PD Smith

Ghetto at the Center of the World

17 November 2011 | cities, Reviewing

“I seek in this book to cel­e­brate Chungk­ing Man­sions in its extra­or­di­nary and large­ly har­mo­nious cul­tur­al diver­si­ty. It is an amaz­ing place, one that should be laud­ed in Hong Kong and the world over.”

My review of Gor­don Math­ews’ fas­ci­nat­ing book Ghet­to at the Cen­ter of the World: Chungk­ing Man­sions, Hong Kong is in this week’s TLS. You can read it online here.

The Trouble with City Planning

12 November 2011 | cities, Reviewing, urban planning | One comment

Kristi­na Ford was direc­tor of city plan­ning in New Orleans for eight years before Hur­ri­cane Kat­ri­na swept across the Big Easy in 2005, bring­ing floods and dev­as­ta­tion on a scale unpar­al­leled in an Amer­i­can city in mod­ern times. Accord­ing to Ford, the hur­ri­cane was an oppor­tu­ni­ty for city plan­ners to do the job they were trained for: “to devise how to use the city’s lands more to the city’s bet­ter­ment.” But this didn’t hap­pen.

Ford’s The Trou­ble with City Plan­ning: What New Orleans Can Teach Us (Yale, £18.00) is a detailed and insight­ful analy­sis of what went wrong and a blue­print for how city plan­ning can be improved in all cities. Cities are con­stant­ly chang­ing and the way land is used impacts the lives of every city dweller. In post-Kat­ri­na New Orleans there was a “bliz­zard of plan­ning”. There were at least five dif­fer­ent plans in all, but the process was chaot­ic and the results large­ly ignored by the city’s elect­ed lead­ers. They also failed to address the thorny his­tor­i­cal issue of why peo­ple (large­ly poor African Amer­i­cans) were liv­ing in areas – such as the Low­er Ninth Ward – which were vul­ner­a­ble to flood­ing. As Ford says, “any street that appeared on a map of New Orleans drawn in the nine­teenth century…probably did not flood”. Plan­ning deci­sions made in the ear­ly twen­ti­eth cen­tu­ry placed too much faith in the pow­er of tech­nol­o­gy to pro­tect new res­i­den­tial areas. And impor­tant­ly no attempt was made in the post-Kat­ri­na pans to explore, let alone explain, these deci­sions.

Accord­ing to Ford, even today “a plan for rebuild­ing New Orleans still remains a most elu­sive goal”. But the expe­ri­ences of the res­i­dents of New Orleans cast light on the trou­ble with con­tem­po­rary urban plan­ning through­out Amer­i­ca. Ford wants to put city dwellers back at the heart of urban plan­ning: good plans “are made with cit­i­zens and are meant to be used by them”. For a start she wants plans to be writ­ten in plain Eng­lish rather than jar­gon and to incor­po­rate not just facts but people’s expe­ri­ences of how they use the city, what they love and hate about the city, what prob­lems need to be solved and what kind of city they want in the future. Plan­ners need to lis­ten more to the peo­ple who live and work in the city. When she was a New Orleans city plan­ner res­i­dents of New Orleans told Ford that their pri­or­i­ties were easy access to the ameni­ties of the city, neigh­bour­hoods with a strong sense of com­mu­ni­ty, street­cars and cycle lanes. These are the kinds of views that should be at the cen­tre of a city’s plan, argues Ford. A good plan should be “an expres­sion of how the cit­i­zen­ry, work­ing with city plan­ners, believes a city could be made bet­ter”. At the heart of her argu­ment is an impor­tant point that is often over­looked: cities are first and fore­most human envi­ron­ments, not dis­play cas­es for archi­tec­ture.

Ford argues pas­sion­ate­ly that plans need to be “robust and sup­ple doc­u­ments”, which include the voic­es of city dwellers, and are “root­ed in his­to­ry”. She acknowl­edges that the plan­ning process is as much an art as it is a sci­ence. There is even room for serendip­i­ty: “A Good City Plan acknowl­edges that what enlivens any city is fre­quent­ly the prod­uct of the unex­pect­ed.” But as well as lis­ten­ing to the voic­es of res­i­dents, she is also reassert­ing the vital role plan­ners must play in cre­at­ing tomorrow’s cities: “what city plan­ners know is essen­tial to great cities”. By reform­ing the way city plans are cre­at­ed, Ford believes “the trou­ble with city plan­ning” can be over­come. As a result may­ors will be oblig­ed to use city plans rather than polit­i­cal expe­di­en­cy as the basis for plan­ning deci­sions. Ford’s ide­al­ism is cer­tain­ly inspir­ing but this is an ide­al­ism ground­ed in a prac­ti­cal under­stand­ing of the chal­lenges of city plan­ning. And in the end, it is this that makes her book so valu­able for cities and cit­i­zens every­where.

[NB. This is a longer ver­sion of my review pub­lished in the Guardian on 12 Novem­ber 2011.]

Jane Jacobs and the Future of the City

08 November 2011 | cities, City

I shall be tak­ing part in a pan­el dis­cus­sion on “Jane Jacobs and the Future of the City” at the Bris­tol Fes­ti­val of Ideas on 3 Decem­ber, togeth­er with Geoff Dyer, Anna Mans­field, and Ben Rogers. More details and book­ing infor­ma­tion here. Should be inter­est­ing. See you there!

Sentient City

14 October 2011 | cities, Reviewing

My review of Sen­tient City: Ubiq­ui­tous Com­put­ing, Archi­tec­ture, and the Future of Urban Space, which appeared in Sep­tem­ber’s Icon mag­a­zine, is now online here. It’s a fas­ci­nat­ing col­lec­tion of essays and spec­u­la­tions about the city of the future.

As the book’s edi­tor Mark Shep­hard says, we are “on the cusp of a near-future city capa­ble of reflex­ive­ly mon­i­tor­ing its envi­ron­ment and our behav­iour with­in it, becom­ing an active agent in the orga­ni­za­tion of every­day life.”

Enchanted Ground

23 July 2011 | cities, London, Reviewing


Thomas Row­land­son’s famous image of Vaux­hall Gar­dens, depict­ing some of the celebri­ties of the day who vis­it­ed the gar­dens to enjoy the music, fresh air and (as one per­son put it) the “strum­pets”. David Coke and Alan Borg have just writ­ten a won­der­ful­ly illus­trat­ed and engag­ing his­to­ry of Vaux­hall Gar­dens, which I’ve reviewed for today’s Guardian:

‘It must have been a tru­ly mag­i­cal expe­ri­ence to wan­der through the gar­dens at night, along tree-lined grav­el walks, with bird-song and music in the air and light from the 20,000 oil-lamps twin­kling among the branch­es (William Wordsworth, who vis­it­ed aged 18, was struck by the “wilder­ness of lamps / Dim­ming the stars”). For 18th-cen­tu­ry Lon­don­ers, it must have seemed like step­ping into a dream world. As Fan­ny Bur­ney’s hero­ine Eveli­na says, it was “enchant­ed ground”.’

Read the rest of my review here.