Jane Jacobs Dies at 89
Jane Jacobs, the great urbanist, community activist and economist, died yesterday in Toronto at the age of 89. She was an original thinker and a marvelous writer, and she was also a community activist.
We owe to Jane Jacobs her pathbreaking books, starting with Death and Life of the Great American Cities, published in 1961. As Joseph Sternberg writes in today's New York Sun, Jacobs "struck a blow agains the forces that favored grand scale and modernist aesthetics over livability in urban life." Jane Jacobs knew and loved neighborhood streets with their messy vitality and their crowded sidewalks. She knew that great businesses grow out of lively, often disorganized, small ones. She wrote about cities, she wrote about economics, she wrote about political philosophy. She was always attentive to facts and nuance. She was never superficial. She was always original. She led protests against the depredations of Robert Moses, who failed to respect Washington Square Park and who planned a highway across SoHo. She was a devoted wife and the mother of three. Along many of the parameters against which human beings must measure themselves, Jane Jacobs was a person of huge achievement. She was indeed great.
In an era when married women were looked down on as mere housewives, and when city planners despised suggestions from any untrained meddler, Jane Jacobs did not count as an author. She counted as a married woman without formal training as a city planner. Architecture critic Lewis Mumford dismissed her as "Mrs. Jacobs." Throughout her long career as a thinker and community leader she was to continue displaying the strength of character that sustained her in those earliest battles. Nor was she in fact unqualified. She had studied her subject for years, she had already published detailed and lively articles about city life, she had served as an editor of a leading architectural journal. To her critics, however, Jane Jacobs was just a housewife. She held her ground. As one civic leader was to observe of her many years later, "A sweet little old lady she is not."
Where are the voices for reason in urban planning today? Scattered and suppressed. Just as Robert Moses ruptured the City with housing projects, or as Jacobs called them, "vertical slums," Michael Bloomberg today pieces out the boroughs to developers of shopping malls and bribes politically rancorous groups with so-called Community Benefits Agreements. Who in New York City today can speak as loudly as Jacobs against him? Bloomberg's projects certainly have local opponents, but they are scattered in the boroughs, and there is no Jane Jacobs. There is no one with the writing credentials she had who also has the same access to a publication she is editing or to a publisher, like Jacobs's Epstein of Random House, who stands behind her in publishing the truth. The money and the power are all on the other side. Even with such obvious vandalism as Bruce Ratner's gigantic Atlantic Yards project, which will bulldoze living neighborhoods in Brooklyn and distort that borough's unique scale, only architecture critic Francis Morrone has both the credentials and the courage that are needed to speak truth to power. New York City's newspapers not only support the Mayor's destructive projects, they refuse to publish opposing opinions. If the architectural establishment lifts its finger, it is to sense the wind of the next commission. Too many local groups are on the CBA pad.
Never did we have a greater need to re-read Jane Jacobs.
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