Academic Hubris (78)
Andrew Zago has achieved a new level of ignorance regarding the New Urbanism. I searched the net for a picture of him and was surprised to find that he does not look quite as slack-jawed stupid as he sounds, even though appearance is apparently how he judges substance.
Now (LORD grant me patience!), “significant” architecture is not really how New Urbanists keep score. We do so in many other ways: how many cars not bought; how many vehicle miles reduced; how much transit supported; how much carbon not spewed into the atmosphere; how many children and old folk walk to their daily needs; how much infrastructure cost saved; how much less expended on the delivery of municipal services; how many HOPE VI houses cherished by their residents; how much real estate value created; how many total acres under design (either as New Urbanist communities or through form-based codes); how many downtowns revitalized; how much choice available regionally to those whom suburbia does not serve well; and so on.
But Architect Zago keeps score by other means — like securing the good opinion of about a half-dozen critics in Los Angeles and New York. Indeed, he operates in a world so marginal that I need to be reminded of its existence, monthly, by Metropolis.
That his statement was thoroughly engaged by Director Martin, rather than being ignored as the antics of a simpleton, shows what kind of emissions pass for discourse in academia these days.
But let’s have a look at it from Architect Zago’s point of view. It turns out that even by the tight little standards of his world, and within just one little project (Seaside), there might be as much “significant” architecture as Architect Zago himself might hope to achieve in a lifetime. Seaside has Steve Holl’s first large building. Machado/Silvetti’s first large building. The first buildings (at least three each, and darn good, too) of Deborah Berke, Alex Gorlin, and Walter Chatham. The only building of Roger Ferri. The first building of Leon Krier. The only American house by Aldo Rossi. A wonderfully melancholic house by Sam Mockbee. Clever and charming pavilions by Michael McDonough, Stuart Cohen and Jersey Devil. A national AIA award-winning and gorgeous church by Scott Merrill. And those are only some of the modernism by the “names,” not all the best buildings.
Architect Zago is doubly ignorant: first of what New Urbanism intends to achieve on its own terms, and then of what it has achieved even on his terms.
Am I to understand that he teaches somewhere?
May 26, 2011, @ 2:49 pm
May 25, 2011, @ 9:27 am
Educational institutions are particularly well placed to accelerating these new forms of intervention — not only to seeing where the opportunities lie but also to encouraging their development in the demanding but very needy environment that exists today for designers. The current generation of teachers who are exploring diverse new structures for the delivery of design in the digital age, and the increasing focus on strengthening interdisciplinary connections between landscape and architecture, between regional planning and economic analysis, between design and the current demographic crisis — these trends make universities the most interesting laboratories of design potential in the world. If one thing is clear, it is that the various professions taught in design schools will prosper, and develop the transformative power that is their potential, only when practiced in ongoing dialogue and collaboration, in intensive feedback with one another.
This sounds like a lot of over paid elitists trying to decide how everyone else should live. My suggestion is that all members of this elite team be required to move their families to this new development and reside there for at least five years as part of their contract. The most troubling is, as Fairfield Fox points out, the use of taxpayer dollars to fund this boodoggle. Who are they to declare that suburban living is dead? Then the usual outlandish lie: " many long-standing critics of the American suburb — who see it as environmentally toxic, energy wasteful and just too expensive (especially because it’s paid for by taxing the cities) " All evidence points to the suburban taxpayer as supporting the urban ghettos so your analysis is an ouit right lie. Abbot schools and other urban renewal activities are primarily supported by taxpayers from the suburbs.
Thank you for critiquing the collaboration process. As President of the Board of Directors for The Wildlands Network, we applaud your efforts in attempting to include ‘rewilding’ into this concept. And while it is encouraging that the design team included an ecologist, it is most unfortunate that the execution did not respect your input. We see this time and again, where some sort of abstract design aesthetic is forced onto the landscape, marginalizing or worse yet, ignoring the basic tenants of ecology, and then championed in the name of ‘sustainability’. Once again, it goes to show that many architects (and landscape architects) talk a good talk about ecological issues but rarely understand the science and almost certainly don’t know how to fully integrate sound ecological principles into their work. The two are not mutually exclusive.
What is most interesting, and hauntingly familiar, is the ecologist’s critique of the final proposal:
“However, in the course of the translation of these strategies into a design aesthetic, a sustained process for facilitating input from the ecologist was never fully developed or attempted, with mixed results in the extent to which the architect was able to effectively capture the ecological concepts. Consequently, while the final proposal of misregistration provides a compelling aesthetic, its actual ecological functionality remains open to question.”
We see this time and again, where some sort of abstract design aesthetic is forced onto the landscape, marginalizing or worse yet, ignoring the basic tenants of ecology, and then championed in the name of ‘sustainability’. Once again, it goes to show that many architects (and landscape architects) talk a good talk about ecological issues but rarely understand the science and almost certainly don’t know how to fully integrate sound ecological principles into their work. The two are not mutually exclusive.
We are not in a wake following a concluded foreclosure crisis -- we are in a foreclosure crisis! For MOMA to pass this off as the creative residue of a situation now resolved is not only stupidly Pollyanna, it is disingenuous and spreads false hope that the worst is behind us. No, the worst is ahead of us. More, many more homeowners are underwater or nearly so and as the economy continues basically moribund, the situation will only get worse. That is, if no one does anything dramatic to help homeowners as much as the bankers. Two Administrations of supposedly different ideologies have conspired to let the banks off the hook and throw the deadbeats -- the newly poor -- out of their homes.
MOMA's characterization of the exhibition as post facto is blatantly ignorant of the situation as it is. MOMA should be made to address the realities of home loss, not its own fantasy of what may have occurred.
BTW, the ridiculous solutions to the suburban crisis proposed in the exhibition are not clever, they are insulting to the people who made it possible: the foreclosed. Really in poor taste.
6 Months Ago
I was about to write this piece off, but then I read the absolutely spot-on dose of skepticism at the end, and then I was OK with it.
For starters, couldn't the architects have deigned to live "in residence" in, I dunno, a blue collar suburb like Brentwood, Long Island rather than Long Island City, Queens? Would it really have killed them to go and look at a (GASP) actual suburb and talk to some people who actually live in one?
On a more fundamental level, I question whether architects come from the right profession to address the undeniable problems that suburbs face. Design is the easy part. The hard part has to do with politics, infrastructure, taxes, race, class, regulations, and so forth.
And on a still more fundamental level, I question whether the term "suburb" is even useful at all. Are Claremont and Riverside both "suburbs" of Los Angeles? Well, I guess so. Do they even remotely have anything in common with each other, apart from the fact that they are in the LA region but not part of the City of LA? Not really. In fact, not at all. I think the very framing of this exhibit is outdated, and was put together by people who do not get out of their bougie, 24-hour city enclaves enough to have a whole lot that's interesting to say about the "real America" (the REAL real America, full of racial, ethnic and other kinds of diversity, not Sarah Palin's 1950s-era small town fantasy) and what problems it faces.
6 Months Ago
2/16/2012 10:34 PM CST
2/16/2012 6:23 PM CST
2/16/2012 12:40 PM CST
2/16/2012 11:43 AM CST
- The focus of WALKac's urbanism is a giant compost heap anchoring their plan.
- Studio Gang envisions a world where residences look like scaleless shipping containers.
- Andrew Zago thinks the future rests in a childish vision of LegoLand with skewed walls.
I’m surprised Barry Bergdoll let his name be associated with such obvious rot. No doubt pretentious architects will buy into this. It fulfills their idea of themselves as intellectuals even as it highlights the degree to which they have not fully developed as sentient human beings.
2/16/2012 10:56 AM CST
2/15/2012 10:05 PM CST
2/15/2012 6:44 PM CST
I think you mean - "The theme of the show is the disconnect between the housing Americans need and the half-baked elitist ideas that pretentious liberal academics would like to impose on them."
R.D. Caldora, New York City
2/15/2012 5:58 PM CST
2/15/2012 4:53 PM CST
2/15/2012 4:51 PM CST
2/15/2012 4:48 PM CST
2/15/2012 3:18 PM CST
Quasi-intellectual architect-driven initiatives have rarely had the same positive result. Almost a century of bombastic architectural "visions' from Corb's plan to level Paris, to Pruitt-Igoe and beyond have repeatedly shown that many architects know less about how people really want to live than do the developers they so easily criticize. So much for the fruits of half-baked liberal thinking rooted in "speculation" rather than informed analysis. Typically, the more theoretically driven the project, the worse were the results. - QED "Foreclosure".
2/15/2012 12:50 PM CST
Ill give you libeskind, im not a fan of his either, but just because an idea isn't popular doesn't automatically make it incorrect...this is a lesson that has been repeated through the course of history. People are resistant to change, we like the status quo. People hated the eiffel tower, now they love it. The same holds true for the pompidou center. People's like or dislike of things really does not prove whether or not it is inherently wrong or bad design or anything. It just proves that they are unfamiliar with it, nothing more. Give these ideas a chance and they might actually have some worth. And I wouldn't dismiss the education of today and compare it to the ecole. Most of the study of ecole revolved around tirelessly perfecting the Orders, today's education (at certain schools) deals more with complex building systems and the human interaction with the space.
2/14/2012 4:12 PM CST
2/14/2012 3:23 PM CST
2/14/2012 3:14 PM CST
2/14/2012 2:42 PM CST
2/14/2012 2:24 PM CST
2/14/2012 12:58 PM CST
2/14/2012 12:27 PM CST
“Anti Socialists”, “healthy cities” – hilarious! “Eggheady liberal architects”!? LOL Oh how you flatter yourselves! Inexperienced, academic, myopic, global warming eco hustlers who don’t understand the environment, fossil fuels/energy economy, national defense, US economy, our history or American Exceptionalism means that you are incapable of comprehending our future, which robs you of any basis for design. …so as a result we get vanity nonsense like this. ..and wishes for socialism as Athens burns in the wake of spastic entitlement class withdrawal.
Americans were not “given” anything; planning is not a socialist activity in the United States; and the diversity of planning across the country varies from tragic to excellent – something some writing here are obviously unaware of, living in a generation of under-educated, arrogant skepticism of forces you don’t understand.
Market forces drive change, a natural process arrogant socialists have no patience for. You are confused and angry because of the lies you tell yourselves and the turmoil that results. For example: there is no place for over-priced boutique wind/solar power (creates a job killing prosperity tax); oil is cheap and plentiful for hundreds of years; electric cars have already been rejected by the market; human controlled global weather is nonsense (global warming); landfills are a business like any other; recycling is, with few exceptions, just more manufacturing; and you have been betrayed by those who have taught you much of your lives. No matter what eco fantasy world you want to inhabit, everything I’ve written is dead on and there’s not a thing your hatful confusion can do about it.
Take some comfort in knowing that, for better or worse, you are not wise enough to begin to understand our future.
2/14/2012 11:29 AM CST
The solution (according to the people responding to this article): Ignore the "eggheady" liberal architects and do what the American people want: ie more of the same.
No wonder America is so incompetent when it comes to healthy cities. Only a small minority of intelligent liberal green architects and planners embrace a healthy productive path forward, and an overwhelming majority of ignorant architects and free market thinkers couldn't care less or think the solution to the problem is to ignore the solutions and embrace the problem as the only answer - I guess because Ronald Reagan told them to (during a period in his life when he had a debilitating mental illness I might add).
2/13/2012 5:40 PM CST
Their design responses always seem to find answers in central planning socialism (or communism) where the lord in charge decrees how the little people shall live. In the context of the greatest economy on earth, these solutions always vary from amusing and trendy to useless. Ironically and predictably, the housing solutions generated by real world socialists and communists are among the worst on the planet!
Two years ago I outlined a grant project to design and build "the next American Home" using an award winning, very expensive, AE design and development team that no market rate home owner could ever afford. My local region's weather, utility rates, standard of living, aesthetic sensibilities and real estate market would all form the basis for this project. Once constructed, it would be leased and its overall performance measured over years – including elements like comfort, pride of ownership and livability in addition to the boring engineering stuff like energy performance.
The goal would be to offer a platform for the next generation of America’s homebuilders to reference when that industry recovers. I will not give away all the beans because I may resurrect it someday but needless to say, even in this economy I became too busy to fuss around with it.
2/13/2012 4:12 PM CST
What people need is the liberty to pursue their dreams and the educational and intellectual means to obtain it. Then they can buy whatever housing they like, even a McMansion.
2/13/2012 3:13 PM CST
2/13/2012 2:27 PM CST
2/17/2012 4:50 PM CST
2/25/2012 2:22 PM CST
2/29/2012 5:47 AM CST
2/29/2012 9:03 AM CST
Builders, developers and real estate people have been telling people how to live for years....it's obvious now, more than ever, thats how things are done....people don't know what they want...Architects stopped telling people what they want in the 1960's....see what we have now? I think as far as far as something develor driven, the Eichler approach today would be a good start....Developer, hiring good and great Architects, offering something different that makes sense.
Why does innovation from Architects always have to come in the form of telling people how to live their lives?
You hit the nail on the head. This goes back the the FLW broad acre city idea, that we can reinvent society in totality to fit a certain utopian vision. The problem is that every architect wants to invent the big cure not the gradual remedy, because the glory lies in being Jonas Salk not the guy who invented Robatusin. The problem with any utopian model is that it usually works in theory, but is completely unrealisable due to the given societal constraints with regard to culture and economy. I have been arguing on threads here that we need to become developers and offer realistic alternatives to crap suburbia. Once again, architects are thinking of top down solutions to what can only be achieved with bottom up models. We live in a free market society whether we like it or not. We need to create demand by building better stuff. "if you build it they will come" We can't just dictate our solutions and hope for society to demand our service. The suburban model is not going away because it is deeply part of the american culture. Rather than get rid of it, lets start by building more sustainable and enriching suburaban communities that are affordable. Look at the way the auto industry copes with these constraints...Sure a small electric car that weighs 1000 lbs. may be the best solution, but they recognise that society will not change so quick, so they focus on hybrid suv's and 4 door sedans. We need to build the "civic hybrid" equivelent of architecture right now (transitionary projects) not the electric smart car, because unfortunatly many people out there still have steel testicles hanging from the back of their pick-up trucks. If we can't even do that, how the hell are we going to do anything more radical. While I wish society was easy to change and would love to see such grand projects, it just ain't gonna happen yet.
Is this guy suggesting Condos are the solution to the real estate crisis? Or does everyone become a renter? Seems like another utopian community to me. And of course... he's going to tell me that if I have ONE child, I only get a two bedroom unit. No thanks. Why does innovation from Architects always have to come in the form of telling people how to live their lives? Maybe innovation could be a business model that allows Architects to incorporate all these good ideas and give the customer what they want instead of telling them what they want?
Some good ideas lost in translation, reducing cost of utilities. Simple solution there. Smaller footprint, better insulation and higher efficiency systems. Hmmm.... looks to be the kind of home that the home builders are putting out right now. Wonder why they're still in business?
February 17, 2012, @ 2:44 p.m.
The provocations lived up to their name. The show was widely praised in the media for its ambition, vision, and social and environmental engagement, but there has also been some dust raising on the architectural blogs. Dissenters called the proposals out of touch, self-indulgent, elitist, esoteric. Some saw a cabal of ivory-tower types imposing their social-engineering fantasies upon a constituency they don’t know or understand. Others confused a theoretical exercise meant to incite discussion with a shovel-ready project.
Yes, finally someone who realizes; as soon as most Americans have 2 kids, it's off to the suburbs to stay most of their lives. Also the gentleman points out that the two coasts (and that big city in between) have the greatest access to publications, so the two coasts produce most of the noise about what should be done to improve our built environment.
Felix, thank you. Over the last four decades over half of all the single family homes were built in this country, most of them in the suburbs, through a production system that is inextricably bound up with bankers, builders and brokers. The good news is we will need the same number again over the next four decades, but we must offer a viable alternative to the suburban status quo, just as we have done with the IPad or the Hybird car. The current system in bankrupt-- physically, psychologically, and financially--but America has the capacity to constantly reinvent itself. Unfortunately, academic exercises like "Foreclosed" only put those off who can make the changes and need our help the most.
Here we go again - architects attempting to be the deciders on who lives in a cooked up utopian paradise. I agree with Dee - didn't we go through this before - actually several times before - go back to Lutyens and others pre-Victorian UK for other references. This argument is as old as time in architecture circles and frankly something I believe in my bones architects need to stay way far away from.
The problems associated with the current debacle in housing goes way beyond just cooking up alternatives to a model that for decades had worked pretty well until the restraints of the banking system and the policy makers in DEE CEE were unshackled. Thank you Barney Frank, Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, Sarbanes / Oxley, CRA, Derivatives, MBS, CDO's, Wall Street, Glass Steagle (no more), FHA, HMA, Phil Gramm, Rudman, Fannie, Freddie, National Assoc. of Realtors, Mortgage Banking Association, TARP, QE whatever, Helicopter Ben, HARP, HAMP, Obama and the porkulus - the list of imposters posing as statesmen and policy wonks and their attendant fixes goes on and on. To just read this article on the surface and agree would be in my humble opinion horribly misguided and naive.
Wake up architects - putting the design blinders on only will not serve you nor your clients well. A much broader and active view is needed - bone up on economics, finance, politics, local government, proper spheres of authority, the scriptures - you name it. Without a broader and DEEPER view of the market the profession will continue to wallow in the ditch it finds itself in, unable to provide any added value to projects and their sponsoring clients. Clients want value - not just ideas!!! And one final thing......
I LIKE LIVING IN THE SUBURBS!!!
The use of charged buzzwords words and phrases like “activist” and “socially or environmentally conscious dimension” suggests some serious import where none is evident in the work itself. It is a common liberal ploy to distract from any more intuitive thought processes that would likely conclude that these ill-conceived experiments will almost certainly be the slums of tomorrow.
Dr. D.S. Abrams
New York City
3/23/2012 12:31 PM CDT
Architects/Urban planners often suffer from the same level of hubris as religious and political zealots. They “believe” they know how humanity should behave and think.
When presenting they will say. “One walls along this avenue, and feels a sense of…” Huh? The world abounds with architectural and urban planning disasters. Look at a park where instead of following some meandering walkway, there is a muddy path straight across the grass.
Le Corbusier was amongst the worst, and subsequent generations not much better. A case of the “Emperor’s Clothes”.
Throw in a little anti-capitalist, anti-car, eco looniness, and you end up with Milton Keynes, or worse, Bracknell where I am spending too much time. I need Sat-Nav to get in and out of town and contribute to muddy paths straight across roundabouts.
Now we have computers, curves and angles thrive, simply because they can be designed, not because they make sense,
Why reinvent the wheel? We have spent thousands of years evolving buildings and spaces that work.
Essential reading. Jane Jacobs : “The Death and Life of Great American Cities”, Peter Collins: “Changing Ideals in Modern Architecture”, John Summerson, “Heavenly Mansions”. All classic texts on modern architecture and urban design. And anything by Colin Davies.
Classic examples of Urban planning disasters caused by hubris? Brasilia along with Chandigarh in India. Loved by the acolytes of modern architecture, a failure by everybody else’s standards.
Architects (some) have always had an over-evolved sense of their own importance. At least Paulo Soleri had style, these guys are recycling stuff we did in the 70's, just not as well. The big design solutions and Urban planning of the past don't work for the future. The next step will be devolution, self sustaining, smaller, less susceptible to economic changes and power failures. I think you call them villages in europe. We don't have that concept in the USA. The curator screwed the pooch on this one, there's lot of interesting alternate work out there.
The ghettos of the future. I wonder how many of these visionaries would actually like to live there.
Usual soulless and inhuman "solutions" from those desperate-for-attention, anti-social egoists we call Architects. Horrible rubbish really - but if there's profit enough developers might build this garbage - pity the inhabitants.
There’s the publishing world of architecture – propagated by academics and starchitects – and then there’s the people with offices in almost every town doing the best they can. The former develop illustrious careers, building reputations instead of structures. The latter do the best they can, which is rarely enough.
Some architects (including me) want to be artists, and you don’t get into a show at MoMA by proposing moderate, affordable, pragmatic solutions to housing problems. And despite prevailing sterotypes, architects don’t really have that much control over the final outcome. It takes good taste and good money to create good buildings, and since the first two are in short supply these days, so is the third.
AU: The Museum of Modern Art has a tradition of putting on---
Sandra Smith [blonde]: I was going to say, artists are never political.
SV: It's always the elite telling the rest of us how we should live, isn't it?
AU: No, it's---
SV: Always.
AU: No, in fact, the state of California is enacting zoning policies to make suburbs more dense. You know, and the Wall Street Journal just pointed out last week that they are trying to, instead of having four houses per acre, they're going to have twenty houses per acre.
Alex Ulam (AU): No, it's not the elite. It's the way our tax...It's the way our housing policy has been oriented for the last twenty or thirty years. It's unsustainable---
SV: We should not be organizing ourselves and where to live. Now the elites are telling us how we should be doing it.
AU: They are making some suggestions, but -- listen -- it's unsustainable for people to live in suburbs.
SV: Who says?
AU: Well most Americans actually spend more money on transportation than they do on medical care or on taxes. The average family of four that makes $50,000 spends somewhere between $7,900 and---
Affordable Housing (103)
Andrew Zago has achieved a new level of ignorance regarding the New Urbanism. I searched the net for a picture of him and was surprised to find that he does not look quite as slack-jawed stupid as he sounds, even though appearance is apparently how he judges substance.
Now (LORD grant me patience!), “significant” architecture is not really how New Urbanists keep score. We do so in many other ways: how many cars not bought; how many vehicle miles reduced; how much transit supported; how much carbon not spewed into the atmosphere; how many children and old folk walk to their daily needs; how much infrastructure cost saved; how much less expended on the delivery of municipal services; how many HOPE VI houses cherished by their residents; how much real estate value created; how many total acres under design (either as New Urbanist communities or through form-based codes); how many downtowns revitalized; how much choice available regionally to those whom suburbia does not serve well; and so on.
But Architect Zago keeps score by other means — like securing the good opinion of about a half-dozen critics in Los Angeles and New York. Indeed, he operates in a world so marginal that I need to be reminded of its existence, monthly, by Metropolis.
That his statement was thoroughly engaged by Director Martin, rather than being ignored as the antics of a simpleton, shows what kind of emissions pass for discourse in academia these days.
But let’s have a look at it from Architect Zago’s point of view. It turns out that even by the tight little standards of his world, and within just one little project (Seaside), there might be as much “significant” architecture as Architect Zago himself might hope to achieve in a lifetime. Seaside has Steve Holl’s first large building. Machado/Silvetti’s first large building. The first buildings (at least three each, and darn good, too) of Deborah Berke, Alex Gorlin, and Walter Chatham. The only building of Roger Ferri. The first building of Leon Krier. The only American house by Aldo Rossi. A wonderfully melancholic house by Sam Mockbee. Clever and charming pavilions by Michael McDonough, Stuart Cohen and Jersey Devil. A national AIA award-winning and gorgeous church by Scott Merrill. And those are only some of the modernism by the “names,” not all the best buildings.
Architect Zago is doubly ignorant: first of what New Urbanism intends to achieve on its own terms, and then of what it has achieved even on his terms.
Am I to understand that he teaches somewhere?
May 26, 2011, @ 2:49 pm
yes i was wondering how i go about not lossing my house it has been in my wifes famlily for over a hundred years my wife was layed off the morgage company wouldnt talk to us because she was layed off and now we are so far behind we cant get cought up so now we are loosing our home is there help out there for me
Cool #MOMAcompetition on affordable-housing design/production, esp in developing world: http://bit.ly/kARHd9. #NYUWagnerMUPs, go get 'em!
8/10/11
4:12pm
Brooklyn, NY
Arianna, it's nice that you worry about the middle class and the recently unemployed. I worry about them, too. I worry that they won't be able to handle it when they become homeless.
Low-income/no-income housing is needed now!!!
The challenge now is not in our ability to solve problems but in our core values as fellow human beings. The American Dream is gone as we knew it. Homes have become unhealthy physically, spiritually and soulfully. Our families are broken, medications are excessive and stress has filled our lives. Homes used to be our sacred space but today it is the cause of of distress.
How did this happen?
After a career in home design and building I became acutely aware of the pressure to have bigger and bigger homes. At the same time we have lost millions of acres of land to sprawl and the reports are in that sprawl causes heart attack and stroke because people are not moving enough. On top of this, our water is disappearing and our air is heavy because corporate builders are profit driven and have no concern for the health of the homeowner. Joined with unethical bankers, the US homeowner has poorly built expensive homes. 1/4 of homes are under water financially as poorly built ones depreciate faster than people can afford to maintain.
There are a couple of solutions that can recapture our dream. By taking personal responsibility in what we purchase we can regain control. In home design and building, choose smaller, better built homes. Buy on an existing grid and use local builders and materials. Smaller, infill homes will immediately change the quality of life we experience and we recapture the sacred core of our homesteads.
