The rise & fall of New Left urbanism
The pillars of the 鈥渦rban renewal order,鈥 shorthand for an interlocking set of social policies since the 1940s, were crumbling fast by the 1960s. Urban populations, especially in Western Europe, the United States, and Canada, suddenly no longer wanted the variety of once progressive-minded public programs it encompassed: highways through cities, demolitions aimed at clearing 鈥渂lighted鈥 or 鈥済ray鈥 areas, redevelopment for public housing superblocks and other megaprojects. A slum in the eyes of a planner, it turned out, was often a resident鈥檚 cherished homestead, and soon proponents of the City of Tomorrow ran up against increasing opposition. The fall of the urban renewal order was driven from below, to be sure; but the ideology of this grassroots uprising was not clearly drawn from the traditional left or right. Yet in its wake opened a fleeting conceptual space, where the fate of urban planning and policy鈥揺ven urban life in general鈥揷ould be debated and reconsidered, sometimes quite radically.
Striking experiments in citizen participation, or 鈥渁dvocacy planning,鈥 took root in Anglo-American urbanism in the 1960s and 1970s, often in the very neighborhoods that were threatened by 鈥渢he federal bulldozer.鈥 In districts like London鈥檚 Covent Garden, Toronto鈥檚 St. Lawrence Neighborhood, and New York鈥檚 West Village, citizens attempted to make city planning鈥揳nd by extension urban life鈥搈ore democratic and equitable, putting forward their own proposals to counter the sweeping urban renewal plans imposed by government or private developers. Each of the counterproposals, while not always successfully realized, experimented with alternative methods of meeting urban challenges鈥 mobility, preservation, growth, affordability, and upgrading鈥揳nd embodied the aspirations and ideals of residents who couldn鈥檛 be easily ignored. Such residents rejected the authority of supposedly impartial experts and liberal policymakers, whose pursuit of modernization in the 鈥減ublic interest鈥 seemed to come at the expense of urban neighborhoods.
Ad hoc grassroots organizing proved effective in stopping highway plans, 鈥渟lum鈥 clearance proposals, and redevelopment schemes. But such victories posed a follow-up question: must popular mobilization be only reactive? In other words, couldn鈥檛 cities also be planned from the grassroots? At a time when the New Left was championing the idea that 鈥渢he people with the problems are the people with the solutions,鈥 an emergent 鈥淣ew Left urbanism鈥 embodied hopes (in the end fleeting) for urban renewal with a humane face.
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