Slate.com Finally Recognizes Challenge of Atlantic Yards
Finally, a unit of the national media recognizes the national significance of the dispute about what Frank Gehry wants to do at "Atlantic Yards." Finally, on Monday, June 19, Slate.com published Brooklyn novelist Jonathan Lethem's long piece
called Brooklyn's Trojan Horse: What's wrong with the buildings Frank Gehry wants to put in my neighborhood. Like architectural historian Francis Morrone, who wrote the matchless piece "Vanishing Vistas" about "Atlantic Yards," Lethem is a member of the advisory board of Develop--Don't Destroy Brooklyn, the umbrella group for AY opponents. The Supreme Court's recent Kelo case already demonstrates that irreparable harm under the flag of economic development continues to threaten not just Brooklyn but local communities nation-wide. The "Atlantic Yards" issues, the Gehry-in-Brooklyn issues, are national issues.
Lethem writes to Frank Gehry, as one artist to another, or one citizen to another, about: "the ill-conceived and out-of-scale flotilla of skyscrapers you propose to build on a series of sites between Atlantic Avenue and Dean Street in Brooklyn, in your partnership with a developer named Bruce Ratner and his firm, Forest City Ratner Companies." Citing Brooklyn architect Jonathan Cohn's eloquent blogpost titled It's the Scale, Stupid, Lethem writes:
The primary objection to your project always was, and always will be, its outlandish disproportion to the neighborhoods around it. None of the array of low-scale, largely residential communities directly adjacent to this proposed "neighborhood from scratch" (your words) want or need such an intrusion. Residents have been enticed with goodies: major-league sports in Brooklyn, housing at a variety of income levels, an influx of jobs. Yet in this case, none of the carrots that have been dangled are worth it—or, necessarily, realistic. I think it is standard operating procedure with these megadevelopments for the developers wildly to exaggerate the economic development potential of their projects. Lethem cites Cohn's attacks on the alleged numbers of jobs and other economic benefits for "Atlantic Yards." The wonderful blog Atlantic Yards Report does beautiful work on the "jobs" claims today. When do these huge projects ever result in long-term economic development? One thing I believe about Kelo is that the Supreme Court must have believed that huge projects really do create net long-term economic gain. On the contrary, I think these projects, at best, really just move economic activity from one place to another.
Lethem urges Gehry to act in a manner consistent with his own announced artistic principles and walk away from the project.
There is an active debate on Lethem's essay on the message board on Slate. Please read his piece and then join in.
More will be revealed.
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