This is important work but keep the focus on energy demand reduction. Affordable Housing that is inexpensive to build but costs too much to operate is a cruel joke on the residents. Encourage Mass Wall enclosure technology (using light weight Autoclaved Aerated Concrete is the best starting point), then ERV (Energy Recovery Ventilation), and then alternative energies (solar HW and Geo-Thermal)make economic sense because you don’t need to produce that much.
Heartbreaking story on foreclosed homes on #60Minutes. #MoMAenlisting arch. teams to find solutions in 5 U.S. regions. http://bit.ly/oez2hm
December 22, 2011 at 11:22 am
December 21, 2011 at 2:43 pm
December 22, 2011 at 12:28 am
December 20, 2011 at 11:02 pm
December 25, 2011 at 2:05 am
December 20, 2011 at 2:21 pm
"They put $100 down on the $8,500 house (about $75,000 in today's currency)."
What house can you buy that'd even be habitable, and that's not in a slum or 50 miles away from the nearest city, for $75000? How much would a comparable house sell for on Long Island now, $350000? Forget buying a house if you have anything less than a graduate degree, much less if you're a blue collar worker. If you aren't a doctor/stock broker/lawyer/engineer, you're f(#*ked, no matter how hard you work..
December 20, 2011 at 12:46 pm
For A Regular Guy(Written after reading the story in L.A. Times of a dead man found in a foreclosed home in Westchester, CA on 7/20/2009 by a real estate agent preparing to show the house to a prospect.)
Three bedroom 2 bath
garage backyard lawn
rambling family style
home for kids pets. 1957.
Needs work
refinancing available
forbearance provided
for small fee.
A sunny southern Cal
kind of Monday
in Westchester.
Realty Modern
shows same home
once bestowed
with bank notes
loans interest rates
derivatives
credit-default swaps.
Brokered down by
adjustable rates
pre-payment penalties.
Now liberated by the
free market.
Lien holders
mean holder
sof bankrupt dreams.
FORECLOSED.
Ready to buy
best terms
and cheap!
But oh dear!
What’s a 45-year-old
dead man doing here?
Didn’t we clean this
property up?
Who could
miss the odor
of late payments ?
The gruesome smell
of maxed out credit?
The stench of the
unemployed?
What’s an agent to do?
Come back later.
This regular guy
Laid off. Laid out cold
in the family room.
Second mortgage borrowerr
avaged by pyramid
schemes. No modification
no public offering
for him. No gold man of stocks
no Fed unreserved no inside track
no parachute for this everyday chump.
Lien holdersmean holders
of bankrupt dreams.
FORECLOSED.
In addition, the team also discovered the importance of organic brownfield remediation in Cicero, even if it meant the land would remain underdeveloped. Through commonplace planting, the toxic industrial sites scattered across the residential fabric would change into safer cleaner zones for future community use. Finally, within certain regions of each parcel, the once zoned industrial land could be converted into a dense collection of affordable modular beds, baths, and public space by using the existing industrial structures and materials on each site such as truss frames and brick partition walls. The new clusters would become and important blend of adaptive reuse and new construction that utilized a sizable amount of Cicero's historical past while creating a new 21st century anchor that can accommodate thousands immediately adjacent to one of Chicago's commuter rail corridors.
2/16/2012 10:34 PM CST
2/15/2012 3:18 PM CST
The poster child for the crisis is the exurban home in the unfinished subdivision, yet the crisis has hit equally hard at older, close-in suburbs like Cicero. According to the Woodstock Institute, the town had 1,066 new foreclosures in 2010, an increase of 8.6 percent over the previous year. While foreclosures declined slightly in the first half of 2011, no one in Cicero expects the problem to go away anytime soon.
MB: The big issue I would get across here is that all housing is financially constructed. And in the United States, the single-family house for purchase with a mortgage is public. The mortgage deduction on your annual taxes means that everybody in this country has subsidized housing.
FS: Well, the homeowners do anyway.
#MoMAexhibit, "Foreclosed" shows gap between housing available in U.S. and housing Americans need http://bit.ly/zk1dJ2
Builders, developers and real estate people have been telling people how to live for years....it's obvious now, more than ever, thats how things are done....people don't know what they want...
If you think it's just builders and developers telling people how to live, you're clearly missing a larger picture. Retailers are a huge factor here too. The problem with suburbia is the lack of "real job" creation.
The problem comes from the concept that many retailers sell products that more-or-less require single-unit, single-family housing units— lawnmowers, automobiles, chest freezers, full-sized appliances, furniture et cetera. The code for this word is "durable goods." And anytime you hear the government, planners or business-types talking about the increase in the purchase of durable goods or stimulating the durable goods market... they're clearly talking about suburbia.
And many of the companies that sell the tools of suburbia actively influence policy development by funding various non-profit and non-governmental organizations. We don't know who does what but there are fair examples.
Cato Insitute, a supporter of laissez-faire capitalism, is quite a staunch critic of urban planning is or has been supported by the likes of General Motors, ExxonMobile, Toyota, Visa, Wal-mart, Volkswagon, Honda, FedEx and Time Warner. None of these companies want to see functioning cities.
And we end up the paradox of...
If most of the jobs are low-wage, who's buying goods and services?
And where do the armies of wage workers live if new suburban development is too expensive?
MB: […] One of the big points of the show for anyone who deals with housing issues academically is, yeah, that deduction makes basically a
huge amount of American housing public housing at some level. It’s a far
bigger expenditure on the federal level than, for example, funding for HUD
for homelessness.
TS: It’s about $80 billion or something, right?
MB: It’s about $80 billion. Low-income housing tax credits, I think, are
probably $30 billion. So, the federal government at this point in time really
does not build directly public housing any longer. It incentivizes it through
tax credits.
CH: And it incentivizes for people to purchase their own homes and take
out a lot of debt, the interest of which they can then take off against their
taxes.
CH: Increased density?
MB: All five projects in the show deal with density, and they also deal with trying to find housing that is probably more financially and size-wise appropriate to its user, but also that would use dramatically less energy to basically dramatically lower carrying costs. But I think many of the people, including ourselves, we were looking at ways to take underutilized property, publicly held or publicly controlled, and increase density around infrastructure because the public has already paid for all of that infrastructure and isn’t using it.
MB: […] In the 1990s you had a booming economy, you had a kind ofpush to alter, if not end, the welfare state. By the 2000s, you have a real estate bubble. And today you have a foreclosure crisis. But in all of these situations, there are a couple things that have been consistent. The amount of money people spend on housing and transportation is immense. They can’t afford it. You don’t want to tell people they can’t afford something and say that’s the reason to change. You want to be more positive than that. But there are many, many factors about affordability, about energy consumption, and frankly about the role of design in any of it. The American single-family house is a commodity product that has virtually no research and development, no design. Architects, in a spec house in Houston in the late 1990s—their fee was about twelve dollars per house. These are mass-produced commodities. There is no professional engagement. […] I think most of the people in this exhibition are quite
positive and excited about the suburbs. We know it’s a deeply, deeply important part of the American ethos, if not just everyday life of course. But, they’re not inevitable. And the financial underpinnings of them have really dramatically shifted in the last five, ten, fifteen years—not just the last two.
CH: Talk about that R&D thing. You made a point in the video in the exhibition that blew my mind about the comparison between how much money in R&D goes into your iPhone or anti-lock brakes versus an American home.
MB: I did mention anti-lock brakes. For many commodities, before they hit the market, there are billions of dollars that might precede it, whether it’s Clorox or whether it’s an iPhone or a Honda Civic which is quite an ingenious product. Housing as we know it has kind of ironed all of that
out of it, and it did it a long time ago. […] They are paying Mercedes Benz prices for a twenty-year-old used car. The single-family house market atomizes out all of the financial processes, and you still are spending large sums of money, but you’re not getting the sophisticated product. It’s not that it’s not a nice product or something people love, but it could be much, much better in energy and everything else.
Do not get me started.
On the refi problems I have encountered because of rules changes made by the Dodd/Frank law.
The bottom line is simple.
Old refi rules = $120 a month savings.
New refi rules = $230 a month increase in mortgage.
And I am being forced into a refi because of circumstances beyond my control. Show Less -
I don’t know how you can say that the housing crisis was mostly a suburban thing. In downtown Portland all of the condo projects that were completed between 2007 and 2009 were subsequently turned into apartments or turned over to banks. Unsold units in bank possession were auctioned off or otherwise sold at a 40% discount. This reversed the trend of the prior decade of apartment buildings being converted into condos. Look around and the cranes are building new apartment buildings, not condos.
To the point of suburban architectural solutions to making housing affordable. You know that museum-curated shows are always ‘think big or don’t come’. When was the last time you saw a curated show present pragmatic proposals that could be installed in real life, the next day?
Real life solutions are already being played out in the burbs of Portland, and undoubtedly in hundreds of other burbs in the nation.
Orenco Station is supposed to be a New Urbanism project, although its growth has been driven by the big-box strip mall (a blend between the traditional strip mall and the single lot big box store).
A twist on Jane Jacobs romanticism connected to mass transit rail is discerned from stop after stop along the TriMet MAX, with tracts of townhomes and pocket parks within 1000′ of a MAX stop.
Not two weeks ago, the Portland Home Show unveiled the IKEA House. A collaboration between IKEA and a local company – Ideabox – that designs and builds prefab structures. It turns out, the solution to making housing affordable is to downsize the McMansion and make it practical inside.
In any case, the solution is either to expand suburbia outward or increase density — move out or move up.
In places like Mumbai, where arguably a majority of the city is inhabited---and much of it was literally developed---by squatters in slums and shanties, this commodification of land is very risky. Shutting (poor) squatters out of land is precisely what governments in Mumbai and Beijing are doing now, by bulldozing slums. And this is harmful not just for reasons of justice and equity, but also because the urban poor contribute a great deal of labor and economic activity to the city.
Blocks and grid systems would facilitate that process by specifically defining plots of land and putting a price on them, which would then be an "opportunity cost" of housing the poor.
Thoughts on MoMA`s Foreclosed:... http://tinyurl.com/6u6ypzx #adaptablere-use #affordable#architecture#design#green#sustainable
MrCotain: Thoughts on MoMA`s Foreclosed:... http://tinyurl.com/6u6ypzx #adaptablere-use #affordable#architecture#design#green#sustainableI...
So I believe the hybrid approach is the likeliest way to achieve real innovation in housing as well as in real estate development practices. What might be the role of architects in this effort? The South African architect Iain Low has described a building as a manifesto, a declaration of what is possible. (“I work within the possibility of significantly transforming reality, as opposed to reinventing it," he said.) And indeed, the five projects in Foreclosed show us the possibilities of dreaming big.
It is a sign of the times that this exhortation has proved controversial not because it reminds us of the economic inequity, the structural racism, and the gender violence that has marked every stage of so much welfare-state public housing, from inception to management, even as it challenges the apparent inevitability of such results. It is controversial because it suggests that the state, or the public sector — conceived along with civil society in terms of multiple, overlapping, virtual and actual publics — might play a more active, direct and enlightened role in the provision of housing and, by extension, of education, health care and other infrastructures of daily life in the United States. In other words, it is a direct challenge to the now-dominant paradigm of privatization. That the design teams did not entirely take up this challenge is, in my view, at least as interesting as what they actually did propose, and is perhaps symptomatic of how deeply the politics of privatization has shaped design culture. Simply put, can we no longer imagine architecture without developers?
We need more effective ways to build housing quickly and cheaply, and this requires both a design solution and a policy solution. Even in cities like San Francisco where there is a push by the local government to create housing for people at all income levels, the process works too slowly and leaves too many people out. Housing policy is a failure when there are thousands of people waiting for a home that they can afford.
06.26.12 at 02:51
I attended this exhibition - some innovative ideas for delivering infrastructure and financing housing projects....... http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/ …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Of course. Most of the huge old Victorian homes were broken up into apartments because no one could afford to heat or maintain them. The same thing will happen with the plague of McMansions that have cropped up in the past 15 years or so.
I've never understood why anyone ever thought to pay so much to live in grids of look-alike homes... They look exactly like low income housing developments, really.
And the idea of criticizing people who use mass transit bus systems, but think it's not government to use the highways...
There's such a disconnect... I think a lot of people anymore don't connect how community & civilization aspects interact, and don't really understand how we have a civilization.
There are still a lot of post Katrina trailers available in New Orleans and they come permeated with formaldehyde at no extra cost.
Since the mexican drug lords and international high-dollar real estate speculators have pretty much cornered the market on having a roof overhead, when can we expect The Government/associated business entities to start setting up the low-cost campsites and RV/trailer parks, or the high-capacity public confinement facilities/gas chambers/whatever?
BL: What you essentially did in maybe two minutes is cut a broad swath right through just about every problem that we kind of touched upon up here and hopefully to some extent a lot of these projects started to poke at. I would, with all due respect to my colleagues, suggest they didn’t really get into that cut. And, when Barry said this would be a little more nuts and bolts, I didn’t realize we were talking this nuts and bolts, but you’re absolutely right. You point out a whole series of problems starting from the fact that you’ve been displaced, put in a position where you could no longer afford your house because of the taxes on that house. Now you’re being left with very few options. I would hope on a really basic level that your voucher is portable, so that you aren’t stuck just looking for housing in Fort Lee which I know can be somewhat challenging. […] The whole Affordable Housing Trust Fund is a problem because it’s like the old George Bernard Shaw play Major Barbara: It allows these guys to buy their way out of providing affordable housing. […] As long as you continue to take what amounts to developers’ ransom money, you’re going to continue to have segregated neighborhoods. You’re going to continue to have folks like yourself who are stuck, getting forced out of their neighborhood…
BL: One of the things I thought to do in preparation for this talk was to chart, from the Bush administration through the Obama administration, the number of times the word “housing” appears in the State of the Union address. I got really depressed, so I stopped. In essence—again, because it is so polarizing, and I can’t wait to see what they said on Fox News—you’re going to have to wait until December. You’re going to have to wait until he gets reelected. You’re going to have to wait until Shaun Donovan has four more years. Then we can start to have a meaningful discussion. But until then, I don’t think anything that you put on the national political agenda that talks about “public” or “housing” other than possibly bailing out mortgages and/or bailing out more bank —I don’t know how that’s going to gain any traction or do anything other than alienate more voters. But once December comes, then it’s a different story.
MJ: I wouldn’t disagree with that. I think there’s a curious rupture between the importance of housing in our lives and the importance of it in the political discourse, if you will. I think in New York City there are two things that are important to New Yorkers: real estate and romance. And real estate inevitably trumps romance. “Who’s got the right rent-stabilized apartment? I’ll take that one!” “Ok, you’re moving in with me. I’m not moving in with you.” Here it is so central to our lives. Go to a party in a single-family house in a neighborhood or something: “So, did you hear the house down the street went for so-many dollars?” It dominates our conversation in so many ways, and yet it’s so difficult for it to enter into the discussion even in the aftermath of this colossal, this calamity that has occurred. […] In some ways, when it gets into the public policy realm, it’s like “My eyes glaze over.” I’m talking about QRMs [Qualified Residential Mortgages], and you’re falling asleep. Let’s admit it. It is hard. It’s really hard to raise this issue in an effective manner.
It’s refreshing that the team unabashedly suggests that much of these new ribbons of housing would be developed as public housing. But if this is a serious idea, not simply a gesture or metaphor, then one must confront the fact that public housing in the United States, apart from unfortunately being in ideological disrepute, is also grossly underfunded.
American Dream (106)
The foreclosure crisis has led to a major loss of confidence in the suburban dream. The idea of single-family houses on private lots reachable only by car has been broken, and this new reality has hit especially hard in suburbs. It is here, rather than in the next ring of potential sprawl, where architects, landscape designers, artists, ecologists, and elected officials need to rethink reshaping urban America for the coming decades.
The American Dream has always been based on the freedom to pursue your dreams and the enabler for the American Dream has always been our Constitution, the rule of law, and economic liberty. Our free enterprise system lifted more people out of poverty than any other system this earth has ever known. Government exists to protect your rights and to prevent other people from interfering with your pursuit of these dreams, free of harm.
The American Dream is different for every person in this country. For some it is to own a home. For some it is to have a successful business. Whatever that Dream is to be achieved through your own personal perseverance, drive, determination and responsibility. It's not anybody else's job to deliver your American Dream to your doorstep, and that includes the government. The American government is in the business of protecting the freedom of its citizens to pursue their dreams.
There is much made of the American Dream, can someone define what this American Dream is, or was, and reassure us all that it is not based on infinite consumption of finite resources? There seems to be no other way of realising that ‘dream’. We must pump more oil, find more gas, rip our planet apart to find the stuff we must have in order to perpetuate some kind of illusion into an infinity that is constantly receding. Politicians scream :’vote for me, and you can have it all when I get elected’ so the gullible masses decide which candidate offers the best sounding lies. Then find that they still can’t have what they want, because the previous incumbent ‘left such a mess’ that getting the economy straight puts back the good times for another few years. So the myth of the American Dream goes on, always that illusive future awaiting everyone that was, I fear, the creation of postwar admen: that if you always bought the newest car and bigger house further out, you would always have the means to drag 2 tons of steel 20 miles to buy your groceries, or propel yourself at 500mph to sit on beach 2000 miles away for 2 weeks. Unfortunately the ‘means’ isn’t there anymore, The dream was built on an infinity of cheap oil and the dream is turning into a nightmare because oil is now too expensive to use for dream making. http://www.yourmedievalfuture.com/
Whether or not residents agree with that assessment is beside the point because the re-envisioning is less about the specifics of the Keizer Station and more about what it means to alter the previous conceptions of the American Dream.
“The drive everywhere for cheaper and cheaper things mentality is unsustainable. It’s getting more crowded and a huge portion of the income goes into transportation,” Dufaux said.
"Change the dream and you change the city." The line could describe their hopes exactly. Instead, it helps introduce five other plans for suburban America, each with a commitment to cities and to dreaming. The Museum of Modern Art calls the show "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream." Yet, the curators are not looking for new architecture to house an older ideal. Rather, they want to change thinking, the kind that brought the tangle of postwar suburban sprawl and, in their minds, the doomed housing bubble.
be rational–the future is gated communities–there is not 'community' or 'society'...just a bunch of f trying to get ahead by either playing the victim card or getting elected to congress or the executive branch.
The equivalent of a bunch of mentally re-tarded third graders run america. So yea, I think thed solution is for everyone to give one big middle finger to everyone that wants to tell other people how to live, and if they keep at it, move–
THERE ARE SEVERAL PLACES AROUND THE PLANET that are looking for professionals, america is not the only happy pie-
they give you too much sh-t, you leave. GIVE ONE BIG MIDDLE FINGER to all the little angry faced third graders as the economy sours. They dont deserve your taxes. The f idiots can't get out of a cardboard box.
December 20, 2011 at 3:47 pm
December 20, 2011 at 2:26 pm
The suburban dream isn't the same for them, she said.
"It'll never happen again," she said of the suburban boom.
And that's too bad: "It was a much nicer way of living."
For A Regular Guy(Written after reading the story in L.A. Times of a dead man found in a foreclosed home in Westchester, CA on 7/20/2009 by a real estate agent preparing to show the house to a prospect.)
Three bedroom 2 bath
garage backyard lawn
rambling family style
home for kids pets. 1957.
Needs work
refinancing available
forbearance provided
for small fee.
A sunny southern Cal
kind of Monday
in Westchester.
Realty Modern
shows same home
once bestowed
with bank notes
loans interest rates
derivatives
credit-default swaps.
Brokered down by
adjustable rates
pre-payment penalties.
Now liberated by the
free market.
Lien holders
mean holder
sof bankrupt dreams.
FORECLOSED.
Ready to buy
best terms
and cheap!
But oh dear!
What’s a 45-year-old
dead man doing here?
Didn’t we clean this
property up?
Who could
miss the odor
of late payments ?
The gruesome smell
of maxed out credit?
The stench of the
unemployed?
What’s an agent to do?
Come back later.
This regular guy
Laid off. Laid out cold
in the family room.
Second mortgage borrowerr
avaged by pyramid
schemes. No modification
no public offering
for him. No gold man of stocks
no Fed unreserved no inside track
no parachute for this everyday chump.
Lien holdersmean holders
of bankrupt dreams.
FORECLOSED.
2/16/2012 12:11 AM CST
2/15/2012 6:44 PM CST
One of the beauties of the American Dream is that people can aspire to living in a large home, or a cave if they so prefer. The unilateral imposition of small standardized homes on the masses is an idea best left to the few countries that still embrace the mistaken ideology that was Communism. If these rather naive architects are so committed to that concepts they endorse for others, then I suggest they emmigrate to a former Soviet Bloc country where they will feel more fulfilled. They should take their hypocrisy with them. It has no place in the US.
2/14/2012 6:41 PM CST
There don't seem to be any strong critical concept in re-thinking the suburb, or the "American Dream", in the time of the "American Nightmare". Can't see the attractiveness of WORkac's proposal, one story strips and towers.....? how original.
2/13/2012 4:26 PM CST
What people need is the liberty to pursue their dreams and the educational and intellectual means to obtain it. Then they can buy whatever housing they like, even a McMansion.
2/13/2012 3:13 PM CST
I am 62 years old.
I have worked honestly & hard my whole life (since I was 14) because that is how you "realize the American Dream."
I was a home builder & designer.
In 1980, the "Savings & Loan Crisis" forced me out of work & out of business. (The gov’t helped the banks survive ...)
In 2007, the "Sub-prime Mortgage Crisis" crushed me again. I lost my home, my wife & my belief in that "American Dream." (The gov’t saved the banks again ...)
I think there's no doubt that there is a trend towards "large multigenerational groupings" given the immigrant population explosion.
It's never been part of our culture.
Our goal used to be to become an adult and get out on one's own.
The American Dream Revised - @buttermilk1on the new MOMA "Foreclosed" exhibit - http://bit.ly/xEE6Mm via @emilybadger
At MoMA in NYC- what to become of foreclosed suburbs? The American Dream, Revised zite.to/ABSiJ7 via @zite
#Architects+ economists = #foreclosed: change the dream...& you change the #cityhttp://ow.ly/1GvZS7 #citiesftw#MoMA#futrchat
Sub-urban and suburban are also two very different things. I would argue that sub-urban is not bad. A good example of this is in some parts of Brooklyn, Queens, and Nassau county NY. The density is greater than the typical suburban environment, and there is a small business walkable street scape that flanks a mix of multi and single family housing in many of these neighborhoods. There is also access to public transit in and out of the city. There is a mix of home owners and renters, and the opportunity to own a house and rent out the top floor. There is a sense of community and a feeling of being in a small town within a city. The film "Do the Right Thing" by Spike Lee so clearly expresses this. Another issue is density. More density is not the solution alone. We need to find an appropriate balance of density, production, and economy so that development can be in some sort of sustainable balance. I think that sub-urban form has the greatest potential for a sustainable development because there is enough space to support a mix of agriculture, industry,small business, housing, park space, etc...as well as enough density to support local businesses with regard to employees and consumers. Cities like manhattan will never be able to become hybrid typologies because things like urban agriculture and production will be far too expensive due to crazy high land prices. The only problem with the sub-urban typology is that it sometimes becomes gentrified over time as we see in brooklyn or the opposite happens where it becomes a ghetto due to the home values going down as density goes up like in Jamaica Queens (balance is always a thin line). On the other hand, suburban development lends itself to exploitation by corporate interests as James R. clearly articulates. The American dream of owning a single family home is not going away. It is a part of the American culture that dates back hundreds of years. We need to find a solution to the problem without ignoring the cultural mentality that led to it. This is why ideas like the ones in the MoMA exhibit never work. I believe that we need to study examples that already work like Astoria, and go from there.
Why does innovation from Architects always have to come in the form of telling people how to live their lives?
You hit the nail on the head. This goes back the the FLW broad acre city idea, that we can reinvent society in totality to fit a certain utopian vision. The problem is that every architect wants to invent the big cure not the gradual remedy, because the glory lies in being Jonas Salk not the guy who invented Robatusin. The problem with any utopian model is that it usually works in theory, but is completely unrealisable due to the given societal constraints with regard to culture and economy. I have been arguing on threads here that we need to become developers and offer realistic alternatives to crap suburbia. Once again, architects are thinking of top down solutions to what can only be achieved with bottom up models. We live in a free market society whether we like it or not. We need to create demand by building better stuff. "if you build it they will come" We can't just dictate our solutions and hope for society to demand our service. The suburban model is not going away because it is deeply part of the american culture. Rather than get rid of it, lets start by building more sustainable and enriching suburaban communities that are affordable. Look at the way the auto industry copes with these constraints...Sure a small electric car that weighs 1000 lbs. may be the best solution, but they recognise that society will not change so quick, so they focus on hybrid suv's and 4 door sedans. We need to build the "civic hybrid" equivelent of architecture right now (transitionary projects) not the electric smart car, because unfortunatly many people out there still have steel testicles hanging from the back of their pick-up trucks. If we can't even do that, how the hell are we going to do anything more radical. While I wish society was easy to change and would love to see such grand projects, it just ain't gonna happen yet.
ending the subsidies that drastically lower the true cost of many aspects of the suburban lifestyle would be a very strong incentive for many people to move into apartments and denser neighborhoods. If you want urban-style services and utilities with the luxury of low density you should have to pay a premium for it. otherwise there are ways of living more "off the grid" if you're willing to do your own maintenance and pay a little more up front for these systems.
many people do have the dream of living in a detached single-family home, and I think this should be available to people if they can afford it, but I think until the crash people were pretty delusional about how much this lifestyle actually costs (i.e. taking out loans they couldn't afford), and how much it has been costing our country.
