productivity are incompatible with efficiency. New York is a fast-moving, creative, entrepreneureal place, where most businesses are small businesses, feeding one another, originating and supplying new needs at a rapid pace, all doubtless very, very inefficiently. For New York to adopt the big-box efficiency that some people admire as a model would mean the end of the New York way of life, of what New Yorkers value here and, if Jacobs is right, of New York productivity.
My piece "Ten (10) Reasons to Oppose Ikea-Red Hook," covers city-planning as well as economic issues related to the proposed Ikea store in Red Hook, Brooklyn. It appears in the left-hand column of the home page, at Big Cities Big Boxes. As to the false promise of jobs, look at my op-ed, which originally appeared in Newsday, Superstores Come With Too High a Price. My analysis of the debate that the New York Daily News published on Sunday, September 4, appears here.
Now the debate has begun. The aim of this blog, Big Cities Big Boxes, is to provide a useful resource to all debaters of good will.
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