Barry Bergdoll (BB): It is astounding to what extent people’s dreams are fulfilled by images that are supplied to them by the marketplace, by advertising, by television, but I do think that that is shifting. And even some of the dream producers like movies, like television series, are beginning to address the complex realities of suburbs and are starting to show us images of suburbs which are arrival cities for immigrants which have multigenerational families living in the same house. Some of the kind of covering up of those realities in popular entertainment is itself beginning to erode. So, there are many many cracks in the dream.
Retrofitting the American Dream in a flat world
I hate the over developed suburban wasteland, having grown up in a small town in eastern PA. Shortly after developers cut down the apple orchard at the end of my street to build more houses I escaped to art school. Ironically I grew up in a town that had a lot of history & culture — where American folk artist Edward Hicks painted the Peaceable Kingdom. In that Newtown, which is a very old American town, I learned a few things. If we combine a time for work (the lion), a time for home (the lamb) and a time for culture (the horse) we will rediscover the American Dream. Our Dream just needs a little pruning to flourish.
I agree with Ellen Dunham’s optimistic ideas for retrofitting suburbia. She touches on the idea of people having a third place to go to after the home and the workplace. We need to develop this idea. The only thing I would add to Ellen’s summary is to build equestrian centers on public land through out the American suburban landscape to add culture to the town centers. People need a place to meet and reconnect. We need to get back on the horse and rediscover our culture.
Thank you for your post
Some thoughts about MoMA’s exhibit on the American Dream and the “Buell Hypothesis” What do you think Socrates… fb.me/1yZab8T3M
MoMA's new exhibit "springs from the belief that fewer and fewer Americans have or want the lives that suburbs... http://fb.me/1s7GTzCU8
Buell Hypothesis: examining cultural assumptions of the American Dream in the context of foreclosures & sprawl http://bit.ly/AnixCO #cplan
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/buell_hypothesis
The Buell Hypothesis, at its most basic, argues as follows: Change the dream and you change the city http://ow.ly/9faRb #placemaking
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/buell_hypothesis
MB: People have looked toward changing or improving the suburbs
for a long time. You can go back to the 1970s, and academics are often
lambasted for not being sensitive about it. But the reason I’m bringing
this up is that what is different at this point in time is everything from
globalization in terms of where is production happening, what are the
jobs. When you talk about housing, you ultimately always—even if you’re
an architect—end up talking about jobs. What will secure that loan in the
future? So, flexibility comes in. But the difference now, I think, is that
what people realize… And the foreclosure crisis is an awful thing, it is
absolutely a crisis, but it does start to create a situation where people
start to imagine that what we have is not inevitable. And, in fact, it was
produced, and it was dreamed. I think, people don’t like change in housing,
and they should worry about change in housing, but what we have is also
not terribly secure. And, so, I think that’s what you’re bringing up, and
Jeanne was bringing that up quite brilliantly.
CH: One of the things I think Detroit forces us to think of is the fact that
the things we think are natural are contingent.
CH: How’s this: “Embrace the Dream: Rent.” Anyone? Any takers on that?
MB: […] One of the big points of the show for anyone who deals with housing issues academically is, yeah, that deduction makes basically a
huge amount of American housing public housing at some level. It’s a far
bigger expenditure on the federal level than, for example, funding for HUD
for homelessness.
TS: It’s about $80 billion or something, right?
MB: It’s about $80 billion. Low-income housing tax credits, I think, are
probably $30 billion. So, the federal government at this point in time really
does not build directly public housing any longer. It incentivizes it through
tax credits.
CH: And it incentivizes for people to purchase their own homes and take
out a lot of debt, the interest of which they can then take off against their
taxes.
MB: […] In the 1990s you had a booming economy, you had a kind ofpush to alter, if not end, the welfare state. By the 2000s, you have a real estate bubble. And today you have a foreclosure crisis. But in all of these situations, there are a couple things that have been consistent. The amount of money people spend on housing and transportation is immense. They can’t afford it. You don’t want to tell people they can’t afford something and say that’s the reason to change. You want to be more positive than that. But there are many, many factors about affordability, about energy consumption, and frankly about the role of design in any of it. The American single-family house is a commodity product that has virtually no research and development, no design. Architects, in a spec house in Houston in the late 1990s—their fee was about twelve dollars per house. These are mass-produced commodities. There is no professional engagement. […] I think most of the people in this exhibition are quite
positive and excited about the suburbs. We know it’s a deeply, deeply important part of the American ethos, if not just everyday life of course. But, they’re not inevitable. And the financial underpinnings of them have really dramatically shifted in the last five, ten, fifteen years—not just the last two.
CH: Talk about that R&D thing. You made a point in the video in the exhibition that blew my mind about the comparison between how much money in R&D goes into your iPhone or anti-lock brakes versus an American home.
MB: I did mention anti-lock brakes. For many commodities, before they hit the market, there are billions of dollars that might precede it, whether it’s Clorox or whether it’s an iPhone or a Honda Civic which is quite an ingenious product. Housing as we know it has kind of ironed all of that
out of it, and it did it a long time ago. […] They are paying Mercedes Benz prices for a twenty-year-old used car. The single-family house market atomizes out all of the financial processes, and you still are spending large sums of money, but you’re not getting the sophisticated product. It’s not that it’s not a nice product or something people love, but it could be much, much better in energy and everything else.
were each assigned a suburban community with a higher foreclosure rate than the national average and asked to imagine in the design a vision for what sustainable, vibrant, post-crisis communities could be if we rethink our most fundamental beliefs about the American house.
Building a "new america" after the foreclosure crisis: http://cnnmon.ie/zpertA #CNNMoney
Architects re-imagine #foreclosedcities - Video - Business News - http://goo.gl/8p7WA #realestate#fb
@MuseumModernArt"Foreclosed" exhibition challenged designers to reexamine the American Dream. See what changed. http://bit.ly/wqFcxE
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
It looks to me like the Orange NJ proposal is to place buildings in the centers of certain street segments to create
1 - density
2 - mixed use (neighborhood retail/commercial services)
3 - capillary cul-de-sacs (where kids can play without through traffic)
These could put services close to residents, and make walking/biking to them more attractive at the same time. This, in turn, could reinvigorate the local economy and sense of community. Not an easy task in existing grids, so we must begin thinking of unconventional solutions. Fire engines, by the way, routinely serve cul-de-sacs.
I have also long championed flexibility in housing to better accomodate the diverse life paths taken in modern times and other cultures. The American Dream/white picket fence/Mayberry suburb fails badly at this, making your Cicero concept another valuable exercise. In 2012 America, we have a working class that may marry 3 times or not at all. We are all step-this and step-that. College kids might need to return home for years. Grandma might need closer care. Families aren't really nuclear, they are fissile, fusile, orbital and subatomic. So bring back the courtyard, with apartments around it.
The reintegration of nature into our communities is another worthy goal. I think creek daylighting, community gardens, and village greens are all good ideas. The cougar idea must be whimsy, but it helps us avoid getting trapped in the fallacy that land is a purely human medium.
CH, I advise you to spend more time off the island of Manhattan. Go to Alaska. Go to Detroit. Go to a hutong. And go to a desolate American suburb. Then go back to MoMA and tell me what you see.
What American dream? Looks like a nightmare!!!!!
Owning your own home is the American dream. That is never going to change. Those architects need a wake up call
And with the problem of widespread foreclosures embodying the issues faced by families and communities across the county, leading designers have now offered a new vision of the future.
'Change the dream & you change the city' - food for thought at 'Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream' exhibit, MoMA http://bit.ly/wqFcxE
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Felix:
One other point – the interview with Mr. Bell in essence points out his socialization of housing and thereby negates one of the big principles that sets our nation apart – Property Rights!!! Somehow this fact is getting lost in these utopian schemes. Just food for thought!
The Buell Hypothesis: "Change the dream and you change the city." Food for thought #architecture#changehttp://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/buell_hypothesis/
This is a democracy. We have nobody to blame but the 51% of people who elect those who allow the 1% to exploit us and steal from us. Tighter financial regulations, more low cost/free public programs, subsidizing green energy and public transport as well as other welfare programs… these are values. One party in America cares about them, one doesn’t.
These aren’t architectural problems. They are political and social problems. The cities we live in represent the values of the people in America, unfortunately. If/when Americans evolve some and start looking forward rather than backwards, and start making political decisions to match, these problems with irresponsible development will be a long way towards being resolved.
As the American dream evolves, so too will the American landscape. But essentially, this is about politics in the end. Architects can only point out the root problems and propose solutions that point to them, as this article suggests. I don’t have any problem with utopian proposals. Architects aren’t the financiers and architects aren’t the home buyers. It’s up to the wealthy and to average Americans to change their values. Most architects are already much farther down the evolutionary path on that front than the average American voter.
Have you forgotten the sad lessons of Pruitt - Igoe .
Since then the hard road to "Love thy neighbor as Thy self " in America has been shattered by
Inner city Gangs on one side & Gated WEALTH on the other .
The American dream for the rest of us ( the dying middle class) has become a survival Hell !!!
Now that the GREED & ME first failures have happened ;perhaps we can have SOCIAL change .
TRY this . Housing complexes with Cultural places which are inclusive of ALL classes & cultures .
Howard Roark
3/22/2012 2:57 AM CDT
This study, I have not read it, seems to advocate a reversal of that movement. A compaction of the habitable structures into higher density areas with less reliance on the automobile but with the option of public transportation.
Those first two words came from a long conversation I had with a loosely knit group of home builders and developers over coffee one morning.
Consensus was that without a paradign shift in buyer attitude about whether they could expect the livibility, security and comfort and a level of freedom in a high density housing project as they would expect in a "normal" development, it had limited appeal. (Their demographic target(s) were the first/second time home buyer with children).
I don't believe that shift will occur without a far more serious change than the foreclosure crisis. And, knowing a bit about govmint and how it "thinks" I'd venture a guess that their stereotypes of high density housing is limited to a condominium complex with a swimming pool and 2car attached garages. Ciao
I didn't see the exhibit in person like you did, Alex, but I did read about it. The part that really got under my skin was when I read that the participants, to prepare for this exhibition, had spent some time "in residence" at PS 1 in Long Island City.
Would it really have killed them to spend some time in -- gasp -- actual suburbs? I guess that was just a bridge too far.
It confirmed my pre-existing notion, which I think you echo, that architecture, generally speaking, is not a discipline that has much that's meaningful to contribute towards these issues of redefining the American Dream. To critique it and to change it, it's helpful to have even a smidgen of understanding of why it's powerful and widespread among so many people.
Change the dream and you change the city. MoMA | Foreclosed | The Buell Hypothesis | via @SpaceSyntaxGirl- http://bit.ly/HWtGGY
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/buell_hypothesis/
SV: But don't you think we can decide for ourselves...?
Shibani Joshi [brunette]: But this is what artists are doing. This is what they do. They inspire thoughts. They inspire discussion. What's wrong with it?
fascinating! just great – i want to watch all of these.
i live in a city that is wholly embracing (sub)urban sprawl – it's a small city, so this is a (relatively) recent development. the difficult part is that it feels so unstoppable when the entire system of city government is set up to encourage single-use, encourage sprawl (things like zoning laws that make home business illegal, or lack of impact fees, so that developers don't have to pay a cent to get utilities run to new developments outside the current city). and discourage historic preservations, as angie said (or, more accurately, only encourage it in affluent neighborhoods).
this from someone who has wholly embraced the home part of the american dream, if not the other parts. but owning a home has been a dream of mine for…ever – and it is just as amazing as i always thought. the thing that really strikes me is the number of homeowners i know who don't actually like owning a home (or at least none of the details that come with the concept).
shannon –my home is the hobby i've always wanted – i have always and forever loved building, fixing things…handyman work. apartment/rental life (for me they were always the same) was boring to me. the ability to customize my house the way i like is part of it, but the bigger part is that if my sheetrock needs repair i get to repair the sheetrock rather than call someone to do it. it's awesome.
there are also aspects of space and community which are not exclusive to houses or homeowners, but which have correlated in my life – urban homesteading stuff like growing food and composting and such, and talking with the neighbors, or meeting folks who walk their dogs (or kids with rc cars) by the house while you're gardening.
anyhow, i think the difference is that there are a lot of folks who own homes because it is what you are "supposed to do", but who don't actually like any of the things that come with it – they'd rather just be able to call a landlord to fix the house problems, and i know quite a few who find a yard to be more of a hassle than an asset. which is a-ok, but it seems to me like a shame that they were culturally shamed into homeownership in the first place.
also, i've gotten a chance to see another couple of the videos, and this project is fascinating! i *love* the ideas of space and community in these. again, space and community are a lot of what i love about homeownership, and those could (in theory) absolutely be achieved without the ownership part. but not here and now, so…
However, the original idea of designing neighborhoods was to escape all of these city life hardships and to live in a quiet, green and neat place with a family. Suburbs have long been the sites of a key component of American dream – personal ownership of a single-family home, an investment that once guaranteed stability and legacy for next generations.
If we can change the dream we can, possibly, change reality.
“You can’t have 6.8 billion cowboys out there and begin to think about bringing the species together in a global economy and a global biosphere.”
The American Dream is not a sustainable intelligent vision. The needs of the many are left out of the utopian backyard. And I have never witnessed, in all my days, a direct correlation between happiness and prosperity.
Amazing exhibit on redefining our suburbias but changing the 'America Dream'. Worth seeing if you're able http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …#MOMA
Very interesting and provocative piece. I have to wonder if it is not a bit of a critique on the stalled vernacular that defines most of America’s housing. For a while now, the vast majority of new housing that we build is largely a replication of an historic archetype that no longer accurately reflects the present nature of our society. We build more space than we need, or even spaces that we hardly ever use, because we think they’re “supposed” to be there. The quaint American home is a fallen star–fallen from grace. It’s days of glory and true architectural exploration are over, serving more as a diluted relic of a former era.
Instead, the dream is conjured out of these material things and fed back into them as a guiding norm. Similarly, architectural projects, no matter how fanciful or abstract, are real, material things (models, drawings, and videos, in this case) that put ideas (and maybe dreams) on the table for detailed debate by interested parties. Yes, this too could be a distraction, and the still unmet challenge is to assemble all of the parties, from residents to public officials to investment bankers, in an agonistic yet equitable setting. Nevertheless, the large models of large-scale proposals sitting on tables in a MoMA gallery represent a deliberate curatorial decision, since models have a way of generating discussion and assembling publics around themselves. The tables on which the models sit might even foreshadow our efforts with this online roundtable, which the Buell Center has convened in collaboration with Architects, Designers, and Planners for Social Responsibility to explore the contours that configure the debate surrounding housing and suburbanization itself.
Amen. Americans need to stop worshipping at the alter of the lawn. Its absolutely insane. Name me another activity where Im expected to nurture something and make it grow just so I can mow it down when it grows too much? I think Elvis had the right idea with Astroturf.
Art & Architecture (36)
Can art help fix our gridlocked suburban dysfunction? MOMA takes on sprawl w/"Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" http://bit.ly/kzLr7b
US Sec HUD Shaun Donovan highilghts #ArtPlacein keynote at MoMA's Foreclosed event. http://bit.ly/n58jye
As an urbanist and lawyer, I think deeply about these issues. I find the efforts in Cicero to be interesting, but somehow missing the point of other communities of “outsiders” on the inside, like the Chatham of my youth. I am sympathetic to the plight of hardworking immigrants but would offer the story of the middle class community that is suffering by bureaucratic malfeasance of displacing the black poor into these neighborhoods with insufficient support systems and resources. Chicago is, according to the Manhattan Institute, the most segregated city in the US. It is also still has a large black population..for historical reasons. What design opportunities exist to revitalize the far south side? Is a Walmart the key to salvation? (I think, not) Mr Gates, I saw your show here in LA at the Moca Geffen and am very intriqued by the synergy that you create with your interests…arts, urban planning. I would like the opportunity to meet with you in Chicago to discuss ideas and opportunities for creating interest in saving Chatham.
Is this Art or propaganda? I left apartment living for the suburbs and have no intention of moving back to high density.
2/17/2012 9:58 AM CST
2/16/2012 10:36 AM CST
2/16/2012 12:11 AM CST
2/13/2012 9:31 PM CST
--Jane Jacobs
2/13/2012 6:32 PM CST
2/17/2012 4:22 PM CST
2/22/2012 1:02 PM CST
The art of real estate at MoMA: “Foreclosed Rehousing the American Dream,” fb.me/1b801jTdm
Her response was: "So, how is life with the 1%?" After a career in design, I certainly didn't feel like a member of the 1%, but from my view of the champagne bar in the VIP lounge it was clear that I was in close proximity. Then, I began to wonder:
Has "design" become an activity of, by, and for the 1%?
hey @WiedenKennedydon't worry that you're taking money from polluters like chevrolet as long as you do hipster art http://bit.ly/zVOynk
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
3/7/2012 2:32 AM CST
Isn't the museum of Modern Art a place for Art?
I don't know if i'm missing something, but any art gallery/museum i've been too rarely lets reality to get in the way of weird and wonderfula rt (especailly if it's of the 'modern' genre).
Was this exhibition meant to showcase real options for architectural redesign of these places or was it's objective to do art?
I'm confused...
There’s the publishing world of architecture – propagated by academics and starchitects – and then there’s the people with offices in almost every town doing the best they can. The former develop illustrious careers, building reputations instead of structures. The latter do the best they can, which is rarely enough.
Some architects (including me) want to be artists, and you don’t get into a show at MoMA by proposing moderate, affordable, pragmatic solutions to housing problems. And despite prevailing sterotypes, architects don’t really have that much control over the final outcome. It takes good taste and good money to create good buildings, and since the first two are in short supply these days, so is the third.
Reflecting on the new suburban utopia at 'Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream' @momapsi: http://bit.ly/wqFcxE #urbanism.
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Art + Policy , makes me giddy! Foreclosed at http://MoMA.org http://bit.ly/wQpxaR
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
I live in the wrong part of the world to offer first hand critique of Foreclosed, but this criticism seems unqualified. MoMA is an art museum, and will provide inventive solutions based in the arts, surely! That is what i would expect to see at MoMA, and would be disappointed otherwise. I dont think they promised ‘practical’ solutions. Bit like going to a Michelin star restaurant and criticising them because they dont serve Big Macs.
Challenge of Suburbia (56)
The foreclosure crisis has led to a major loss of confidence in the suburban dream. The idea of single-family houses on private lots reachable only by car has been broken, and this new reality has hit especially hard in suburbs. It is here, rather than in the next ring of potential sprawl, where architects, landscape designers, artists, ecologists, and elected officials need to rethink reshaping urban America for the coming decades.
Whether or not residents agree with that assessment is beside the point because the re-envisioning is less about the specifics of the Keizer Station and more about what it means to alter the previous conceptions of the American Dream.
Foreclosed: MoMA Takes on Suburbia: The severe effects of the current economic crisis on suburbs across America ... http://bit.ly/uq80l0
MoMA #Foreclosedexhibit calls on architects and designers to take on the suburb as their next great challenge. http://www.moma.org/explore/inside …
@BrianBMaddenlet's go to NYC to see this @MoMAon urban #design. There is life after cul de sacs! http://nymag.com/arts/architect …
The poster child for the crisis is the exurban home in the unfinished subdivision, yet the crisis has hit equally hard at older, close-in suburbs like Cicero. According to the Woodstock Institute, the town had 1,066 new foreclosures in 2010, an increase of 8.6 percent over the previous year. While foreclosures declined slightly in the first half of 2011, no one in Cicero expects the problem to go away anytime soon.
MoMA has addressed the financial crisis and possible ways for the regeneration of Am. suburbia http://nymag.com/arts/architect …http://www.archdaily.com/170180/update- …
At MoMA in NYC- what to become of foreclosed suburbs? The American Dream, Revised zite.to/ABSiJ7 via @zite
Sub-urban and suburban are also two very different things. I would argue that sub-urban is not bad. A good example of this is in some parts of Brooklyn, Queens, and Nassau county NY. The density is greater than the typical suburban environment, and there is a small business walkable street scape that flanks a mix of multi and single family housing in many of these neighborhoods. There is also access to public transit in and out of the city. There is a mix of home owners and renters, and the opportunity to own a house and rent out the top floor. There is a sense of community and a feeling of being in a small town within a city. The film "Do the Right Thing" by Spike Lee so clearly expresses this. Another issue is density. More density is not the solution alone. We need to find an appropriate balance of density, production, and economy so that development can be in some sort of sustainable balance. I think that sub-urban form has the greatest potential for a sustainable development because there is enough space to support a mix of agriculture, industry,small business, housing, park space, etc...as well as enough density to support local businesses with regard to employees and consumers. Cities like manhattan will never be able to become hybrid typologies because things like urban agriculture and production will be far too expensive due to crazy high land prices. The only problem with the sub-urban typology is that it sometimes becomes gentrified over time as we see in brooklyn or the opposite happens where it becomes a ghetto due to the home values going down as density goes up like in Jamaica Queens (balance is always a thin line). On the other hand, suburban development lends itself to exploitation by corporate interests as James R. clearly articulates. The American dream of owning a single family home is not going away. It is a part of the American culture that dates back hundreds of years. We need to find a solution to the problem without ignoring the cultural mentality that led to it. This is why ideas like the ones in the MoMA exhibit never work. I believe that we need to study examples that already work like Astoria, and go from there.
sustainable developers?? developers follow incentives and try to minimize risk - without government subsidizing sprawling (i.e. cheap & low capacity) infrastructure and overly restrictive zoning laws they'd very likely build far more high-density mixed-use buildings without parking (but also without green space). without utilities, roads, and other services land is pretty much worthless - and developers typically don't like challenging zoning unless they know the municipality is on board.
also - high-density outside of the city center presents another challenge because of the capacity of the existing services. Some towns in the northeast have put a moratorium on any new building because their existing water and sewer systems cannot handle any additional load. when you think of it, suburban development is often a function of how big the sewer systems are, or how much space is needed for a septic and/or leech field and buffer.
perhaps if as a culture we had a much healthier relationship with our own poop...
Barry Bergdoll (BB): It is astounding to what extent people’s dreams are fulfilled by images that are supplied to them by the marketplace, by advertising, by television, but I do think that that is shifting. And even some of the dream producers like movies, like television series, are beginning to address the complex realities of suburbs and are starting to show us images of suburbs which are arrival cities for immigrants which have multigenerational families living in the same house. Some of the kind of covering up of those realities in popular entertainment is itself beginning to erode. So, there are many many cracks in the dream.
MOMA #Foreclosedexhibit showcases suburrbs. Are suburbs dead? We think not! #realestateNext #AmericanCity: http://americancity.org/buzz/entry/337 …
We need to stop demonizing the suburbs and start recognizing that we are all in this together. Is it better to annihilate suburbia or perfect it? Pragmatic solutions, like changing zoning to encourage density, more sustainable landscaping and agriculture, could be relatively easy to enact and would go a long way to improving the vitality of the suburbs
I think this misses the critique by a long shot. The problem of the suburbs is not that it's being demonized, and being "nicer" to the suburbs ain't going to redeem them.
The suburbs will be "fixed" when an overwhelming political majority of suburbanites buy into the "pragmatic solutions" the author listed. The question is whether that will happen or not. That someone somewhere made fun of Applebee's is irrelevant.
What stuns me, though, is the claim that things like zoning changes would be "relatively easy to enact". In the absence of democracy this is clearly the case. That's not the world we live in, though. Hell, DC has arguably one of the most liberal, pro-urban voting populations in the country, and implementing such changes here, in the heart of the city, are almost impossible.
(As an example, there's been an almost decade long struggle to allow a 2000 square foot day care facility to operate just north of Lincoln Park on Capitol Hill. There was angry resistance when neighbors found the newly opened Hill Center planned on allowing wedding receptions until midnight. The examples are endless).
The idea that it will be relatively ease" to get existing suburban homeowners on board with such radically changes of policy is naive. Frankly, I'm stunned whenever a place like DC or Arlington manages to eke out a minor pro-urbanist victory. The cynic in me says meaningful change in the suburbs are orders of magnitude more difficult, and is contingent on outside factors like resource depletion. And there's a further argument to be made that a suburbs without the resources to maintain itself certainly hasn't got the resources to reinvent itself.
Feb 22, 2012 10:20 am
Is MOMA's _Foreclosed_ too critical of the suburbs? http://americancity.org/buzz/entry/337 …
Though the panelists agreed that the foreclosure crisis will lead to major changes in suburban development, they... http://bit.ly/H6nSeG
That stretch of the 15 freeway is always sooo windy. Trucks would literally flip on their side.
I am surprised people would actually consider living there.
However, the original idea of designing neighborhoods was to escape all of these city life hardships and to live in a quiet, green and neat place with a family. Suburbs have long been the sites of a key component of American dream – personal ownership of a single-family home, an investment that once guaranteed stability and legacy for next generations.
Circulation (50)
There is much made of the American Dream, can someone define what this American Dream is, or was, and reassure us all that it is not based on infinite consumption of finite resources? There seems to be no other way of realising that ‘dream’. We must pump more oil, find more gas, rip our planet apart to find the stuff we must have in order to perpetuate some kind of illusion into an infinity that is constantly receding. Politicians scream :’vote for me, and you can have it all when I get elected’ so the gullible masses decide which candidate offers the best sounding lies. Then find that they still can’t have what they want, because the previous incumbent ‘left such a mess’ that getting the economy straight puts back the good times for another few years. So the myth of the American Dream goes on, always that illusive future awaiting everyone that was, I fear, the creation of postwar admen: that if you always bought the newest car and bigger house further out, you would always have the means to drag 2 tons of steel 20 miles to buy your groceries, or propel yourself at 500mph to sit on beach 2000 miles away for 2 weeks. Unfortunately the ‘means’ isn’t there anymore, The dream was built on an infinity of cheap oil and the dream is turning into a nightmare because oil is now too expensive to use for dream making. http://www.yourmedievalfuture.com/
“The drive everywhere for cheaper and cheaper things mentality is unsustainable. It’s getting more crowded and a huge portion of the income goes into transportation,” Dufaux said.
I like this design a lot better than our current Keizer Station layout. I almost dread going to Keizer Station because I always take the long way to get to where I am going. I just can’t figure out the roads. It’s confusing.
A tourist from Georgia once confronted me in the Lowes parking lot and asked me how to get to Target because he had seen it from the freeway. He seemed intelligent enough. I laughed because I told him that I live in Keizer and still can’t figure it out. I gave him the best directions I could and wished him luck. He said “Thank you for the directions and hope I can find my way back to the freeway”. I wished him good luck yet again.
I am dependent on my automobile to go from one store to the next. I love going to Bridgeport Village. Parking is a problem but once you park, it’s a pleasure to walk from store to store. And there is such variety. I can even take in a movie after shopping. It’s just an attractive place to visit. It’s inviting. The footprint of Bridgeport is so small compared to Keizer Station. It’s just a total waste of land. Too bad we can’t just start over.
I just can’t wait for the Mayor’s, Chamber of Commerce’s and the council’s Walmart to be built. Doubt that Walmart was envisioned initially but we have to please Chuck Sides. Hey, doesn’t he owe the city back taxes? Oh, he is immune to paying taxes. Too bad, the city could use the money.
All five teams have responded to this directive to some degree by proposing social and infrastructural systems that attempt, on a large scale, to align with the new cultural desires and economic realities of American suburban living. Amale Andraos and Dan Wood of WORK Architecture Company, working on SalemKeizer, Oregon, propose a contemporary update on the notion of a garden city, addressing a range of ecological issues. Hilary Sample and Michael Meredith of MOS, analyzing the Oranges, New Jersey, explore the potential of suburban streets to offer a new kind of civic space in a less car-dependent future. Jeanne Gang of Studio Gang, focusing on Cicero, Illinois, seeks a new flexibility in housing that will accommodate the rapidly shifting immigrant populations in the suburbs outside Chicago. Andrew Zago of Zago Architecture, studying Rialto, California, subverts the strict hierarchies of property boundaries that have traditionally structured suburban space. And Michael Bell of Visible Weather, examining Temple Terrace, Florida, considers the relationship between relatively homogenous Florida suburbs and the more diverse and less prosperous neighboring urban communities.
December 20, 2011 at 5:44 pm
It affected gender roles and pollution sky-rocketed because they through these homes up with NO regard to solar orientation and etc. It increased dependency on the car and was a nightmare for the family that had one car... which was almost everyone...
Not only that it also decreased the amount of diversity in a given area which has added to more social problems in our communities
December 20, 2011 at 1:18 pm
So those songs about ticky tacky boxes – well that historical revisionism.
December 20, 2011 at 12:00 pm
But there were real suburbs long before most people drove cars: streetcar tracks were everywhere in LA and in the East they coordinated with commuter trains. This phenomenon dates back to the 1880's. I live in such a neighborhood and it still works much better than the one I grew up in, Anaheim, California (a typical 50's suburb).
Suburbs would be great if there was a lot of public transportation that linked them efficiently with cities nearby. I love my Boston suburb and it is much simpler to get downtown than it is if you live in LA and have to sit in traffic on the freeway. I keep sampling and comparing the two since my family still lives in LA: Boston wins.
December 20, 2011 at 12:13 pm
2/15/2012 5:45 PM CST
Sub-urban and suburban are also two very different things. I would argue that sub-urban is not bad. A good example of this is in some parts of Brooklyn, Queens, and Nassau county NY. The density is greater than the typical suburban environment, and there is a small business walkable street scape that flanks a mix of multi and single family housing in many of these neighborhoods. There is also access to public transit in and out of the city. There is a mix of home owners and renters, and the opportunity to own a house and rent out the top floor. There is a sense of community and a feeling of being in a small town within a city. The film "Do the Right Thing" by Spike Lee so clearly expresses this. Another issue is density. More density is not the solution alone. We need to find an appropriate balance of density, production, and economy so that development can be in some sort of sustainable balance. I think that sub-urban form has the greatest potential for a sustainable development because there is enough space to support a mix of agriculture, industry,small business, housing, park space, etc...as well as enough density to support local businesses with regard to employees and consumers. Cities like manhattan will never be able to become hybrid typologies because things like urban agriculture and production will be far too expensive due to crazy high land prices. The only problem with the sub-urban typology is that it sometimes becomes gentrified over time as we see in brooklyn or the opposite happens where it becomes a ghetto due to the home values going down as density goes up like in Jamaica Queens (balance is always a thin line). On the other hand, suburban development lends itself to exploitation by corporate interests as James R. clearly articulates. The American dream of owning a single family home is not going away. It is a part of the American culture that dates back hundreds of years. We need to find a solution to the problem without ignoring the cultural mentality that led to it. This is why ideas like the ones in the MoMA exhibit never work. I believe that we need to study examples that already work like Astoria, and go from there.
Jeanne Gang (JG): I think we can’t afford not to realize something. We have so many issues especially in the inner ring suburbs where we were looking at, like Cicero, where developers kind of hop-skip over them and sprawl out into further and further-out suburbs, which just increases our dependence on the car.
Love it! Cicero is nicely located near downtown and public transport. Agree with first commenter about the bike unfriendly aspect.
What appears to be missing from consideration is transportation infrastructure. More specifically, walking, biking and mass transit.There are many structural components to accomodate these modes such as ramps (which serve bikes, carriages, wheelchairs etc), and flat surfaces running along stairways. Seperated and/or elevated lanes and parking and rental facilities for bikes etc.
@Moma's take on walkable cities. View the various projects @OPinDC@DDOTDChttp://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
What do you think? RT @edestesdesign: @Moma's take on walkable cities. View the various projects @OPinDC@DDOTDChttp://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
4 months ago
The author's jimmies seem to be particularly rustled at the thought of replacing cul-de-secs with a cold, urban grid. "The winding cul-de-sac roads are then met with a grid form. This disrespect for the rhythms of a suburban lifestyle...". We do not need a grid of streets to fix the suburbs, or so he argues.
Actually, you kinda do. IMO, the cul-de-sacs are part of the core of the problem. A landscape that is very permeable for walkers and cyclists is essential. A grid of streets makes it much easier/faster to walk from one place to another. A grid of streets is easier to mentally map. The author doesn't really understand what makes the city different than the burbs.
Feb 22, 2012 12:14 pm
MB: […] In the 1990s you had a booming economy, you had a kind ofpush to alter, if not end, the welfare state. By the 2000s, you have a real estate bubble. And today you have a foreclosure crisis. But in all of these situations, there are a couple things that have been consistent. The amount of money people spend on housing and transportation is immense. They can’t afford it. You don’t want to tell people they can’t afford something and say that’s the reason to change. You want to be more positive than that. But there are many, many factors about affordability, about energy consumption, and frankly about the role of design in any of it. The American single-family house is a commodity product that has virtually no research and development, no design. Architects, in a spec house in Houston in the late 1990s—their fee was about twelve dollars per house. These are mass-produced commodities. There is no professional engagement. […] I think most of the people in this exhibition are quite
positive and excited about the suburbs. We know it’s a deeply, deeply important part of the American ethos, if not just everyday life of course. But, they’re not inevitable. And the financial underpinnings of them have really dramatically shifted in the last five, ten, fifteen years—not just the last two.
CH: Talk about that R&D thing. You made a point in the video in the exhibition that blew my mind about the comparison between how much money in R&D goes into your iPhone or anti-lock brakes versus an American home.
MB: I did mention anti-lock brakes. For many commodities, before they hit the market, there are billions of dollars that might precede it, whether it’s Clorox or whether it’s an iPhone or a Honda Civic which is quite an ingenious product. Housing as we know it has kind of ironed all of that
out of it, and it did it a long time ago. […] They are paying Mercedes Benz prices for a twenty-year-old used car. The single-family house market atomizes out all of the financial processes, and you still are spending large sums of money, but you’re not getting the sophisticated product. It’s not that it’s not a nice product or something people love, but it could be much, much better in energy and everything else.
EH: Maybe in the future, but I will say directly answering your question: The entire city of Orange will not be a carless community.
Buildings in the streets? Check out a video on how "Architects re-imagine foreclosed cities" http://ow.ly/9l3J5
DREAM HOUSES
Letters
The proposed housing models featured in your Spring 2012 issue (“Dreaming American”) are best described as solutions in search of a problem. In particular, the proposal for the Oranges, in New Jersey — which would fill underused streets between existing buildings with ribbons of new developments — creates problems for which there are no reasonable solutions.
Problem number one is that the new structures, to meet disability-access regulations and building codes, would require elevators and public corridors leading to enclosed exit stairways, neither of which can be accommodated within the proposed configurations. Problem number two is that the structures would interfere with access for emergency vehicles.
But aided by the reclamation of previously private spaces (“The idea is that private space that is now abandoned, foreclosed, or empty would be given back to the public”), a more realistic project could be conceived featuring the following:
• Narrowed and reconfigured roads for use by bicyclists and joggers, and access for emergency vehicles.
• Playgrounds, parks, and open space enabled by the demolition of buildings deemed to be unsuited for adaptive reuse.
• Varied housing types to accommodate residents with a wide range of family structures and financial resources.
• Ground-level spaces for such services as childcare, health care, laundry, and community administration.
• Community-owned shuttle buses to provide access to shops and schools.
I’m sure that Jane Jacobs, if she were alive today, would be pleased to see this concept implemented.
Aaron Cohn ’49GSAPP
Los Angeles, CA
Aaron Cohn, “Dream Houses,” Columbia Magazine, Summer 2012, 3.
Walkable suburbs - the most important future development for suburban planning and refurbishment.
What a strange review. It seems that anyone questioning the car in American urbanism is considered ridiculous. MOS's Orange NJ proposal is completely reasonable in a world where our policies towards automobile driven urbanism is making the working poor even poorer and more unhealthy/obese. It's based around pedestrians and mass transit, not really that radical actually.... To propose a dense city based upon the pedestrian instead of car seems like the type of urban thinking we need.
Did anyone see any Churches? I would love to see a drive in movie theater. I love really wide streets, and wide parking spots.
"Death" of the suburban auto? Architects re-imagine foreclosed cities http://money.cnn.com/video/news/201 …via @CNNMoney
MOS interrupted the street network with housing to make Orange a pedestrian paradise http://ow.ly/9ncre #ShiftingSuburbia
It would good for everyone if the Pomona became a job center.
Places like Rialto, Fontana, Chino Hills, and Rancho Cucamonga wouldn't be such far-off exurbs.
There's even an international airport (ONT) right next to Pomona.
3/21/2012 5:00 PM CDT
Alex Ulam (AU): No, it's not the elite. It's the way our tax...It's the way our housing policy has been oriented for the last twenty or thirty years. It's unsustainable---
SV: We should not be organizing ourselves and where to live. Now the elites are telling us how we should be doing it.
AU: They are making some suggestions, but -- listen -- it's unsustainable for people to live in suburbs.
SV: Who says?
AU: Well most Americans actually spend more money on transportation than they do on medical care or on taxes. The average family of four that makes $50,000 spends somewhere between $7,900 and---
One thing that would help suburbia would be a requirement that ALL streets have sidewalks on at least one side of the street, preferably both sides.
Might encourage people to do a little walking, and do that walking away from the vehicular traffic?
I've never understood why anyone ever thought to pay so much to live in grids of look-alike homes... They look exactly like low income housing developments, really.
And the idea of criticizing people who use mass transit bus systems, but think it's not government to use the highways...
There's such a disconnect... I think a lot of people anymore don't connect how community & civilization aspects interact, and don't really understand how we have a civilization.
It’s refreshing that the team unabashedly suggests that much of these new ribbons of housing would be developed as public housing. But if this is a serious idea, not simply a gesture or metaphor, then one must confront the fact that public housing in the United States, apart from unfortunately being in ideological disrepute, is also grossly underfunded.
Cities & Suburbs (71)
This is fascinating Kevin. I heard a few months ago about re-engineering communities to be some what self-contained where people would not be living in “out-lying areas” as they would be in designed communities. However that idea is born out of something entirely different I don’t want ot post here.Anyway, I wonder why they chose Rialto as a focus area? Will be fascinating to see the results of this.
There is much made of the American Dream, can someone define what this American Dream is, or was, and reassure us all that it is not based on infinite consumption of finite resources? There seems to be no other way of realising that ‘dream’. We must pump more oil, find more gas, rip our planet apart to find the stuff we must have in order to perpetuate some kind of illusion into an infinity that is constantly receding. Politicians scream :’vote for me, and you can have it all when I get elected’ so the gullible masses decide which candidate offers the best sounding lies. Then find that they still can’t have what they want, because the previous incumbent ‘left such a mess’ that getting the economy straight puts back the good times for another few years. So the myth of the American Dream goes on, always that illusive future awaiting everyone that was, I fear, the creation of postwar admen: that if you always bought the newest car and bigger house further out, you would always have the means to drag 2 tons of steel 20 miles to buy your groceries, or propel yourself at 500mph to sit on beach 2000 miles away for 2 weeks. Unfortunately the ‘means’ isn’t there anymore, The dream was built on an infinity of cheap oil and the dream is turning into a nightmare because oil is now too expensive to use for dream making. http://www.yourmedievalfuture.com/
This sounds like a lot of over paid elitists trying to decide how everyone else should live. My suggestion is that all members of this elite team be required to move their families to this new development and reside there for at least five years as part of their contract. The most troubling is, as Fairfield Fox points out, the use of taxpayer dollars to fund this boodoggle. Who are they to declare that suburban living is dead? Then the usual outlandish lie: " many long-standing critics of the American suburb — who see it as environmentally toxic, energy wasteful and just too expensive (especially because it’s paid for by taxing the cities) " All evidence points to the suburban taxpayer as supporting the urban ghettos so your analysis is an ouit right lie. Abbot schools and other urban renewal activities are primarily supported by taxpayers from the suburbs.
Truth is, the Great Migration destroyed the great cities of Detroit, Cleveland, Chicago (Orly the Daley’s could hold this wondrously toddlin’ town together; Rahm’s clueless), Newark, L.A., Philadelphia and NYC. They aren’t coming back. Neither are places like Orange and Irvington, the former Camptown. Parasites will use our tax dollars in a quixotic attempt to recapture history, while pocketing some easy Money. Then, a thesis can be griten, a PhD for someone’s daughter in Urban Planning? Sure, why not? Then, a fellowship on the tazxpayers’ cuff. The rip-off.
It seems like only yesterday, that I could hop on the bus, for a dime, with friends and go “downtown”, to catch a ballgame, a movie or just mingle with the delightful crowds. Then, around 1958, that became dangerous for kids under 15….then under 20….then EVERYONE. The jostling started. The Huggins, the 5 vs. 2 shakedowns. The stabbings and the shootings and the rapes. A cannonball, they said, could be fired down every “Main Street”, without injuring a soul…because everyone had fled. What a helluva migration, as we look back over what was, and can never be again. Only yesterday.
All five teams have responded to this directive to some degree by proposing social and infrastructural systems that attempt, on a large scale, to align with the new cultural desires and economic realities of American suburban living. Amale Andraos and Dan Wood of WORK Architecture Company, working on SalemKeizer, Oregon, propose a contemporary update on the notion of a garden city, addressing a range of ecological issues. Hilary Sample and Michael Meredith of MOS, analyzing the Oranges, New Jersey, explore the potential of suburban streets to offer a new kind of civic space in a less car-dependent future. Jeanne Gang of Studio Gang, focusing on Cicero, Illinois, seeks a new flexibility in housing that will accommodate the rapidly shifting immigrant populations in the suburbs outside Chicago. Andrew Zago of Zago Architecture, studying Rialto, California, subverts the strict hierarchies of property boundaries that have traditionally structured suburban space. And Michael Bell of Visible Weather, examining Temple Terrace, Florida, considers the relationship between relatively homogenous Florida suburbs and the more diverse and less prosperous neighboring urban communities.
December 21, 2011 at 2:43 pm
Perhaps by providing a definition of what they consider a "suburb" the authors of the article can resolve this issue.
As a side note, it would be interesting to see an article that explores the fate and paths of these even earlier locales.
December 21, 2011 at 12:52 pm
As far as pre-fab construction. there is nothing wrong with it, so long as it abides by building codes. My home in Florida requires cinderblock framing for the ground floor...for hurricane resistance. Even though we're more than 50 miles from the coast, it's just the way it is here. Many people assume that something different is always bad. That's not the case. The house is gorgeous, with a nice stucco exterior, and nice finishes inside. It was still relatively affordable for a brand new house...and would have been less had I not had a porch, lanai, or extra room added.
I agree that a LOT of new constructions are wasteful, and people worry more about getting granite counter tops, high end appliances, upgraded fixtures, etc....instead of getting something more functional and workable. That's what many people want, but they shouldn't be complaining when their mortgage is much higher than mine or can't afford their "dream house". Cookie cutter houses are fine if that is what is in your budget. I won't complain about them. :)
December 20, 2011 at 3:01 pm
December 20, 2011 at 1:44 pm
December 20, 2011 at 1:59 pm
December 20, 2011 at 12:51 pm
So those songs about ticky tacky boxes – well that historical revisionism.
December 20, 2011 at 12:00 pm
Yes it did. The word was in use in the 1890's certainly and possibly earlier. Heck, the Chevy Suburban has been made since the 1930's I think....1935 to be exact.
Bad writer, no cookie!
December 20, 2011 at 11:54 am
Is this Art or propaganda? I left apartment living for the suburbs and have no intention of moving back to high density.
6 Months Ago
if downtown is for people, then who are the suburbs for?
Sub-urban and suburban are also two very different things. I would argue that sub-urban is not bad. A good example of this is in some parts of Brooklyn, Queens, and Nassau county NY. The density is greater than the typical suburban environment, and there is a small business walkable street scape that flanks a mix of multi and single family housing in many of these neighborhoods. There is also access to public transit in and out of the city. There is a mix of home owners and renters, and the opportunity to own a house and rent out the top floor. There is a sense of community and a feeling of being in a small town within a city. The film "Do the Right Thing" by Spike Lee so clearly expresses this. Another issue is density. More density is not the solution alone. We need to find an appropriate balance of density, production, and economy so that development can be in some sort of sustainable balance. I think that sub-urban form has the greatest potential for a sustainable development because there is enough space to support a mix of agriculture, industry,small business, housing, park space, etc...as well as enough density to support local businesses with regard to employees and consumers. Cities like manhattan will never be able to become hybrid typologies because things like urban agriculture and production will be far too expensive due to crazy high land prices. The only problem with the sub-urban typology is that it sometimes becomes gentrified over time as we see in brooklyn or the opposite happens where it becomes a ghetto due to the home values going down as density goes up like in Jamaica Queens (balance is always a thin line). On the other hand, suburban development lends itself to exploitation by corporate interests as James R. clearly articulates. The American dream of owning a single family home is not going away. It is a part of the American culture that dates back hundreds of years. We need to find a solution to the problem without ignoring the cultural mentality that led to it. This is why ideas like the ones in the MoMA exhibit never work. I believe that we need to study examples that already work like Astoria, and go from there.
The topic of discussion: "nature," "town & country" and the suburb is neither. http://bit.ly/uxXO4f #foreclosed
Justin Davidson on MoMA's Architectural Response to the Financial Crisis (in the suburbs) -- http://bit.ly/w6oWRJ #urbanplanning, #cities
MoMA’s Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream is inspiring interesting discussions about the suburban/urban divide: http://goo.gl/MYJYy
As an unashamed suburbanite, I'm so happy to see this whip-smart review of MoMA's Foreclosed by @dianalindindexhttp://americancity.org/buzz/entry/337 …
@Ries is correct. Many people live in the burbs because they don't want to live in city, and visa versa. And, let's not forget that many people live where they live, love it or hate it, because (gasp) they can't afford to live elsewhere. Let's also not forget about the cost of the commute, no matter what form that takes. Design is part of the intrigue, but it's not the whole enchilada.
Arlington is only out of the category of "suburban" (to the extent it is) due to the large scale urbanist victories there.
in fact lots of suburban jurisdictions are making urbanist changes -in greater DC (excluding arlington and City of Alex as urban) we have them in Fairfax, in City of Falls Church, in MoCo, and even in PG (and even a tiny bit in Loudoun). Now, those are often only in select locations, or are balanced by antiurbanist decisions. But see, thats where the demonization blinds people - if you can accept that auto centric suburbia is going to continue to be the preferred way to live for many (possibly the majority) then the fact that only 5-10% say, of Fairfax, is going to end up walkable TOD may be an acceptable result.
As for demonization mattering to the political process, I think it does. I have participated in such discussions with fellow NoVans, and I think the more extreme viewpoints including have left people very defensive, and believing things about urbanism that give ammo the antiurbanists, and make their job of persuasion easier. These include the impressions that urbanists beleive A. that everyone should be carfree B. That no one should live in a SFH C. That everyplace on Greater Washington outside of the district is "bad" regardless of density, etc, etc.
Obviously there are larger, real issues that drive suburban politics, not just these discourse focused issues, and obviously there are things in the discourse on these issues that are unhelpful aside from extremist urbanism memes. But they are not trivial in their impact, IMO. And as someone who values urbanism, I find the distortion of urbanism involved in those memes particularly troubling. It makes a sophisticated vision of a reinvented metropolitan america sound like the ravings of naive hipsters.
Feb 22, 2012 10:47 am
The author's jimmies seem to be particularly rustled at the thought of replacing cul-de-secs with a cold, urban grid. "The winding cul-de-sac roads are then met with a grid form. This disrespect for the rhythms of a suburban lifestyle...". We do not need a grid of streets to fix the suburbs, or so he argues.
Actually, you kinda do. IMO, the cul-de-sacs are part of the core of the problem. A landscape that is very permeable for walkers and cyclists is essential. A grid of streets makes it much easier/faster to walk from one place to another. A grid of streets is easier to mentally map. The author doesn't really understand what makes the city different than the burbs.
Feb 22, 2012 12:14 pm
CH: Increased density?
MB: All five projects in the show deal with density, and they also deal with trying to find housing that is probably more financially and size-wise appropriate to its user, but also that would use dramatically less energy to basically dramatically lower carrying costs. But I think many of the people, including ourselves, we were looking at ways to take underutilized property, publicly held or publicly controlled, and increase density around infrastructure because the public has already paid for all of that infrastructure and isn’t using it.
Michael Bell (MB): We were asked by the Museum to work on a site called Temple Terrace, Florida. It’s the northeast corner of Tampa, and a little town. It’s 22,000 people. It was an incorporated city in 1926. It preceded the growth of Tampa. Tampa eventually came to meet Temple Terrace, in a kind of typical American situation where something that was very rural became urban, “quasi-urban” one could say. Temple Terrace actually had a relatively low foreclosure rate: 168 foreclosures in a town of 10,000 households. So, in looking at all of this, it actually became much more of a scenario of looking at “How did Temple Terrace operate historically? Financially? What was its density?” Etc., etc. It became much more of a project about trying to produce a future that would be more secure against those kinds of problems, rather than being immediately reactive to the problem now. And I think that’s true for the whole exhibition.
"Foreclosed" at the MOMA asks what people really like about suburban living - from @langealexandra: http://dogroup.co/zCQPPb
I have been working on new style of urban planing among capital cities. The fundamental difference between urban city and suburb has almost similar meaning of difference between individual-life style and nuclear family-life style. Urban city needs excitement. Suburb needs relax. It is good to be focused on Hispanic-Family's tradition for re-developing suburb community environment. Is there any support to business start-up for those new residents ? Maybe they should develop those project with economists and/or investors to be real american dream makers.....
Urban planners will never understand 50%+ of the population DON'T WANT to live in multi-unit dwellings in their beloved cities, but they keep trying anyway. Like Jon from Cheyenne said, many prefer and like our own S-P-A-C-E away from all of the traffic, crime, and supposed "enlightenment" that city life purports to offer. They can have it and LEAVE US ALONE!
I don’t know how you can say that the housing crisis was mostly a suburban thing. In downtown Portland all of the condo projects that were completed between 2007 and 2009 were subsequently turned into apartments or turned over to banks. Unsold units in bank possession were auctioned off or otherwise sold at a 40% discount. This reversed the trend of the prior decade of apartment buildings being converted into condos. Look around and the cranes are building new apartment buildings, not condos.
To the point of suburban architectural solutions to making housing affordable. You know that museum-curated shows are always ‘think big or don’t come’. When was the last time you saw a curated show present pragmatic proposals that could be installed in real life, the next day?
Real life solutions are already being played out in the burbs of Portland, and undoubtedly in hundreds of other burbs in the nation.
Orenco Station is supposed to be a New Urbanism project, although its growth has been driven by the big-box strip mall (a blend between the traditional strip mall and the single lot big box store).
A twist on Jane Jacobs romanticism connected to mass transit rail is discerned from stop after stop along the TriMet MAX, with tracts of townhomes and pocket parks within 1000′ of a MAX stop.
Not two weeks ago, the Portland Home Show unveiled the IKEA House. A collaboration between IKEA and a local company – Ideabox – that designs and builds prefab structures. It turns out, the solution to making housing affordable is to downsize the McMansion and make it practical inside.
In any case, the solution is either to expand suburbia outward or increase density — move out or move up.
Nature City: city-living in nature. Impossible? http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …#innovation#greenliving#citylife
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/keizer/
@jaredhechtDid you see the Foreclosed exhibit at MOMA? Really cool stuff related to that shift. http://www.moma.org/foreclosed/
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
I believe in density, as in cities, where efficient distribution infrastructure is established and leave more open space around the city for everybody to enjoy. This is also less harmful to the environment when we concentrate habitat with a smaller footprint. Cities are vibrant places where people actually interact and encourage understanding and learn to live together. While I understand the urge to want to own ones home, I don't understand the continued sprawl of suburban areas that are so far away from the cities. What does one do in these boring tract homes that all look the same and where nobody gets out of their cars until they are in their garage. It's kind of depressing.
Community Input (46)
And thanks, too, Bahij for commenting. It’s always great to hear from people in the field. I’m a little saddened by your “museum environments can often be colder and more sterile than some of their community counterparts” comment. I think that’s true in many cases, but I also think that it’s more of an indication of museums doing something wrong. It would seem to me that museums full of human creativity should be the complete opposite of cold and sterile, at least if the content is presented correctly.
Also, as you say, “community centers, art spaces and concert halls” should also offer forums for discourse, but in our non-ideal world and American society right now, those centers, spaces, and halls are struggling to survive even more so than museums. In my native Philadelphia, community centers close frequently and the local orchestra is filing for bankruptcy, while the museums continue to plug along.
Thanks, everyone, for commenting on this post about, well, commenting!
—Bob
Having served as a disaster relief expert and community economic development specialist for 15 years under 5 previous US Administrations, I believe there has never been a better opportunity to provide expanded resources for individuals, organizations and communities to "claim their ultimate destiny".
The field of Community Economic Development (CED), which includes a focus on Self-help, Empowerment and Capacity Building, is best known for successes in microenterprise development, "community based development" and fostering "multi-sector collaborative partnerships".
Your initiative to recognize individuals who are stepping up and making a difference is similar to the Ultimate Destiny Hall of Fame Awards developed to recognize individuals who are fulfilling their ultimate destiny while helping others manifest their own destiny. That program recently led to a visionary description of "The United State of Americans", pending publication of a free publication on Solving the Ultimate Destiny of the USA and a proposal to help establish thousands of locally initiated non-profit CED Community Resource Centers whose mission is nearly identical with your message in this article.
The CAN DO! CED Resource Centers encompass Bucky Fuller's vision of "betterment for 100% of humanity", Authur Morgan's vision for The Great Community and it transforms Abraham Maslow's description of a fully actualized individual into a strategy for evolving more fully actualizing communities. The vision and mission is similar to several recent initiatives by President Obama and HUD Secretary Donovan such as Choice Neighborhoods, Sustainable Communities and most recently the Great Cities, Great Communities program.
I think nurturing an arts community is also about creating community. In an increasily mobile society being alienated, or not feeling part of a community is a very real and common thing. The arts help bring back the community!
Yes, you are right! The community should be brought back!
November 21, 2011 at 12:02am
2/16/2012 12:40 PM CST
What people need is the liberty to pursue their dreams and the educational and intellectual means to obtain it. Then they can buy whatever housing they like, even a McMansion.
2/13/2012 3:13 PM CST
Problem no. 1 for architects today is entering and starting to lead that discussion. Otherwise we will be ignored... vigorously. And probably planners are more important in the discussion than architects.
James W. Hadley AIA (aka anonymous)
2/13/2012 2:54 PM CST
2/18/2012 7:30 AM CST
February 17, 2012, @ 2:44 p.m.
For architecture to reach its full potential the public must be involved, inviting designers to be a part of their conversations and solutions in addressing social needs. But before this happens, the public must first understand the newly-emerging role of design. And it is here that this show wastes so much possibility and a timely opportunity.
June 15, 2012, @ 12:11 p.m.
Good urban design is achieved through collaboration, not imposition. http://bit.ly/AaLr3L Insights from Bryan Bell on "Foreclosed" at MoMA
Wednesday, February 22 at 6:05pm
I wonder if anybody thought to ask those people who live in these communities what they wanted. These proposed changes sound as if they were generated in somebody's downtown office. How about you, John? What do your neighbors in the suburb you live in think about being moved into condos? About tearing down the old and starting from scratch?
My own guess is that they think you would come up with a whole new list of mistakes to replace the old ones that they have become used to.
We went to check the community out a few days ago. Best way to know how livable a neighborhood is... Ask those who live there. We spoke to three people who have homes there and they enjoy it there. That's what we will look for. We don't care what outsiders say... Lol
The disappointment expressed by Mr. Martin, that none of the teams used a public process to inform their entry is legitimate. Based upon lectures at the Alaska Design Forum, it appears that many designers have little interaction with the end users, whether it is housing stock or another product. The most apparently successful designers are those who engage the end users, whether it is residents of Medellin, Colombia, Aboriginal Australians, or buyers at Sacks 5th Avenue.
Mr. Agnotti accurately summarized the problem, that we cannot design ourselves out of a problem, whether it is sprawl, foreclosures, or racial divides. The faith in design to solve problems is similar to the faith in technology to solve our problems. Perhaps it would be useful to step out of the the world view that seems to inhabit these conversations and look for a different one. Take as an example that of social work, where they ideally look for and base their work on the clients' strengths and desires. Lecturing or telling society to change, without asking why it should or what currently drives the actions, will just result in frustration and a smaller and smaller audience.
07.05.12 at 02:52
The Exhibition (139)
While these projects might seem far afield from museums’ traditional mission—to preserve, study, and show their collections—directors say they reflect a logical evolution of their founders’ intentions.
Following up on KB’s Dec. 15 comment and the article:Ecological principles may not be mutually exclusive with human habitat, but that is not the key issue.The most sustainable approach is to make the human built environment as dense, livable and compact, while leaving the hinterland and wilderness as intact as possible – not the agonizing compromise of low density settlements on the periphery of cities. This suburbanized nature, even with rewilding, is neither feasible or sustainable for the 7 B people on the planet – or any number close to that.
Let’s build good, tight cities and leave as much untouched habitat as possible for other plant and animal species. Introducing green design into the urban environment is fine, but not the crux of the ecological benefits of urbanism.
I sense the MOMA exhibit missed the point to a large extent.
Most of the exhibit is not well-balanced. There were more images than text and video. The scale of the descriptions within the renderings is too small to read.
MoMA rethinks architectural possibilities around foreclosures: Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream, a major... http://bit.ly/zyEVBW
@Cyberoid: It's true that the word "Suburb" includes places that are vastly different from each other - do you really think that makes the word so vague as to be meaningless, though? I don't think MoMA is claiming that the foreclosure crisis is over by any means - in fact, the sites in question were selected in part becuase they have high rates of foreclosure and high rates of non-foreclosed homeowners under water on their mortgages.
@Lecorbusier (I've heard of you, haven't I?) For what it's worth, I do know Ellen Dunham-Jones' excellent work on retrofitting dead malls, etc. What I said probably couldn't be done was revamping the suburbs wholesale "by rewriting laws, rationalizing markets, reforming the construction industry, and changing the culture all at once." Do you know of anywhere where such a sweeping transformation has been carried out? If so, I'd be very interested to know more about it.
6 Months Ago
I was about to write this piece off, but then I read the absolutely spot-on dose of skepticism at the end, and then I was OK with it.
For starters, couldn't the architects have deigned to live "in residence" in, I dunno, a blue collar suburb like Brentwood, Long Island rather than Long Island City, Queens? Would it really have killed them to go and look at a (GASP) actual suburb and talk to some people who actually live in one?
On a more fundamental level, I question whether architects come from the right profession to address the undeniable problems that suburbs face. Design is the easy part. The hard part has to do with politics, infrastructure, taxes, race, class, regulations, and so forth.
And on a still more fundamental level, I question whether the term "suburb" is even useful at all. Are Claremont and Riverside both "suburbs" of Los Angeles? Well, I guess so. Do they even remotely have anything in common with each other, apart from the fact that they are in the LA region but not part of the City of LA? Not really. In fact, not at all. I think the very framing of this exhibit is outdated, and was put together by people who do not get out of their bougie, 24-hour city enclaves enough to have a whole lot that's interesting to say about the "real America" (the REAL real America, full of racial, ethnic and other kinds of diversity, not Sarah Palin's 1950s-era small town fantasy) and what problems it faces.
6 Months Ago
rethinking the American home and suburban zoning. See Studio Gang's project at PS1/MOMA's "Foreclosed" http://fb.me/1jwoIU5FR
2/17/2012 11:23 AM CST
2/16/2012 10:34 PM CST
2/21/2012 3:38 PM CST
2/22/2012 3:25 PM CST
Review of new MoMA exhibit 'Foreclosed' about designers n the suburbs. Will it have the impact of 'Rising Currents.' http://nymag.com/arts/architect …
The exhibition is an exploration of new architectural possibilities for American cities and suburbs in the wake of the recent housing crisis. The spots, directed by Beug for urban planning firm WORKac via Wieden+Kennedy, New York, promote a theoretical environmentally friendly housing community in Oregon.
Is MOMA's _Foreclosed_ too critical of the suburbs? http://americancity.org/buzz/entry/337 …
were each assigned a suburban community with a higher foreclosure rate than the national average and asked to imagine in the design a vision for what sustainable, vibrant, post-crisis communities could be if we rethink our most fundamental beliefs about the American house.
Yesterday @MuseumModernArtand visited #BuellHypothesis. Great analysis. Yet, what about the projects? http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/buell_hypothesis
Barry Bergdoll (BB): “The show, I should say, in general is not trying to solve the mortgage crisis. That’s for the banks to sort out. We’re saying that, since we also have learned from it, that the way we build is part and parcel of this massive foreclosure crisis.”
"But 'Foreclosed' seethes with disdain for the suburbs..." - @NextAmCity's Diana Lind on MoMA's new exhibit. http://americancity.org/buzz/entry/337 …
The use of charged buzzwords words and phrases like “activist” and “socially or environmentally conscious dimension” suggests some serious import where none is evident in the work itself. It is a common liberal ploy to distract from any more intuitive thought processes that would likely conclude that these ill-conceived experiments will almost certainly be the slums of tomorrow.
Dr. D.S. Abrams
New York City
3/23/2012 12:31 PM CDT
Jacob Moore, New York, NY
3/21/2012 9:25 AM CDT
The exhibition is disappointing largely because its premise is so fascinating. Barry Bergdoll, MoMA's chief curator of architecture and design, and Reinhold Martin, director of Columbia University's Buell Centre, set out to explore five struggling suburbs. These pockets of the American landscape are in the midst of a transformation. Yes, they were ravaged by the housing crisis, but they were changing even before the recession. Suburban poverty rose by 53% from 2000 to 2010, compared with a 26% jump in cities. In many suburbs, white, nuclear families have been replaced by multigenerational Hispanic ones. The old car culture has become unsustainable, as petrol guzzles a greater share of families' budgets and the need for exercise becomes ever more apparent. All this begs for new types of transport and housing. MoMA wisely seized the chance to imagine a new future for the suburbs. The result, unfortunately, is absurd.
THIS IS THE UGLIEST STUPIDITY I'VE EVER SEEN, BRING IN AN ARTIST TO PAINT YOU CANVAS I THINK A SMALL CHILD WITH CRAYONS COULD HAVE DONE A BETTER JOB. WHAT IS NEEDED IS TO ALLOW THE MASSES TO BE EXPOSED TO BEAUTY THAT THE ELITE CLASS ENJOY TODAY, WHAT YOUR TRYING TO DO IS HELL
Ewww, absolutely no character and downright ugly. My ideal home is a Hobbit house,...go Tolkien for inspiration.
Ugly. There need to be more artistic architects and with a sense of culture. Not merely technicians.
Truly hideous architecture.
Awful...
Zago fell in love with too-clever pixelated imagery as he pursued the valuable idea of rethinking public and private property rights to create more amenities at lower cost.
Here, Studio Gang proposes literally deconstructing an existing factory to salvage its materials and build a new mixed-use group of buildings. I liked the image style very much.
(Another GSAPP-related firm) I didn't look at the text for this one as thoroughly as I should have, but I blame this on the craziness of the visual material. I'm not totally sure what's going on, but it seems pretty cool. The ensemble of weird shapes makes me think of Koolhaas, specifically of “City of the Captive Globe,” while the main site model really begged for having a model train going around it. I can't say that the project made sense, but it was fun to look at.
This is another project that left me feeling unconvinced. The talk about “misregistration” and flexible boundaries etc. didn't seem to do much to change the overall standard suburban layout of the proposed subdivision. The models were amazing, although Seussical in their color choices and shapes.
Michael Bell is another critic at GSAPP, but not one I've had before. Although his group's proposal was filled with slick renderings, I was not at all convinced, because it didn't look like anyone on the team had really thought about or looked at Florida's climate. There was text saying that the project would do this or that regarding climate, but one look at the images was enough to show that it would be ridiculous in Temple Terrace. All that glass would need to be washed continuously! Besides that, where is the vegetation in the renderings? Nothing in Florida looks like the images below - stark white and reflective - because it would blind you, and vegetation takes over whenever it gets a chance. Maybe it's just the style of the images, but it looks to me like no one on the design team had been to Florida.
@guest #6: Agree. When you remove the Yours/Mine designation, it devolves to the:"Its yours to maintain, but mine to use" mentality. The resultant building imagery looks like a Tim Burton claymation model--and not in a good way. This is an interesting idea, but the result is more pastiche than real content.
Gorgeous renderings, but I can't imagine houses like this actually selling or being nice to be in, not that the current suburban developer offerings are so nice but at least they are what people want.
Re-imagined areas devastated by housing crisis for MOMA http://bit.ly/yr57AO << Brilliant use of a digital narrative
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
That said, it is high time that a high-profile American cultural institution took on the question of housing and the future of the American Dream, and the exhibit does an admirable job of asking some important questions.
I can't stop looking at the models. http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …(Read about it here: http://www.thepolisblog.org/2012/03/new-yo …) #LIFEINTHEFUTURE???
gr8 project by @studiogang: Closed factory dismantled & parts used to build combinable living spaces > http://bit.ly/H88gIn #MoMAForeclosed
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/cicero/
5 fantastic US housing research and urban/suburban design proposals http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Smart cities: MoMA art exhibit rethinks suburban America - http://bit.ly/IgbWBr
Foreclosed: MoMA Exhibition Re-Thinks Suburban American Life http://bit.ly/I7TuQK
Foreclosed: MoMA Exhibition Re-Thinks Suburban American Life: The recent foreclosure crisis has taken a heavy t... http://bit.ly/HYOD3V
Architectural models offer stylized solutions to suburban ills. Suburbs accessible by proposed high-speed rail corridors are retrofitted with high-density developments, which in some cases are stripped of streets. Instead of oversized single-family suburban houses narrowly tailored for the nuclear family, the show provides a variety of housing models for people in different groupings, such as empty nesters and extended families.
“You could say parts of Orange look like a third-world country already,” he said. “It’s incredibly tragic what’s going on there, what some people have to do to survive.”
Um, where is historic preservation in this conversation???? HP must be a part of the conversation for community sustainability.
Amazing work by @Workac& others at Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream at http://MoMA.org http://bit.ly/tO5FUi
Foreclosed exhibit @ MoMA - Museum of Modern Art http://instagr.am/p/JvMhFViGXk/
An exhibit I saw at MoMA. Very interesting and impressive architectural project. :) Foreclosed at http://MoMA.org http://bit.ly/wQpxaR
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
A MUST: #MoMAExhibition "Half of America live in suburbs - treated as inhospitable wilderness" - http://bit.ly/whHkX2 /@NYMAG
Policy: Can #Architecture#Innovationsave Suburbs? MoMA for new alliance of planning & building #cities. http://bit.ly/whHkX2
[POLICY] Can Architecture Innovation save Suburbs? #MoMAfor new alliance of planning #citieshttp://bit.ly/whHkX2 /RT @Bernd_Fesel
MOMA Exhibition. Foreclosed. Rehousing the American Dream. MOS’s Thoughts on a Walking City pr http://pinterest.com/pin/2426314986 …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
foreclosed: rehousing the american dream @ Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) http://instagr.am/p/KVh-tVFBxw/
Checking out: "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" (@ Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) w/ 24 others) [pic]: http://4sq.com/JSUVkm
Fantastic post, you hit all my thoughts on this exhibition. I first lost it when looking at the Rialto, CA project that had an elephant in the project section. After all, nothing scales a project in Southern California better than an elephant.
Aft'noon @Foreclosed, v. thoughtful show on alternative suburban living by @columbiaunivarchitect Prof. Martin @MOMApic.twitter.com/3Ugp1A25
Foreclosed:#Housing the #American Dream – mixing urbanism, debt & #architecture archinect.com/features/artic…
#Keizer#Oregonfeatured in amazing @MuseumModernArt#sustainable#housingexhibit featuring @WiedenKennedyhttp://ow.ly/bdkCI
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
with its use of appealing architectural models, videos, artists’ renderings, and large-scale graphics. Even a Rubik’s Cube plays its part, helping to explain Studio Gang’s presentation for Cicero, Ill., an aging suburb outside Chicago. The cube, with its shifting components, represents the plan’s modular “recombinant” housing, mostly within an abandoned factory; the concept allows residents to buy only those parts of a dwelling that they need, adding or subtracting rooms as their families grow or shrink.
Instead, the dream is conjured out of these material things and fed back into them as a guiding norm. Similarly, architectural projects, no matter how fanciful or abstract, are real, material things (models, drawings, and videos, in this case) that put ideas (and maybe dreams) on the table for detailed debate by interested parties. Yes, this too could be a distraction, and the still unmet challenge is to assemble all of the parties, from residents to public officials to investment bankers, in an agonistic yet equitable setting. Nevertheless, the large models of large-scale proposals sitting on tables in a MoMA gallery represent a deliberate curatorial decision, since models have a way of generating discussion and assembling publics around themselves. The tables on which the models sit might even foreshadow our efforts with this online roundtable, which the Buell Center has convened in collaboration with Architects, Designers, and Planners for Social Responsibility to explore the contours that configure the debate surrounding housing and suburbanization itself.
Unfortunately this aspect of the show is only given a few sentences in the exhibit catalog, as well as the website and physical exhibit. A more detailed description of ideas such as "portable mortgages" or "public real estate investment trusts" would have taken the conversation further into the intersection of buildings and the communities that inhabit them. More than changing zoning or the physical walls around people's kitchens and bedrooms, expanding more the possibilities of new types of housing tenure would have been helpful. This would have provided a clearer path to showing how they propose we ground these new American dreams financially and legally.
“Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream” at the Museum of Modern Art http://www.economist.com/blogs/prospero/2012/03/suburban-design …#MoMA#urbanism#suburbanpic.twitter.com/ygjQltVL
#MoMA#NYC#manhattan#models#ecodesign#architecture#foreclosed:r @
New York Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) http://instagr.am/p/M9NGmfw4xH/
One of the most interesting museum exhibits I've ever seen: Foreclosed at http://MoMA.org http://bit.ly/wQpxaR @MuseumModernArt
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
@VisionVancouver@greenestcityMaking silk purses out of sows' ears? MOMA, "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/exhibitions/1230 …
MoMA Foreclosed - http://bit.ly/Q7OpwH - great exhibit! - #cplan#design#architecture#housing#sustainability
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Thank you.
The MOMA exhibit seems more like advertisment for avante garde architects than anything else.
My links below show a different approach.
MOMA's Foreclosed, a thematic exhibition on new models of housing in response to mortgage crisis, closes soon: http://bit.ly/wQpxaR
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Need a break from the Olympics? Only 2 days left to see @MuseumModernArt's Foreclosed exhibit. http://ow.ly/cz2lo
Very often disciplines divide serious issues, which are then studied in one silo when the problem and the solution transcend many silos and disciplines. As the exhibit clearly demonstrates, we can "rehouse the American dream" but certainly not by doing the same old things in the same old ways. See the exhibit before it closes on August 13th or pick up the book which has the same title. Economics and architecture never looked better together.
From the Museum of Modern Art in New York's exhibition on Foreclosure...http://t.co/huK8wTwk http://fb.me/19v8pOS4v
From the "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" exhibit. #MoMA@MuseumModernArthttp://lockerz.com/s/230921079 http://lockerz.com/s/230921093
@rachelsloerts Thinking of you at the #MoMAexhibit, http://MoMA.org/foreclosed http://instagr.am/p/N6jZShS_Ts/
Some Photos from MoMA's "Foreclosed" exhibition http://www.flickr.com/photos/elijahporter/sets/72157631131622762/ …
Family (25)
“The drive everywhere for cheaper and cheaper things mentality is unsustainable. It’s getting more crowded and a huge portion of the income goes into transportation,” Dufaux said.
December 20, 2011 at 5:44 pm
The suburban dream isn't the same for them, she said.
"It'll never happen again," she said of the suburban boom.
And that's too bad: "It was a much nicer way of living."
What crap. For example, says Jeanne Gang, "Cicero’s code also defines "family" in a way that excludes the large, multigenerational groupings." Too much trouble to look? Here is the definition, from the Cicero Illinois Code of Ordinances, sec 46-466:
"Family means a single individual, doing his own cooking, and living upon the premises as a separate housekeeping unit, or a collective body of persons doing their own cooking and living together upon the premises as a separate housekeeping unit in a domestic relationship based upon birth, marriage, or other domestic bond, as distinguished from a group occupying a boardinghouse, lodginghouse, club, fraternity or hotel."
So, multigenerational, and related by birth? That's a family. Large? Not in the definition. Not related by blood, nor by marriage, but cooking and living together, based on a domestic bond? Family, again.
I have no love for Cicero, but Jeanne Gang can make municipal ordinances look reasonable by comparison.
Let's go on to the very next phrase, "now common across the country." Are we to believe that large multigenerational groupings are now common across the country? If they are common, then these onerous regulations aren't having much effect. If they aren't common, then we have Jeanne Gang reporting what she wishes were true, in place of what is. Tool.
MB: People have looked toward changing or improving the suburbs
for a long time. You can go back to the 1970s, and academics are often
lambasted for not being sensitive about it. But the reason I’m bringing
this up is that what is different at this point in time is everything from
globalization in terms of where is production happening, what are the
jobs. When you talk about housing, you ultimately always—even if you’re
an architect—end up talking about jobs. What will secure that loan in the
future? So, flexibility comes in. But the difference now, I think, is that
what people realize… And the foreclosure crisis is an awful thing, it is
absolutely a crisis, but it does start to create a situation where people
start to imagine that what we have is not inevitable. And, in fact, it was
produced, and it was dreamed. I think, people don’t like change in housing,
and they should worry about change in housing, but what we have is also
not terribly secure. And, so, I think that’s what you’re bringing up, and
Jeanne was bringing that up quite brilliantly.
CH: One of the things I think Detroit forces us to think of is the fact that
the things we think are natural are contingent.
I have been working on new style of urban planing among capital cities. The fundamental difference between urban city and suburb has almost similar meaning of difference between individual-life style and nuclear family-life style. Urban city needs excitement. Suburb needs relax. It is good to be focused on Hispanic-Family's tradition for re-developing suburb community environment. Is there any support to business start-up for those new residents ? Maybe they should develop those project with economists and/or investors to be real american dream makers.....
I saw the show two days ago with my husband and kids (9 and 11). It's been the topic of conversation since then. I hate to think about what sort of world we are leaving our children, not only are our cities and infrastructure falling apart but more importantly there seems to be nobody proposing an alternative to our current state of decay. Although they look very well considered, I'm not sure all the proposals are reasonable, but it's wonderful to have people seriously proposing an alternative to our sinking status quo. I wish there was more of exhibitions like this forcing us to think how we are all responsible for the construction of our world, our cities and suburbs. And more importantly that urban development and infrastructure are our legacy we leave our children.
It looks to me like the Orange NJ proposal is to place buildings in the centers of certain street segments to create
1 - density
2 - mixed use (neighborhood retail/commercial services)
3 - capillary cul-de-sacs (where kids can play without through traffic)
These could put services close to residents, and make walking/biking to them more attractive at the same time. This, in turn, could reinvigorate the local economy and sense of community. Not an easy task in existing grids, so we must begin thinking of unconventional solutions. Fire engines, by the way, routinely serve cul-de-sacs.
I have also long championed flexibility in housing to better accomodate the diverse life paths taken in modern times and other cultures. The American Dream/white picket fence/Mayberry suburb fails badly at this, making your Cicero concept another valuable exercise. In 2012 America, we have a working class that may marry 3 times or not at all. We are all step-this and step-that. College kids might need to return home for years. Grandma might need closer care. Families aren't really nuclear, they are fissile, fusile, orbital and subatomic. So bring back the courtyard, with apartments around it.
The reintegration of nature into our communities is another worthy goal. I think creek daylighting, community gardens, and village greens are all good ideas. The cougar idea must be whimsy, but it helps us avoid getting trapped in the fallacy that land is a purely human medium.
CH, I advise you to spend more time off the island of Manhattan. Go to Alaska. Go to Detroit. Go to a hutong. And go to a desolate American suburb. Then go back to MoMA and tell me what you see.
I would not want my kids to grow up in that cold lifeless compound looking mess. I bet those designers do not have kids. Who paid for this really. I bet they have a evil plans for total control. This makes me sick to my core. All on Earth should be put on notice of this future evil plan.
People aspire to live in their own homes - not apartment blocks, not condos. They want a house, with a garden for their kids. Stop with the unrealistic idea that you can force people into these sorts of housing projects.
The exhibit on Nature City in particular was so good/real my children (honor roll twins headed into 7th grade) asked about the possibility of moving there and I am disappointed to find it was all a dream...what a wonderful reality this would be.
(2) Motherhood and childhood are entitled to special care and assistance. All children, whether born in or out of wedlock, shall enjoy the same social protection.
— Article 25, Universal Declaration of Human Rights, United Nations
"...someplace where people do need to work together and have lived there a couple of generations, you will find community."
That reminds me of the small rim-city in the Boston area where I lived for just 3 years. Families were buying properties in advance of their kids' growing up, so they could live close by. It was an old city, so it looked run-down. And it had its problems. But it also had its strengths because the families stayed tight.
What builds community is working together, and families intermarrying. But we don't need to work together, since survival needs are all provided for on the whole, plus we have this American mythos of individual independence. And we move around a lot, that is also a disadvantage. If you go someplace where people do need to work together and have lived there a couple of generations, you will find community.
Government & Policy (144)
The American Dream has always been based on the freedom to pursue your dreams and the enabler for the American Dream has always been our Constitution, the rule of law, and economic liberty. Our free enterprise system lifted more people out of poverty than any other system this earth has ever known. Government exists to protect your rights and to prevent other people from interfering with your pursuit of these dreams, free of harm.
The American Dream is different for every person in this country. For some it is to own a home. For some it is to have a successful business. Whatever that Dream is to be achieved through your own personal perseverance, drive, determination and responsibility. It's not anybody else's job to deliver your American Dream to your doorstep, and that includes the government. The American government is in the business of protecting the freedom of its citizens to pursue their dreams.
Similarly, the Institute's political allegiances: top personnel maintained called a sentimental relationship to the Soviet Union (the Institute saw its goals as higher than that of Russian foreign policy. Stalin, who was horrified at the undisciplined, "cosmopolitan" operation set up by his predecessors, cut the Institute off in the late 1920's, forcing Lukacs into "self-criticism," briefly jailing him as a German sympathizer during World War II.
Lukacs survived to briefly take up his old post as Minister of Culture during the anti-Stalinist Imre Nagy regime in Hungary. Of the other top Institute figures, Herbert Marcuse are typical. He started as a Communist; became a protégé of philosopher Martin Heidegger even as the latter was joining the Nazi Party; coming to America, he worked for the World War II Office of Strategic Services (OSS), and later became the U.S. State Department's top analyst of Soviet policy during the height of the McCarthy period; in the 1960's, he turned again, to become the most important guru of the New Left; and he ended his days helping to found the environmentalist extremist Green Party in West Germany.
In all this seeming incoherence of shifting positions and contradictory funding, there is no ideological conflict. The invariant is the desire of all parties to answer Lukacs' original question: "Who will save us from Western civilization?"
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Wall St now at the bourse
THE BULLS ARE LOCKED WITH THE OPPOSITE-- WE ARE DOING WELL-- IT IS NEUTRAL
The problem is not government. The problem is government controlled by the corporation. If government was more powerful than the oil companies, we would have begun investing in alternative energy sources decades ago and we wouldn't have destroyed the Gulf of Mexico's ecosystem. If government was more powerful than the military industrial complex, we could have had high-tech marvels of peace, like high speed rail systems, cures for cancer, an inspirational space program, universal broadband, and modernized cities. If government was more powerful than Wall Street, banks would be carefully helping individuals and small businesses succeed rather than voraciously pursuing profit and jeopardizing the world economy. And if government paid for elections with public money instead of corporate money, politicians would serve the public instead of the corporations.
Do you really believe that the poor, unemployed and infirm are the problem? When did they become so politically powerful? Who are their paid lobbyists? Which network do they own? How many unemployed does Obama consult when deciding economic policy? You probably can't name more than a handful of politicians who even care about these people. If you sincerely wonder who is responsible for the decline of America, just follow the money. I think you'll find that trail leads -- surprise! -- to the wealthy.
I like this design a lot better than our current Keizer Station layout. I almost dread going to Keizer Station because I always take the long way to get to where I am going. I just can’t figure out the roads. It’s confusing.
A tourist from Georgia once confronted me in the Lowes parking lot and asked me how to get to Target because he had seen it from the freeway. He seemed intelligent enough. I laughed because I told him that I live in Keizer and still can’t figure it out. I gave him the best directions I could and wished him luck. He said “Thank you for the directions and hope I can find my way back to the freeway”. I wished him good luck yet again.
I am dependent on my automobile to go from one store to the next. I love going to Bridgeport Village. Parking is a problem but once you park, it’s a pleasure to walk from store to store. And there is such variety. I can even take in a movie after shopping. It’s just an attractive place to visit. It’s inviting. The footprint of Bridgeport is so small compared to Keizer Station. It’s just a total waste of land. Too bad we can’t just start over.
I just can’t wait for the Mayor’s, Chamber of Commerce’s and the council’s Walmart to be built. Doubt that Walmart was envisioned initially but we have to please Chuck Sides. Hey, doesn’t he owe the city back taxes? Oh, he is immune to paying taxes. Too bad, the city could use the money.
This sounds like a lot of over paid elitists trying to decide how everyone else should live. My suggestion is that all members of this elite team be required to move their families to this new development and reside there for at least five years as part of their contract. The most troubling is, as Fairfield Fox points out, the use of taxpayer dollars to fund this boodoggle. Who are they to declare that suburban living is dead? Then the usual outlandish lie: " many long-standing critics of the American suburb — who see it as environmentally toxic, energy wasteful and just too expensive (especially because it’s paid for by taxing the cities) " All evidence points to the suburban taxpayer as supporting the urban ghettos so your analysis is an ouit right lie. Abbot schools and other urban renewal activities are primarily supported by taxpayers from the suburbs.
Gosh, urban redevelopment with state financing. When will we ever learn? I guess Two Ton Tony Galento would be skeptical of these plans for his old stomping grounds. Samuel Bush, patriarch of the Bushs, and a colleague of the Rockefellers, would likely be quite pleased. As the only Orangian who became part of the Federal Reserve, Old Sammy Bush would like the idea of the government borrowing money...but only if he got a piece of the action.
The only way to fight this would be to have mainstream media to spread article and discussion like this piece, so people would actually paid more attention and begin to question things.
November 21, 2011 at 9:58pm
To respond to the way the blocks are designed, Levittown blocks are a bit of a labyrinth, which makes it difficult for criminals seeking to rob homes to navigate. If any home is robbed, it's usually an inside job. Levittown is surrounded by low-crime neighborhoods demographically, so there's no "spillage" of crime over its borders, and as someone pointed out, has no direct connection to the LIRR, so yes, it's insular, and this is why there is a very low crime rate. This is a reason why I bought in Levittown.
Why else did I buy in Levittown? THE SCHOOL DISTRICT. Levittown's teachers' union had a landmark case in the U.S. Supreme Court, and as a result, their teachers are paid at the top of the Long Island pay scale, on par with districts like Great Neck. In education you get what you pay for!
My daughter, a Levittown graduate, attends Harvard and seminars at MIT. Levittown schools worked with me to groom her and remediate a learning disability she had. So whomever said nobody from Levittown becomes a professional is WRONG. I'm surprised the writer of this article missed mentioning the excellent schools.
As for the Village Greens, it was also missed by the writer and in comments that libraries are often found at the Village Greens. And each family got a pool pass so they could swim FOR FREE all summer long. The Greens still have concerts during the summer, and have little shops. Levittown has some very nice perks.
I left after my family was raised, and after Nassau County re-assessed my property taxes and TRIPLED them over a period of three years. But dollar for dollar, Levittown served its purpose for me. My child got an excellent education in a non-violent, quiet, fairly unspoiled and unpretentious community. Oh, and for the record, the "white trash" element hasn't been able to afford to live in Levittown since the 80s.
December 21, 2011 at 8:51 pm
December 22, 2011 at 12:28 am
December 20, 2011 at 4:03 pm
be rational–the future is gated communities–there is not 'community' or 'society'...just a bunch of f trying to get ahead by either playing the victim card or getting elected to congress or the executive branch.
The equivalent of a bunch of mentally re-tarded third graders run america. So yea, I think thed solution is for everyone to give one big middle finger to everyone that wants to tell other people how to live, and if they keep at it, move–
THERE ARE SEVERAL PLACES AROUND THE PLANET that are looking for professionals, america is not the only happy pie-
they give you too much sh-t, you leave. GIVE ONE BIG MIDDLE FINGER to all the little angry faced third graders as the economy sours. They dont deserve your taxes. The f idiots can't get out of a cardboard box.
December 20, 2011 at 3:47 pm
December 25, 2011 at 2:05 am
December 20, 2011 at 11:57 am
December 20, 2011 at 11:06 am
First, I really appreciate the commentary from both KB (12/15) and DK (03/07) regarding the rewilding concepts in relation to suburbanization. I would like to respond first to DK’s point of building dense and compact cities and leaving the “hinterland and wilderness as intact as possible” is the ideal and I certainly do not disagree with this position. That said this is not what is taking place on the ground. Urbanization is continuing to spread into the hinterlands here in the US, in China, India, and Brazil and around the globe. The proposal here is to consider the potential for these exurban developments to adopt an ecological mandate.The focus on the MOMA exhibit and analysis is also very specific and thus the proposal needs to be seen in its context. We were specifically tasked with looking at foreclosure housing projects and how as designers and scientists we might bring federal funding to address some of the issues faced. Thus the site was selected for us, and due to its proximity to the San Bernardino National Forest and the ecologically intact conditions of the surrounding context including the Lytle Creek Wash, we saw the notion of creating a neighborhood focused in part on ecological management as an opportunity for collaboration between developers, the federal government and future homeowners.A third factor to consider is climate change and global warming. The earth is changing in part through large-scale anthropogenic causes. These are creating pressures and constraints on the hinterland ecosystems and organisms. Already, there are discussions of how to foster species migration as their ranges shift north. This is an area that scientists are keenly interested in the role they might play. Consider the species introductions, assisted migrations and other efforts scientists are already participating with the goal of enhancing ecosystems. In other words, just leaving the hinterlands out there “undisturbed” by the built environment does not mean they remain undisturbed, and to maintain ecosystems and organisms human interventions will likely be an important component. Consider John Foley’s diagram of the changing landscape conditions – where is the “hinterlands” in his diagram?Finally, Rewilding (and this goes back to KB’s comments) is a radical proposal and one that is debated amongst ecologist. Much of the issue arises from the concern over human – wildlife conflict that would likely ensue if we were to reintroduce large carnivores etc. to the US. At the same time, most ecologists would agree that top down predation would benefit ecosystem health and lead to greater diversity of species. Thus the issue is one of public acceptance. As a result, getting this concept out there through a variety of venues (given that Rewilding is in the “marketing” stage) should mostly benefit the cause. It is a much more radical concept than simply allowing people to manage biological systems at the urban fringe and is intended to create debate and discussion.The MoMA exhibit is pervaded by architectural discourse of the suburb and could use this layer of integration of knowledge into new suburban forms. The architect and their modes of working and analysis were prioritized and sites open to large development were sites for new visions. Still, the rewilding concept is part of the exhibit, which means that tens of thousands of museumgoers visiting the exhibit will have the opportunity to reflect on what role people can play in managing ecosystems in their neighborhoods, and on the potential value of rewilding as a concept to consider for promoting ecosystem function.
The solution (according to the people responding to this article): Ignore the "eggheady" liberal architects and do what the American people want: ie more of the same.
No wonder America is so incompetent when it comes to healthy cities. Only a small minority of intelligent liberal green architects and planners embrace a healthy productive path forward, and an overwhelming majority of ignorant architects and free market thinkers couldn't care less or think the solution to the problem is to ignore the solutions and embrace the problem as the only answer - I guess because Ronald Reagan told them to (during a period in his life when he had a debilitating mental illness I might add).
2/13/2012 5:40 PM CST
2/13/2012 5:30 PM CST
2/13/2012 5:22 PM CST
2/13/2012 2:27 PM CST
I am 62 years old.
I have worked honestly & hard my whole life (since I was 14) because that is how you "realize the American Dream."
I was a home builder & designer.
In 1980, the "Savings & Loan Crisis" forced me out of work & out of business. (The gov’t helped the banks survive ...)
In 2007, the "Sub-prime Mortgage Crisis" crushed me again. I lost my home, my wife & my belief in that "American Dream." (The gov’t saved the banks again ...)
MB: The big issue I would get across here is that all housing is financially constructed. And in the United States, the single-family house for purchase with a mortgage is public. The mortgage deduction on your annual taxes means that everybody in this country has subsidized housing.
FS: Well, the homeowners do anyway.
Builders, developers and real estate people have been telling people how to live for years....it's obvious now, more than ever, thats how things are done....people don't know what they want...
If you think it's just builders and developers telling people how to live, you're clearly missing a larger picture. Retailers are a huge factor here too. The problem with suburbia is the lack of "real job" creation.
The problem comes from the concept that many retailers sell products that more-or-less require single-unit, single-family housing units— lawnmowers, automobiles, chest freezers, full-sized appliances, furniture et cetera. The code for this word is "durable goods." And anytime you hear the government, planners or business-types talking about the increase in the purchase of durable goods or stimulating the durable goods market... they're clearly talking about suburbia.
And many of the companies that sell the tools of suburbia actively influence policy development by funding various non-profit and non-governmental organizations. We don't know who does what but there are fair examples.
Cato Insitute, a supporter of laissez-faire capitalism, is quite a staunch critic of urban planning is or has been supported by the likes of General Motors, ExxonMobile, Toyota, Visa, Wal-mart, Volkswagon, Honda, FedEx and Time Warner. None of these companies want to see functioning cities.
And we end up the paradox of...
If most of the jobs are low-wage, who's buying goods and services?
And where do the armies of wage workers live if new suburban development is too expensive?
sustainable developers?? developers follow incentives and try to minimize risk - without government subsidizing sprawling (i.e. cheap & low capacity) infrastructure and overly restrictive zoning laws they'd very likely build far more high-density mixed-use buildings without parking (but also without green space). without utilities, roads, and other services land is pretty much worthless - and developers typically don't like challenging zoning unless they know the municipality is on board.
also - high-density outside of the city center presents another challenge because of the capacity of the existing services. Some towns in the northeast have put a moratorium on any new building because their existing water and sewer systems cannot handle any additional load. when you think of it, suburban development is often a function of how big the sewer systems are, or how much space is needed for a septic and/or leech field and buffer.
perhaps if as a culture we had a much healthier relationship with our own poop...
ending the subsidies that drastically lower the true cost of many aspects of the suburban lifestyle would be a very strong incentive for many people to move into apartments and denser neighborhoods. If you want urban-style services and utilities with the luxury of low density you should have to pay a premium for it. otherwise there are ways of living more "off the grid" if you're willing to do your own maintenance and pay a little more up front for these systems.
many people do have the dream of living in a detached single-family home, and I think this should be available to people if they can afford it, but I think until the crash people were pretty delusional about how much this lifestyle actually costs (i.e. taking out loans they couldn't afford), and how much it has been costing our country.
LP: And architecture becomes the way that people will trust their government or trust their institutions.
RB: It can.
Wednesday, February 22 at 6:05pm
We need to stop demonizing the suburbs and start recognizing that we are all in this together. Is it better to annihilate suburbia or perfect it? Pragmatic solutions, like changing zoning to encourage density, more sustainable landscaping and agriculture, could be relatively easy to enact and would go a long way to improving the vitality of the suburbs
I think this misses the critique by a long shot. The problem of the suburbs is not that it's being demonized, and being "nicer" to the suburbs ain't going to redeem them.
The suburbs will be "fixed" when an overwhelming political majority of suburbanites buy into the "pragmatic solutions" the author listed. The question is whether that will happen or not. That someone somewhere made fun of Applebee's is irrelevant.
What stuns me, though, is the claim that things like zoning changes would be "relatively easy to enact". In the absence of democracy this is clearly the case. That's not the world we live in, though. Hell, DC has arguably one of the most liberal, pro-urban voting populations in the country, and implementing such changes here, in the heart of the city, are almost impossible.
(As an example, there's been an almost decade long struggle to allow a 2000 square foot day care facility to operate just north of Lincoln Park on Capitol Hill. There was angry resistance when neighbors found the newly opened Hill Center planned on allowing wedding receptions until midnight. The examples are endless).
The idea that it will be relatively ease" to get existing suburban homeowners on board with such radically changes of policy is naive. Frankly, I'm stunned whenever a place like DC or Arlington manages to eke out a minor pro-urbanist victory. The cynic in me says meaningful change in the suburbs are orders of magnitude more difficult, and is contingent on outside factors like resource depletion. And there's a further argument to be made that a suburbs without the resources to maintain itself certainly hasn't got the resources to reinvent itself.
Feb 22, 2012 10:20 am
Arlington is only out of the category of "suburban" (to the extent it is) due to the large scale urbanist victories there.
in fact lots of suburban jurisdictions are making urbanist changes -in greater DC (excluding arlington and City of Alex as urban) we have them in Fairfax, in City of Falls Church, in MoCo, and even in PG (and even a tiny bit in Loudoun). Now, those are often only in select locations, or are balanced by antiurbanist decisions. But see, thats where the demonization blinds people - if you can accept that auto centric suburbia is going to continue to be the preferred way to live for many (possibly the majority) then the fact that only 5-10% say, of Fairfax, is going to end up walkable TOD may be an acceptable result.
As for demonization mattering to the political process, I think it does. I have participated in such discussions with fellow NoVans, and I think the more extreme viewpoints including have left people very defensive, and believing things about urbanism that give ammo the antiurbanists, and make their job of persuasion easier. These include the impressions that urbanists beleive A. that everyone should be carfree B. That no one should live in a SFH C. That everyplace on Greater Washington outside of the district is "bad" regardless of density, etc, etc.
Obviously there are larger, real issues that drive suburban politics, not just these discourse focused issues, and obviously there are things in the discourse on these issues that are unhelpful aside from extremist urbanism memes. But they are not trivial in their impact, IMO. And as someone who values urbanism, I find the distortion of urbanism involved in those memes particularly troubling. It makes a sophisticated vision of a reinvented metropolitan america sound like the ravings of naive hipsters.
Feb 22, 2012 10:47 am
RT @JenniferRaitt: Rehousing proposals. Can zoning/ local policies support them? "Foreclosed" opens at MoMA http://bit.ly/ztBuCN
investment banking. There’s the Wagner-Steagall Act which funded public housing. Steagall was on both.
CH: Interesting.
MB: It’s very interesting.
CH: Now we’ve got huge conglomerate banks and no public housing.
MB: […] One of the big points of the show for anyone who deals with housing issues academically is, yeah, that deduction makes basically a
huge amount of American housing public housing at some level. It’s a far
bigger expenditure on the federal level than, for example, funding for HUD
for homelessness.
TS: It’s about $80 billion or something, right?
MB: It’s about $80 billion. Low-income housing tax credits, I think, are
probably $30 billion. So, the federal government at this point in time really
does not build directly public housing any longer. It incentivizes it through
tax credits.
CH: And it incentivizes for people to purchase their own homes and take
out a lot of debt, the interest of which they can then take off against their
taxes.
CH: Increased density?
MB: All five projects in the show deal with density, and they also deal with trying to find housing that is probably more financially and size-wise appropriate to its user, but also that would use dramatically less energy to basically dramatically lower carrying costs. But I think many of the people, including ourselves, we were looking at ways to take underutilized property, publicly held or publicly controlled, and increase density around infrastructure because the public has already paid for all of that infrastructure and isn’t using it.
MB: […] In the 1990s you had a booming economy, you had a kind ofpush to alter, if not end, the welfare state. By the 2000s, you have a real estate bubble. And today you have a foreclosure crisis. But in all of these situations, there are a couple things that have been consistent. The amount of money people spend on housing and transportation is immense. They can’t afford it. You don’t want to tell people they can’t afford something and say that’s the reason to change. You want to be more positive than that. But there are many, many factors about affordability, about energy consumption, and frankly about the role of design in any of it. The American single-family house is a commodity product that has virtually no research and development, no design. Architects, in a spec house in Houston in the late 1990s—their fee was about twelve dollars per house. These are mass-produced commodities. There is no professional engagement. […] I think most of the people in this exhibition are quite
positive and excited about the suburbs. We know it’s a deeply, deeply important part of the American ethos, if not just everyday life of course. But, they’re not inevitable. And the financial underpinnings of them have really dramatically shifted in the last five, ten, fifteen years—not just the last two.
CH: Talk about that R&D thing. You made a point in the video in the exhibition that blew my mind about the comparison between how much money in R&D goes into your iPhone or anti-lock brakes versus an American home.
MB: I did mention anti-lock brakes. For many commodities, before they hit the market, there are billions of dollars that might precede it, whether it’s Clorox or whether it’s an iPhone or a Honda Civic which is quite an ingenious product. Housing as we know it has kind of ironed all of that
out of it, and it did it a long time ago. […] They are paying Mercedes Benz prices for a twenty-year-old used car. The single-family house market atomizes out all of the financial processes, and you still are spending large sums of money, but you’re not getting the sophisticated product. It’s not that it’s not a nice product or something people love, but it could be much, much better in energy and everything else.
Here we go again - architects attempting to be the deciders on who lives in a cooked up utopian paradise. I agree with Dee - didn't we go through this before - actually several times before - go back to Lutyens and others pre-Victorian UK for other references. This argument is as old as time in architecture circles and frankly something I believe in my bones architects need to stay way far away from.
The problems associated with the current debacle in housing goes way beyond just cooking up alternatives to a model that for decades had worked pretty well until the restraints of the banking system and the policy makers in DEE CEE were unshackled. Thank you Barney Frank, Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, Sarbanes / Oxley, CRA, Derivatives, MBS, CDO's, Wall Street, Glass Steagle (no more), FHA, HMA, Phil Gramm, Rudman, Fannie, Freddie, National Assoc. of Realtors, Mortgage Banking Association, TARP, QE whatever, Helicopter Ben, HARP, HAMP, Obama and the porkulus - the list of imposters posing as statesmen and policy wonks and their attendant fixes goes on and on. To just read this article on the surface and agree would be in my humble opinion horribly misguided and naive.
Wake up architects - putting the design blinders on only will not serve you nor your clients well. A much broader and active view is needed - bone up on economics, finance, politics, local government, proper spheres of authority, the scriptures - you name it. Without a broader and DEEPER view of the market the profession will continue to wallow in the ditch it finds itself in, unable to provide any added value to projects and their sponsoring clients. Clients want value - not just ideas!!! And one final thing......
I LIKE LIVING IN THE SUBURBS!!!
3/23/2012 1:52 PM CDT
Foreclosures - done to benefit the banksters who pull the strings of whatever government is sitting in the White-house.
Do not get me started.
On the refi problems I have encountered because of rules changes made by the Dodd/Frank law.
The bottom line is simple.
Old refi rules = $120 a month savings.
New refi rules = $230 a month increase in mortgage.
And I am being forced into a refi because of circumstances beyond my control. Show Less -
How about these in your face truths.
Government forced mandates made it legal for banks to offer mortgages to people that had no capability to pay back the loans.
The number of people artificially allowed into the housing market by these policies triggered crazy bidding wars, that I was a victim of, and artificially drove up real estate values.
Which in turn drove up rental costs which overall drove a spike in the national cost of housing.
Which resulted in a net loss of real income because wages did not keep up.
The loans the banks were legally allowed to sell to people who could not afford them had time bombs in them like adjustable rates and interest only loans that our poorly educated masses were too dumb to realize would financially destroy them.
And the biggest architect of this mess, Congressman Barney Frank of MA, is being allowed to retire and not go to prison for his part in building this mess.
A modern Eastern Europe apartment complex, Chinese, Russian? The architects would be better off spending their idle time finding ways to rid themselves of our current legislators, economic development leadership and others, and begin to lure businesses into the area that will hire locals in huge quantities, companies that will not depend on government handouts and pay their employees a living wage plus benefits.
This is a democracy. We have nobody to blame but the 51% of people who elect those who allow the 1% to exploit us and steal from us. Tighter financial regulations, more low cost/free public programs, subsidizing green energy and public transport as well as other welfare programs… these are values. One party in America cares about them, one doesn’t.
These aren’t architectural problems. They are political and social problems. The cities we live in represent the values of the people in America, unfortunately. If/when Americans evolve some and start looking forward rather than backwards, and start making political decisions to match, these problems with irresponsible development will be a long way towards being resolved.
As the American dream evolves, so too will the American landscape. But essentially, this is about politics in the end. Architects can only point out the root problems and propose solutions that point to them, as this article suggests. I don’t have any problem with utopian proposals. Architects aren’t the financiers and architects aren’t the home buyers. It’s up to the wealthy and to average Americans to change their values. Most architects are already much farther down the evolutionary path on that front than the average American voter.
How does this "Fix" anything?
The problems are economic stupidity and corruption, not architecture.
This study, I have not read it, seems to advocate a reversal of that movement. A compaction of the habitable structures into higher density areas with less reliance on the automobile but with the option of public transportation.
Those first two words came from a long conversation I had with a loosely knit group of home builders and developers over coffee one morning.
Consensus was that without a paradign shift in buyer attitude about whether they could expect the livibility, security and comfort and a level of freedom in a high density housing project as they would expect in a "normal" development, it had limited appeal. (Their demographic target(s) were the first/second time home buyer with children).
I don't believe that shift will occur without a far more serious change than the foreclosure crisis. And, knowing a bit about govmint and how it "thinks" I'd venture a guess that their stereotypes of high density housing is limited to a condominium complex with a swimming pool and 2car attached garages. Ciao
AU: They probably don't pay taxes because it's a nonprofit institution.
SV: That's a form of subsidy, isn't it?
AU: You care about where your tax dollars go, don't you?
SV: Yes, and I'll vote to make sure they go in the right place.
AU: Yes, well maybe right now too many tax dollars have been going to the suburbs, and maybe it's time to have the tax payer dollars to go to cities and making certain suburbs more sustainable and more like cities.
SV: Yes.
AU: --- that are completely financially unsustainable?
SV: Who says they're completely financially unsustainable? Who says this?
AU: Well, why is poverty increasing at double the rate in suburbs as it is in cities?
SV: Because maybe poor people have moved out of the city and gotten a place in suburbs.
AU: Well that's the only place they can afford to buy houses.
Alex Ulam (AU): No, it's not the elite. It's the way our tax...It's the way our housing policy has been oriented for the last twenty or thirty years. It's unsustainable---
SV: We should not be organizing ourselves and where to live. Now the elites are telling us how we should be doing it.
AU: They are making some suggestions, but -- listen -- it's unsustainable for people to live in suburbs.
SV: Who says?
AU: Well most Americans actually spend more money on transportation than they do on medical care or on taxes. The average family of four that makes $50,000 spends somewhere between $7,900 and---
fascinating! just great – i want to watch all of these.
i live in a city that is wholly embracing (sub)urban sprawl – it's a small city, so this is a (relatively) recent development. the difficult part is that it feels so unstoppable when the entire system of city government is set up to encourage single-use, encourage sprawl (things like zoning laws that make home business illegal, or lack of impact fees, so that developers don't have to pay a cent to get utilities run to new developments outside the current city). and discourage historic preservations, as angie said (or, more accurately, only encourage it in affluent neighborhoods).
this from someone who has wholly embraced the home part of the american dream, if not the other parts. but owning a home has been a dream of mine for…ever – and it is just as amazing as i always thought. the thing that really strikes me is the number of homeowners i know who don't actually like owning a home (or at least none of the details that come with the concept).
Bell told me what his team was thinking: “One basic understanding of REITs that I often heard people criticize is that they’re essentially hedging instruments.” So the upswing in home prices in one part of the world might be played off a drop in value elsewhere. “Instead of real estate being held as a local asset, it gets bundled up as a global asset.
So I believe the hybrid approach is the likeliest way to achieve real innovation in housing as well as in real estate development practices. What might be the role of architects in this effort? The South African architect Iain Low has described a building as a manifesto, a declaration of what is possible. (“I work within the possibility of significantly transforming reality, as opposed to reinventing it," he said.) And indeed, the five projects in Foreclosed show us the possibilities of dreaming big.
(2) Motherhood and childhood are entitled to special care and assistance. All children, whether born in or out of wedlock, shall enjoy the same social protection.
— Article 25, Universal Declaration of Human Rights, United Nations
It is a sign of the times that this exhortation has proved controversial not because it reminds us of the economic inequity, the structural racism, and the gender violence that has marked every stage of so much welfare-state public housing, from inception to management, even as it challenges the apparent inevitability of such results. It is controversial because it suggests that the state, or the public sector — conceived along with civil society in terms of multiple, overlapping, virtual and actual publics — might play a more active, direct and enlightened role in the provision of housing and, by extension, of education, health care and other infrastructures of daily life in the United States. In other words, it is a direct challenge to the now-dominant paradigm of privatization. That the design teams did not entirely take up this challenge is, in my view, at least as interesting as what they actually did propose, and is perhaps symptomatic of how deeply the politics of privatization has shaped design culture. Simply put, can we no longer imagine architecture without developers?
We need more effective ways to build housing quickly and cheaply, and this requires both a design solution and a policy solution. Even in cities like San Francisco where there is a push by the local government to create housing for people at all income levels, the process works too slowly and leaves too many people out. Housing policy is a failure when there are thousands of people waiting for a home that they can afford.
06.26.12 at 02:51
cities and towns are run by the people you elect. if you are not part of the solution, you are part of the problem
Laws can be changed if people want to change them. I hope you write a letter to the editor of your local newspaper to complain and send a letter to your elected representatives in your town. Tell everyone how unjust it was to fine someone for corn stalks...make it an issue
It is called "edible landscaping". It does not have to involve tall corn stalks. It is a very intriguing idea. I have done some of this type of landscaping. Every year I grow a hedge of indeterminate, small tomatoes that greets you as you come up to my door.
Too tall corn stalks? Maybe, maybe if they were blocking a view of traffic and causing a hazard. You can get into that situation with too tall shrubbery, as well.
I've been talking about the fact that there is no limit to the interest a homeowner can deduct. This is a big problem that reduces tax revenue. There should be a limit on the amount that can be deducted. Interest on the price of an average home should be deductible anything over that average amount excluded. $300,000.00 seems reasonable to me, any interest due to borrowing above that will not be deductible.
Had this been in place since day one homeowners would not have tried to get the biggest, tackiest house they can get a mortgage on and we may never have had this problem. There would be no demand and the contractors knowing this would not have built so many excess. Despite the banks trickery this would have prevented a lot of the carnage.
palaces they will never be able to sell. BTW my ex live near Tampa, was the first to buy in their new development, and now the surrounding, brand new homes having never been lived in are being torn down to prevent squatters and shooting galleries from taking over. My daughter bought a modest house in St Petersburg only to learn 2 years later that it's worth less than half of what they owe as almost every other house in the neighborhood was now
on the market at rock bottom prices. Fortunately they were able to do a short sale and move to Seminole which is a slightly more affluent area.
I've been talking about the fact that there is no limit to the interest a homeowner can deduct. This is a big problem that reduces tax revenue. There should be a limit on the amount that can be deducted. Interest on the price of an average home should be deductible anything over that average amount excluded. $300,000.00 seems reasonable to me, any interest due to borrowing above that will not be deductible.
Had this been in place since day one homeowners would not have tried to get the biggest, tackiest house they can get a mortgage on and we may never have had this problem. There would be no demand and the contractors knowing this would not have built so many excess. Despite the banks trickery this would have prevented a lot of the carnage.
palaces they will never be able to sell. BTW my ex live near Tampa, was the first to buy in their new development, and now the surrounding, brand new homes having never been lived in are being torn down to prevent squatters and shooting galleries from taking over. My daughter bought a modest house in St Petersburg only to learn 2 years later that it's worth less than half of what they owe as almost every other house in the neighborhood was now
on the market at rock bottom prices. Fortunately they were able to do a short sale and move to Seminole which is a slightly more affluent area.
This tax exemption just subsidizes more sprawl.
So you would let Romney and his ilk continue to use every available loophole and remove the largest middle class tax tax exemption? You are pert of the problem, not the solution.
Even better. Repeal the income tax.
This would destroy the pocket books of those holding existing mortgages, who count on that mortgage deduction. We could never have gotten our house without that $20K a year of itemized deductions.
Toss out the tax exemption on mortgage interest and RE will bottom in 6 months. Cut the current exemption to two thirds the first year, then to one third the second and then to zero exemption for the third year, for all interest over $4k per year per house.
I've never understood why anyone ever thought to pay so much to live in grids of look-alike homes... They look exactly like low income housing developments, really.
And the idea of criticizing people who use mass transit bus systems, but think it's not government to use the highways...
There's such a disconnect... I think a lot of people anymore don't connect how community & civilization aspects interact, and don't really understand how we have a civilization.
The Cicero plan sounds good on paper, but don't put a dime into that town until Larry Dominick is safely out of office and finally behind bars. He makes us next door in Chicago look clean.
Since the mexican drug lords and international high-dollar real estate speculators have pretty much cornered the market on having a roof overhead, when can we expect The Government/associated business entities to start setting up the low-cost campsites and RV/trailer parks, or the high-capacity public confinement facilities/gas chambers/whatever?
I'm not sure how I see the deflation of an over-inflated housing market brought about by greedy mortgage bankers and speculators has anything whatsoever to do with Obama. If we had kept sensible regulations in place during the Reagan/Bush/Clinton/Bush years, 2008's crash wouldn't have happened, and housing would not have shot through the roof. Obama is picking up the pieces. The previous 4 presidents and previous Congresses caused the problem through being in bed with the criminal international banking cartel.
Americans demanded gleaming houses on individual squares of lawn far removed from urban centers, and the people who finance and construct real estate delivered the goods. This is how we wound up with expanding rings of suburban sprawl orbiting every metropolitan area. This is how we turned ever-larger swaths of open space into grids of look-alike homes, the inventory that came to be tinder for the foreclosure inferno. The developers, bankers, salespeople and their government enablers were merely working to satisfy a public craving.
But the real estate bubble was in fact an orgy of profiteering run by and for the benefit of special interests that stuck the public with the cleanup. Investment banks poured money into housing because mortgages had become raw materials for a lucrative business churning out mortgage-backed securities. Homebuilders carved acreage into subdivisions far in excess of demand because money was free and volume was good for share prices. Money was free because the Federal Reserve kept interest rates low while Fannie and Freddie kept guaranteeing mortgages. Land was accessible because the government expanded highways and subsidized gas prices.
BL: What you essentially did in maybe two minutes is cut a broad swath right through just about every problem that we kind of touched upon up here and hopefully to some extent a lot of these projects started to poke at. I would, with all due respect to my colleagues, suggest they didn’t really get into that cut. And, when Barry said this would be a little more nuts and bolts, I didn’t realize we were talking this nuts and bolts, but you’re absolutely right. You point out a whole series of problems starting from the fact that you’ve been displaced, put in a position where you could no longer afford your house because of the taxes on that house. Now you’re being left with very few options. I would hope on a really basic level that your voucher is portable, so that you aren’t stuck just looking for housing in Fort Lee which I know can be somewhat challenging. […] The whole Affordable Housing Trust Fund is a problem because it’s like the old George Bernard Shaw play Major Barbara: It allows these guys to buy their way out of providing affordable housing. […] As long as you continue to take what amounts to developers’ ransom money, you’re going to continue to have segregated neighborhoods. You’re going to continue to have folks like yourself who are stuck, getting forced out of their neighborhood…
BL: One of the things I thought to do in preparation for this talk was to chart, from the Bush administration through the Obama administration, the number of times the word “housing” appears in the State of the Union address. I got really depressed, so I stopped. In essence—again, because it is so polarizing, and I can’t wait to see what they said on Fox News—you’re going to have to wait until December. You’re going to have to wait until he gets reelected. You’re going to have to wait until Shaun Donovan has four more years. Then we can start to have a meaningful discussion. But until then, I don’t think anything that you put on the national political agenda that talks about “public” or “housing” other than possibly bailing out mortgages and/or bailing out more bank —I don’t know how that’s going to gain any traction or do anything other than alienate more voters. But once December comes, then it’s a different story.
MJ: I wouldn’t disagree with that. I think there’s a curious rupture between the importance of housing in our lives and the importance of it in the political discourse, if you will. I think in New York City there are two things that are important to New Yorkers: real estate and romance. And real estate inevitably trumps romance. “Who’s got the right rent-stabilized apartment? I’ll take that one!” “Ok, you’re moving in with me. I’m not moving in with you.” Here it is so central to our lives. Go to a party in a single-family house in a neighborhood or something: “So, did you hear the house down the street went for so-many dollars?” It dominates our conversation in so many ways, and yet it’s so difficult for it to enter into the discussion even in the aftermath of this colossal, this calamity that has occurred. […] In some ways, when it gets into the public policy realm, it’s like “My eyes glaze over.” I’m talking about QRMs [Qualified Residential Mortgages], and you’re falling asleep. Let’s admit it. It is hard. It’s really hard to raise this issue in an effective manner.
It’s refreshing that the team unabashedly suggests that much of these new ribbons of housing would be developed as public housing. But if this is a serious idea, not simply a gesture or metaphor, then one must confront the fact that public housing in the United States, apart from unfortunately being in ideological disrepute, is also grossly underfunded.
Homeownership (135)
All five teams have responded to this directive to some degree by proposing social and infrastructural systems that attempt, on a large scale, to align with the new cultural desires and economic realities of American suburban living. Amale Andraos and Dan Wood of WORK Architecture Company, working on SalemKeizer, Oregon, propose a contemporary update on the notion of a garden city, addressing a range of ecological issues. Hilary Sample and Michael Meredith of MOS, analyzing the Oranges, New Jersey, explore the potential of suburban streets to offer a new kind of civic space in a less car-dependent future. Jeanne Gang of Studio Gang, focusing on Cicero, Illinois, seeks a new flexibility in housing that will accommodate the rapidly shifting immigrant populations in the suburbs outside Chicago. Andrew Zago of Zago Architecture, studying Rialto, California, subverts the strict hierarchies of property boundaries that have traditionally structured suburban space. And Michael Bell of Visible Weather, examining Temple Terrace, Florida, considers the relationship between relatively homogenous Florida suburbs and the more diverse and less prosperous neighboring urban communities.
photo piece of the plight of Detroit along with a possible solution involving GIVING homes and commercial property or free rent to folks outside the city; photos of recipients revamping them and buisinesses starting up to support the new arrivals.
theme; how creativity along with left brain thinking can be used to solve vitsl cultural problems!
or pass on to “New Yorker” magazine for One City’s Museum of TOTAL Creativity Helps Save the Culture of Another
December 20, 2011 at 11:02 pm
December 20, 2011 at 1:21 pm
December 20, 2011 at 1:15 pm
December 20, 2011 at 1:06 pm
"They put $100 down on the $8,500 house (about $75,000 in today's currency)."
What house can you buy that'd even be habitable, and that's not in a slum or 50 miles away from the nearest city, for $75000? How much would a comparable house sell for on Long Island now, $350000? Forget buying a house if you have anything less than a graduate degree, much less if you're a blue collar worker. If you aren't a doctor/stock broker/lawyer/engineer, you're f(#*ked, no matter how hard you work..
December 20, 2011 at 12:46 pm
We are not in a wake following a concluded foreclosure crisis -- we are in a foreclosure crisis! For MOMA to pass this off as the creative residue of a situation now resolved is not only stupidly Pollyanna, it is disingenuous and spreads false hope that the worst is behind us. No, the worst is ahead of us. More, many more homeowners are underwater or nearly so and as the economy continues basically moribund, the situation will only get worse. That is, if no one does anything dramatic to help homeowners as much as the bankers. Two Administrations of supposedly different ideologies have conspired to let the banks off the hook and throw the deadbeats -- the newly poor -- out of their homes.
MOMA's characterization of the exhibition as post facto is blatantly ignorant of the situation as it is. MOMA should be made to address the realities of home loss, not its own fantasy of what may have occurred.
BTW, the ridiculous solutions to the suburban crisis proposed in the exhibition are not clever, they are insulting to the people who made it possible: the foreclosed. Really in poor taste.
6 Months Ago
MB: The big issue I would get across here is that all housing is financially constructed. And in the United States, the single-family house for purchase with a mortgage is public. The mortgage deduction on your annual taxes means that everybody in this country has subsidized housing.
FS: Well, the homeowners do anyway.
"decoupling the previous notion that ownership is a home and the land beneath it."
It's called a trailer park. It's already been invented.
The new MoMA exhibit, “Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream", shows a radical approach to home ownership: http://reut.rs/zVU8jU
Michael Bell (MB): [laughs] You’re trying to make it sound good.
Sub-urban and suburban are also two very different things. I would argue that sub-urban is not bad. A good example of this is in some parts of Brooklyn, Queens, and Nassau county NY. The density is greater than the typical suburban environment, and there is a small business walkable street scape that flanks a mix of multi and single family housing in many of these neighborhoods. There is also access to public transit in and out of the city. There is a mix of home owners and renters, and the opportunity to own a house and rent out the top floor. There is a sense of community and a feeling of being in a small town within a city. The film "Do the Right Thing" by Spike Lee so clearly expresses this. Another issue is density. More density is not the solution alone. We need to find an appropriate balance of density, production, and economy so that development can be in some sort of sustainable balance. I think that sub-urban form has the greatest potential for a sustainable development because there is enough space to support a mix of agriculture, industry,small business, housing, park space, etc...as well as enough density to support local businesses with regard to employees and consumers. Cities like manhattan will never be able to become hybrid typologies because things like urban agriculture and production will be far too expensive due to crazy high land prices. The only problem with the sub-urban typology is that it sometimes becomes gentrified over time as we see in brooklyn or the opposite happens where it becomes a ghetto due to the home values going down as density goes up like in Jamaica Queens (balance is always a thin line). On the other hand, suburban development lends itself to exploitation by corporate interests as James R. clearly articulates. The American dream of owning a single family home is not going away. It is a part of the American culture that dates back hundreds of years. We need to find a solution to the problem without ignoring the cultural mentality that led to it. This is why ideas like the ones in the MoMA exhibit never work. I believe that we need to study examples that already work like Astoria, and go from there.
it would be a hard sell to convince people to abandon the traditional stand alone owner occupied home to become apartment dwellers.
it really is not that hard to build a very efficient or even a net zero home these days
Is this guy suggesting Condos are the solution to the real estate crisis? Or does everyone become a renter? Seems like another utopian community to me. And of course... he's going to tell me that if I have ONE child, I only get a two bedroom unit. No thanks. Why does innovation from Architects always have to come in the form of telling people how to live their lives? Maybe innovation could be a business model that allows Architects to incorporate all these good ideas and give the customer what they want instead of telling them what they want?
Some good ideas lost in translation, reducing cost of utilities. Simple solution there. Smaller footprint, better insulation and higher efficiency systems. Hmmm.... looks to be the kind of home that the home builders are putting out right now. Wonder why they're still in business?
MB: People have looked toward changing or improving the suburbs
for a long time. You can go back to the 1970s, and academics are often
lambasted for not being sensitive about it. But the reason I’m bringing
this up is that what is different at this point in time is everything from
globalization in terms of where is production happening, what are the
jobs. When you talk about housing, you ultimately always—even if you’re
an architect—end up talking about jobs. What will secure that loan in the
future? So, flexibility comes in. But the difference now, I think, is that
what people realize… And the foreclosure crisis is an awful thing, it is
absolutely a crisis, but it does start to create a situation where people
start to imagine that what we have is not inevitable. And, in fact, it was
produced, and it was dreamed. I think, people don’t like change in housing,
and they should worry about change in housing, but what we have is also
not terribly secure. And, so, I think that’s what you’re bringing up, and
Jeanne was bringing that up quite brilliantly.
CH: One of the things I think Detroit forces us to think of is the fact that
the things we think are natural are contingent.
CH: How’s this: “Embrace the Dream: Rent.” Anyone? Any takers on that?
MB: […] One of the big points of the show for anyone who deals with housing issues academically is, yeah, that deduction makes basically a
huge amount of American housing public housing at some level. It’s a far
bigger expenditure on the federal level than, for example, funding for HUD
for homelessness.
TS: It’s about $80 billion or something, right?
MB: It’s about $80 billion. Low-income housing tax credits, I think, are
probably $30 billion. So, the federal government at this point in time really
does not build directly public housing any longer. It incentivizes it through
tax credits.
CH: And it incentivizes for people to purchase their own homes and take
out a lot of debt, the interest of which they can then take off against their
taxes.
were each assigned a suburban community with a higher foreclosure rate than the national average and asked to imagine in the design a vision for what sustainable, vibrant, post-crisis communities could be if we rethink our most fundamental beliefs about the American house.
Owning your own home is the American dream. That is never going to change. Those architects need a wake up call
Robert Moses, many many years ago, suggested that we save all the beauty areas of the country for ALL the people. so the rich couldnot take up acreage on the beach in same the Hamptons, etc. HE suggested, smaller homes with huge common gardens, playgrounds....yet we would all have beach access, lake access, etc. I think its a good idea (in theory)..in reality, I don't want to pick up others doggie doo, or garbage. If we were all abiding and pleasant, it would be wonderful. BUT I DO agree that it is not right for the very rich to be able to 'control' a beach area. WHY should they be able to claim part of the Atlantic or Pacific for their very own? makes no sense. ALL beaches should be public, be in Malibu or Quogue.
Mortgage Refinance
While interest rates have never been more attractive, the number of people taking advantage of the historically low rates and refinancing their mortgages has dropped substantially, most of them dont even aware of the rates, i recommend 123 Refinance for refinance
It is time we re-imagined and retooled the old, stale notions of what constitutes a stable home.
Foreclosed Homeowners Inspire Museum's Architects Show: James S. Russell: The MoMA show “Foreclosed: Rehousing t... http://bit.ly/z3Hr7D
Architects float ideas for underwater homeowners at MoMA: http://bloom.bg/ACDs4Q #architecture#urban
Felix:
One other point – the interview with Mr. Bell in essence points out his socialization of housing and thereby negates one of the big principles that sets our nation apart – Property Rights!!! Somehow this fact is getting lost in these utopian schemes. Just food for thought!
In places like Mumbai, where arguably a majority of the city is inhabited---and much of it was literally developed---by squatters in slums and shanties, this commodification of land is very risky. Shutting (poor) squatters out of land is precisely what governments in Mumbai and Beijing are doing now, by bulldozing slums. And this is harmful not just for reasons of justice and equity, but also because the urban poor contribute a great deal of labor and economic activity to the city.
Blocks and grid systems would facilitate that process by specifically defining plots of land and putting a price on them, which would then be an "opportunity cost" of housing the poor.
My review in #TheNation of #MoMA#ForeclosedShow that questions American Dream of homeownership and suburbia http://bit.ly/GLs7Z6 .
fascinating! just great – i want to watch all of these.
i live in a city that is wholly embracing (sub)urban sprawl – it's a small city, so this is a (relatively) recent development. the difficult part is that it feels so unstoppable when the entire system of city government is set up to encourage single-use, encourage sprawl (things like zoning laws that make home business illegal, or lack of impact fees, so that developers don't have to pay a cent to get utilities run to new developments outside the current city). and discourage historic preservations, as angie said (or, more accurately, only encourage it in affluent neighborhoods).
this from someone who has wholly embraced the home part of the american dream, if not the other parts. but owning a home has been a dream of mine for…ever – and it is just as amazing as i always thought. the thing that really strikes me is the number of homeowners i know who don't actually like owning a home (or at least none of the details that come with the concept).
Lady Brett: Just curious. What do you find amazing about owning your home and what are some of the complaints about people who do own their own home and don't like it?
I'm not intending to answer for her, but I identify with where she's coming from, so I'll give MY answer, if you don't mind.
There was a car commercial a few years ago where some young adults are dancing in their apartment and the downstairs neighbor gets mad, so they get in their VW and go buy tons of giant speakers, and it shows them setting them up, and then dancing and jumping on the floor as hard as they can. And then, just when you're thinking they're the biggest dicks ever, it zooms out and they don't live in an apartment anymore; they bought a house.
THIS is why I love my house. I can do what I want in it, I can fill all the fixtures with red lightbulbs, I can dig a trench in my yard and not fill it in all winter long, I can mellow-rock-out to Halou all night long with my windows open, and my neighbors love me, because when they asked me to stop hard-rocking-out to Ministry with the windows open, I DID!
I think people get tired of paying a mortgage (which feels like rent) and not getting any of the benefits of renting. For instance: when my toilet backs up, I have to pay the plumber; when my window screen pops out, I have to shove that rubber bead thingy back in there for like the next three hours; when I get tired of my neighborhood, or my new neighbors, or my tiny, cluttered house, I can't just move…
Home-owning is rewarding, but definitely not for everyone.
It gets complicated because the point of the exhibit Caroline is reporting on is basically that home-ownership like that — unrestricted and wholly self-fulfilling — WAS the American Dream, but is no longer. We don't have the space, or the money, or the resources, or the financial institutions to support that sort of everyone-gets-exactly-what-they-want lifestyle. The communities we built in that image are sprawling and unsustainable, and the designers and artists participating in the exhibit were tasked with imagining how society could take existing infrastructure and reimagine it in more effective, community-focused ways.
shannon –my home is the hobby i've always wanted – i have always and forever loved building, fixing things…handyman work. apartment/rental life (for me they were always the same) was boring to me. the ability to customize my house the way i like is part of it, but the bigger part is that if my sheetrock needs repair i get to repair the sheetrock rather than call someone to do it. it's awesome.
there are also aspects of space and community which are not exclusive to houses or homeowners, but which have correlated in my life – urban homesteading stuff like growing food and composting and such, and talking with the neighbors, or meeting folks who walk their dogs (or kids with rc cars) by the house while you're gardening.
anyhow, i think the difference is that there are a lot of folks who own homes because it is what you are "supposed to do", but who don't actually like any of the things that come with it – they'd rather just be able to call a landlord to fix the house problems, and i know quite a few who find a yard to be more of a hassle than an asset. which is a-ok, but it seems to me like a shame that they were culturally shamed into homeownership in the first place.
also, i've gotten a chance to see another couple of the videos, and this project is fascinating! i *love* the ideas of space and community in these. again, space and community are a lot of what i love about homeownership, and those could (in theory) absolutely be achieved without the ownership part. but not here and now, so…
I have always wanted something between a dream apartment setup that I've never seen exist & home ownership.My basic wants & needs are:–little to no shared walls unless I literally know my neighbors or can screen them & set up agreements (I have been victim to every kind of inconsiderate neighbor imaginable & am only 24 years old)–garden/ yard/ bonfire space–a community of neighbors that actually talk to one another and/or at least could recognize each other elsewhere–some sort of fenced-in outdoor area for my dog &/or future children (not necessarily a communal thing in this case vs. the garden/ bonfire space)
I've never seen anything remotely like this. The closest I've seen is a cul-de-sac back home in WI where at least 4 of the 9 families knew one another, all had their own yard, & occasionally suggested a block party or extended invitations to an existing backyard party to the whole neighborhood. In my mind this is hardly close to the aforementioned situation.
However, the original idea of designing neighborhoods was to escape all of these city life hardships and to live in a quiet, green and neat place with a family. Suburbs have long been the sites of a key component of American dream – personal ownership of a single-family home, an investment that once guaranteed stability and legacy for next generations.
Bell told me what his team was thinking: “One basic understanding of REITs that I often heard people criticize is that they’re essentially hedging instruments.” So the upswing in home prices in one part of the world might be played off a drop in value elsewhere. “Instead of real estate being held as a local asset, it gets bundled up as a global asset.
with its use of appealing architectural models, videos, artists’ renderings, and large-scale graphics. Even a Rubik’s Cube plays its part, helping to explain Studio Gang’s presentation for Cicero, Ill., an aging suburb outside Chicago. The cube, with its shifting components, represents the plan’s modular “recombinant” housing, mostly within an abandoned factory; the concept allows residents to buy only those parts of a dwelling that they need, adding or subtracting rooms as their families grow or shrink.
Unfortunately this aspect of the show is only given a few sentences in the exhibit catalog, as well as the website and physical exhibit. A more detailed description of ideas such as "portable mortgages" or "public real estate investment trusts" would have taken the conversation further into the intersection of buildings and the communities that inhabit them. More than changing zoning or the physical walls around people's kitchens and bedrooms, expanding more the possibilities of new types of housing tenure would have been helpful. This would have provided a clearer path to showing how they propose we ground these new American dreams financially and legally.
In some of the harder hit areas A investors are buying up properties for cash and renting them out.
This means that huge sections of the community will be rentals which is not good.
I believe in density, as in cities, where efficient distribution infrastructure is established and leave more open space around the city for everybody to enjoy. This is also less harmful to the environment when we concentrate habitat with a smaller footprint. Cities are vibrant places where people actually interact and encourage understanding and learn to live together. While I understand the urge to want to own ones home, I don't understand the continued sprawl of suburban areas that are so far away from the cities. What does one do in these boring tract homes that all look the same and where nobody gets out of their cars until they are in their garage. It's kind of depressing.
I've been talking about the fact that there is no limit to the interest a homeowner can deduct. This is a big problem that reduces tax revenue. There should be a limit on the amount that can be deducted. Interest on the price of an average home should be deductible anything over that average amount excluded. $300,000.00 seems reasonable to me, any interest due to borrowing above that will not be deductible.
Had this been in place since day one homeowners would not have tried to get the biggest, tackiest house they can get a mortgage on and we may never have had this problem. There would be no demand and the contractors knowing this would not have built so many excess. Despite the banks trickery this would have prevented a lot of the carnage.
palaces they will never be able to sell. BTW my ex live near Tampa, was the first to buy in their new development, and now the surrounding, brand new homes having never been lived in are being torn down to prevent squatters and shooting galleries from taking over. My daughter bought a modest house in St Petersburg only to learn 2 years later that it's worth less than half of what they owe as almost every other house in the neighborhood was now
on the market at rock bottom prices. Fortunately they were able to do a short sale and move to Seminole which is a slightly more affluent area.
I've been talking about the fact that there is no limit to the interest a homeowner can deduct. This is a big problem that reduces tax revenue. There should be a limit on the amount that can be deducted. Interest on the price of an average home should be deductible anything over that average amount excluded. $300,000.00 seems reasonable to me, any interest due to borrowing above that will not be deductible.
Had this been in place since day one homeowners would not have tried to get the biggest, tackiest house they can get a mortgage on and we may never have had this problem. There would be no demand and the contractors knowing this would not have built so many excess. Despite the banks trickery this would have prevented a lot of the carnage.
palaces they will never be able to sell. BTW my ex live near Tampa, was the first to buy in their new development, and now the surrounding, brand new homes having never been lived in are being torn down to prevent squatters and shooting galleries from taking over. My daughter bought a modest house in St Petersburg only to learn 2 years later that it's worth less than half of what they owe as almost every other house in the neighborhood was now
on the market at rock bottom prices. Fortunately they were able to do a short sale and move to Seminole which is a slightly more affluent area.
This would destroy the pocket books of those holding existing mortgages, who count on that mortgage deduction. We could never have gotten our house without that $20K a year of itemized deductions.
BL: What you essentially did in maybe two minutes is cut a broad swath right through just about every problem that we kind of touched upon up here and hopefully to some extent a lot of these projects started to poke at. I would, with all due respect to my colleagues, suggest they didn’t really get into that cut. And, when Barry said this would be a little more nuts and bolts, I didn’t realize we were talking this nuts and bolts, but you’re absolutely right. You point out a whole series of problems starting from the fact that you’ve been displaced, put in a position where you could no longer afford your house because of the taxes on that house. Now you’re being left with very few options. I would hope on a really basic level that your voucher is portable, so that you aren’t stuck just looking for housing in Fort Lee which I know can be somewhat challenging. […] The whole Affordable Housing Trust Fund is a problem because it’s like the old George Bernard Shaw play Major Barbara: It allows these guys to buy their way out of providing affordable housing. […] As long as you continue to take what amounts to developers’ ransom money, you’re going to continue to have segregated neighborhoods. You’re going to continue to have folks like yourself who are stuck, getting forced out of their neighborhood…
Infrastructure (31)
Andrew Zago has achieved a new level of ignorance regarding the New Urbanism. I searched the net for a picture of him and was surprised to find that he does not look quite as slack-jawed stupid as he sounds, even though appearance is apparently how he judges substance.
Now (LORD grant me patience!), “significant” architecture is not really how New Urbanists keep score. We do so in many other ways: how many cars not bought; how many vehicle miles reduced; how much transit supported; how much carbon not spewed into the atmosphere; how many children and old folk walk to their daily needs; how much infrastructure cost saved; how much less expended on the delivery of municipal services; how many HOPE VI houses cherished by their residents; how much real estate value created; how many total acres under design (either as New Urbanist communities or through form-based codes); how many downtowns revitalized; how much choice available regionally to those whom suburbia does not serve well; and so on.
But Architect Zago keeps score by other means — like securing the good opinion of about a half-dozen critics in Los Angeles and New York. Indeed, he operates in a world so marginal that I need to be reminded of its existence, monthly, by Metropolis.
That his statement was thoroughly engaged by Director Martin, rather than being ignored as the antics of a simpleton, shows what kind of emissions pass for discourse in academia these days.
But let’s have a look at it from Architect Zago’s point of view. It turns out that even by the tight little standards of his world, and within just one little project (Seaside), there might be as much “significant” architecture as Architect Zago himself might hope to achieve in a lifetime. Seaside has Steve Holl’s first large building. Machado/Silvetti’s first large building. The first buildings (at least three each, and darn good, too) of Deborah Berke, Alex Gorlin, and Walter Chatham. The only building of Roger Ferri. The first building of Leon Krier. The only American house by Aldo Rossi. A wonderfully melancholic house by Sam Mockbee. Clever and charming pavilions by Michael McDonough, Stuart Cohen and Jersey Devil. A national AIA award-winning and gorgeous church by Scott Merrill. And those are only some of the modernism by the “names,” not all the best buildings.
Architect Zago is doubly ignorant: first of what New Urbanism intends to achieve on its own terms, and then of what it has achieved even on his terms.
Am I to understand that he teaches somewhere?
May 26, 2011, @ 2:49 pm
I am afraid design has lost touch with the sacred. Solutions that do not revere our connection and dependence on nature are Band-Aids. Foreclosure is the result of a capitalist business model on two fronts. First, homes are built on inexpensive land that require infrastructure. Less expensive than infill, the market is sold a bigger is better value, demeaning the essence of design itself. Inexpensive, huge homes have destroyed millions of acres of farmland and aquifers and are ready to do so again after the recession is over regardless of what you do at MoMA. These homes are expensive and are deteriorating rapidly. Second, a failed industry at the core is not in a position to repair itself without a new revolutionary system approach only slightly identified in LEED and the Green Building initiative.
There must be a return to the building practices from the past that had one core leader in the design and delivery process. Trained as an engineer, these master builders were schooled in a natural, sacred geometric methodology that was philosophical and practical. The difference between this and our existing 3 tiered architect, engineer and builder approach is innate conflict.
A building is a sacred thing, manifest from nature and in accordance with her underlying principles. Until we regain this relationship, any attempts to solve our nightmare of expensive, cheap, environmentally dysfunctional buildings will be superficial. A much deeper view of the problem is the challenge and the work is philosophical,spiritual,professional and health related.
All five teams have responded to this directive to some degree by proposing social and infrastructural systems that attempt, on a large scale, to align with the new cultural desires and economic realities of American suburban living. Amale Andraos and Dan Wood of WORK Architecture Company, working on SalemKeizer, Oregon, propose a contemporary update on the notion of a garden city, addressing a range of ecological issues. Hilary Sample and Michael Meredith of MOS, analyzing the Oranges, New Jersey, explore the potential of suburban streets to offer a new kind of civic space in a less car-dependent future. Jeanne Gang of Studio Gang, focusing on Cicero, Illinois, seeks a new flexibility in housing that will accommodate the rapidly shifting immigrant populations in the suburbs outside Chicago. Andrew Zago of Zago Architecture, studying Rialto, California, subverts the strict hierarchies of property boundaries that have traditionally structured suburban space. And Michael Bell of Visible Weather, examining Temple Terrace, Florida, considers the relationship between relatively homogenous Florida suburbs and the more diverse and less prosperous neighboring urban communities.
To respond to the way the blocks are designed, Levittown blocks are a bit of a labyrinth, which makes it difficult for criminals seeking to rob homes to navigate. If any home is robbed, it's usually an inside job. Levittown is surrounded by low-crime neighborhoods demographically, so there's no "spillage" of crime over its borders, and as someone pointed out, has no direct connection to the LIRR, so yes, it's insular, and this is why there is a very low crime rate. This is a reason why I bought in Levittown.
Why else did I buy in Levittown? THE SCHOOL DISTRICT. Levittown's teachers' union had a landmark case in the U.S. Supreme Court, and as a result, their teachers are paid at the top of the Long Island pay scale, on par with districts like Great Neck. In education you get what you pay for!
My daughter, a Levittown graduate, attends Harvard and seminars at MIT. Levittown schools worked with me to groom her and remediate a learning disability she had. So whomever said nobody from Levittown becomes a professional is WRONG. I'm surprised the writer of this article missed mentioning the excellent schools.
As for the Village Greens, it was also missed by the writer and in comments that libraries are often found at the Village Greens. And each family got a pool pass so they could swim FOR FREE all summer long. The Greens still have concerts during the summer, and have little shops. Levittown has some very nice perks.
I left after my family was raised, and after Nassau County re-assessed my property taxes and TRIPLED them over a period of three years. But dollar for dollar, Levittown served its purpose for me. My child got an excellent education in a non-violent, quiet, fairly unspoiled and unpretentious community. Oh, and for the record, the "white trash" element hasn't been able to afford to live in Levittown since the 80s.
December 21, 2011 at 8:51 pm
December 22, 2011 at 12:28 am
sustainable developers?? developers follow incentives and try to minimize risk - without government subsidizing sprawling (i.e. cheap & low capacity) infrastructure and overly restrictive zoning laws they'd very likely build far more high-density mixed-use buildings without parking (but also without green space). without utilities, roads, and other services land is pretty much worthless - and developers typically don't like challenging zoning unless they know the municipality is on board.
also - high-density outside of the city center presents another challenge because of the capacity of the existing services. Some towns in the northeast have put a moratorium on any new building because their existing water and sewer systems cannot handle any additional load. when you think of it, suburban development is often a function of how big the sewer systems are, or how much space is needed for a septic and/or leech field and buffer.
perhaps if as a culture we had a much healthier relationship with our own poop...
MOMA exhibit examining foreclosures in Orange and discussing the redesign of its housing and supporting infrastructure moma.org/interactives/e…
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
CH: Increased density?
MB: All five projects in the show deal with density, and they also deal with trying to find housing that is probably more financially and size-wise appropriate to its user, but also that would use dramatically less energy to basically dramatically lower carrying costs. But I think many of the people, including ourselves, we were looking at ways to take underutilized property, publicly held or publicly controlled, and increase density around infrastructure because the public has already paid for all of that infrastructure and isn’t using it.
It gets complicated because the point of the exhibit Caroline is reporting on is basically that home-ownership like that — unrestricted and wholly self-fulfilling — WAS the American Dream, but is no longer. We don't have the space, or the money, or the resources, or the financial institutions to support that sort of everyone-gets-exactly-what-they-want lifestyle. The communities we built in that image are sprawling and unsustainable, and the designers and artists participating in the exhibit were tasked with imagining how society could take existing infrastructure and reimagine it in more effective, community-focused ways.
Archive: Foreclosed: Reverse #engineering| Jesse Keenan #housing#infrastructurehttp://www.moma.org/explore/inside …
I attended this exhibition - some innovative ideas for delivering infrastructure and financing housing projects....... http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/ …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
I believe in density, as in cities, where efficient distribution infrastructure is established and leave more open space around the city for everybody to enjoy. This is also less harmful to the environment when we concentrate habitat with a smaller footprint. Cities are vibrant places where people actually interact and encourage understanding and learn to live together. While I understand the urge to want to own ones home, I don't understand the continued sprawl of suburban areas that are so far away from the cities. What does one do in these boring tract homes that all look the same and where nobody gets out of their cars until they are in their garage. It's kind of depressing.
Internet Banter (167)
Artist
Torrance, CA
Sounds like a worthy project, and
local. I like it. Mr. Zago, if the MoMA blog you're going to maintain has an RSS feed, you can load it into your profile and post the news to USA.org automatically.
Community Member
Los Angeles, CA
This is a great project! As a native
Angelino I'm proud to have you representing us at the MoMA!
Andrew Zago has achieved a new level of ignorance regarding the New Urbanism. I searched the net for a picture of him and was surprised to find that he does not look quite as slack-jawed stupid as he sounds, even though appearance is apparently how he judges substance.
Now (LORD grant me patience!), “significant” architecture is not really how New Urbanists keep score. We do so in many other ways: how many cars not bought; how many vehicle miles reduced; how much transit supported; how much carbon not spewed into the atmosphere; how many children and old folk walk to their daily needs; how much infrastructure cost saved; how much less expended on the delivery of municipal services; how many HOPE VI houses cherished by their residents; how much real estate value created; how many total acres under design (either as New Urbanist communities or through form-based codes); how many downtowns revitalized; how much choice available regionally to those whom suburbia does not serve well; and so on.
But Architect Zago keeps score by other means — like securing the good opinion of about a half-dozen critics in Los Angeles and New York. Indeed, he operates in a world so marginal that I need to be reminded of its existence, monthly, by Metropolis.
That his statement was thoroughly engaged by Director Martin, rather than being ignored as the antics of a simpleton, shows what kind of emissions pass for discourse in academia these days.
But let’s have a look at it from Architect Zago’s point of view. It turns out that even by the tight little standards of his world, and within just one little project (Seaside), there might be as much “significant” architecture as Architect Zago himself might hope to achieve in a lifetime. Seaside has Steve Holl’s first large building. Machado/Silvetti’s first large building. The first buildings (at least three each, and darn good, too) of Deborah Berke, Alex Gorlin, and Walter Chatham. The only building of Roger Ferri. The first building of Leon Krier. The only American house by Aldo Rossi. A wonderfully melancholic house by Sam Mockbee. Clever and charming pavilions by Michael McDonough, Stuart Cohen and Jersey Devil. A national AIA award-winning and gorgeous church by Scott Merrill. And those are only some of the modernism by the “names,” not all the best buildings.
Architect Zago is doubly ignorant: first of what New Urbanism intends to achieve on its own terms, and then of what it has achieved even on his terms.
Am I to understand that he teaches somewhere?
May 26, 2011, @ 2:49 pm
please keep me informed!
I am 58-year-old education professional. I also write for the local paper. This morning I decided to create a blog to chronicle my foreclosure experience because it is a very interesting story, and I am a story-teller. Would my posts fit with what is going on here?
And thanks, too, Bahij for commenting. It’s always great to hear from people in the field. I’m a little saddened by your “museum environments can often be colder and more sterile than some of their community counterparts” comment. I think that’s true in many cases, but I also think that it’s more of an indication of museums doing something wrong. It would seem to me that museums full of human creativity should be the complete opposite of cold and sterile, at least if the content is presented correctly.
Also, as you say, “community centers, art spaces and concert halls” should also offer forums for discourse, but in our non-ideal world and American society right now, those centers, spaces, and halls are struggling to survive even more so than museums. In my native Philadelphia, community centers close frequently and the local orchestra is filing for bankruptcy, while the museums continue to plug along.
Thanks, everyone, for commenting on this post about, well, commenting!
—Bob
Arianna - You always write timely, intelligent and articulate posts. Among the most important salient points in your article today is your noting that 'we have a surplus of untapped energy and creativity and talent'. Being a creative professional myself, I do not have the words to describe the devastation myself and my colleagues have suffered during this recession - financially, emotionally and even physically. Brilliant, highly educated and experienced graphic designers, interior designers, architects, painters, artists, musicians, dancers, etc. who have made our country a better place by improving the quality of everything we see, hear, touch, taste and feel have been tossed aside. Many were self-employed and are not able to obtain any unemployment insurance or other types of assistance. Others have been forced to do work where their skills, intellect and ability are demeaned by ridiculously low pay, poor treatment and complete disregard for their talent and the positive aspects it provides. At least during the last depression , the WPA and similar programs existed to tap into these talents and provide recognition, work and intellectual relief to this forgotten segment of our society. Disregarding these talented, creative individuals is proving to be one of the greatest downfalls of our society. It's tragic, sad and truly un-American.
Which "Institute," Christine? MoMA?
8/10/11
4:12pm
Brooklyn, NY
Arianna, it's nice that you worry about the middle class and the recently unemployed. I worry about them, too. I worry that they won't be able to handle it when they become homeless.
Low-income/no-income housing is needed now!!!
I wanted to give you a couple of stickers on your comment, especially the one smart one. You are smart and funny and compassionate. Do we have those stickers? Proud to fan and fave you.
Thank you, Barry, for helping us learn from architecture's past and enabling us to benefit from great minds working to solve the new problems we face today. Your thought-provoking exhibitions are a serve to all who are grappling with the environmental, social, financial and other issues that keep us awake at night. Thanks for providing us with forum for discussion to discover a range of solutions.
Strong wisdom, encouraging: félicitations.
I totally agree
Yes, you are right! The community should be brought back!
Bring your child to the highly important presentation day?
December 23, 2011 at 12:08pm
November 14, 2011 at 9:27am
November 11, 2011 at 8:56am
As an urbanist and lawyer, I think deeply about these issues. I find the efforts in Cicero to be interesting, but somehow missing the point of other communities of “outsiders” on the inside, like the Chatham of my youth. I am sympathetic to the plight of hardworking immigrants but would offer the story of the middle class community that is suffering by bureaucratic malfeasance of displacing the black poor into these neighborhoods with insufficient support systems and resources. Chicago is, according to the Manhattan Institute, the most segregated city in the US. It is also still has a large black population..for historical reasons. What design opportunities exist to revitalize the far south side? Is a Walmart the key to salvation? (I think, not) Mr Gates, I saw your show here in LA at the Moca Geffen and am very intriqued by the synergy that you create with your interests…arts, urban planning. I would like the opportunity to meet with you in Chicago to discuss ideas and opportunities for creating interest in saving Chatham.
December 21, 2011 at 12:45 pm
December 21, 2011 at 12:27 am
December 20, 2011 at 11:02 pm
March 22, 2012 at 6:27 pm
December 20, 2011 at 6:35 pm
December 20, 2011 at 12:57 pm
December 20, 2011 at 1:09 pm
Yes it did. The word was in use in the 1890's certainly and possibly earlier. Heck, the Chevy Suburban has been made since the 1930's I think....1935 to be exact.
Bad writer, no cookie!
December 20, 2011 at 11:54 am
My roommates help with housework, maintenance, and even watching the dogs when I am not home. It's like a small family here. I expect to have this house paid off within 8-10 years if I can do it. Can you say that?
December 20, 2011 at 3:13 pm
The animal diagram has the horse incorrectly labeled as a tapir (in the Linnean taxonomy).
@Cyberoid: It's true that the word "Suburb" includes places that are vastly different from each other - do you really think that makes the word so vague as to be meaningless, though? I don't think MoMA is claiming that the foreclosure crisis is over by any means - in fact, the sites in question were selected in part becuase they have high rates of foreclosure and high rates of non-foreclosed homeowners under water on their mortgages.
@Lecorbusier (I've heard of you, haven't I?) For what it's worth, I do know Ellen Dunham-Jones' excellent work on retrofitting dead malls, etc. What I said probably couldn't be done was revamping the suburbs wholesale "by rewriting laws, rationalizing markets, reforming the construction industry, and changing the culture all at once." Do you know of anywhere where such a sweeping transformation has been carried out? If so, I'd be very interested to know more about it.
6 Months Ago
2/15/2012 6:44 PM CST
2/15/2012 4:53 PM CST
2/15/2012 4:51 PM CST
2/15/2012 3:16 PM CST
One of the beauties of the American Dream is that people can aspire to living in a large home, or a cave if they so prefer. The unilateral imposition of small standardized homes on the masses is an idea best left to the few countries that still embrace the mistaken ideology that was Communism. If these rather naive architects are so committed to that concepts they endorse for others, then I suggest they emmigrate to a former Soviet Bloc country where they will feel more fulfilled. They should take their hypocrisy with them. It has no place in the US.
2/14/2012 6:41 PM CST
Ill give you libeskind, im not a fan of his either, but just because an idea isn't popular doesn't automatically make it incorrect...this is a lesson that has been repeated through the course of history. People are resistant to change, we like the status quo. People hated the eiffel tower, now they love it. The same holds true for the pompidou center. People's like or dislike of things really does not prove whether or not it is inherently wrong or bad design or anything. It just proves that they are unfamiliar with it, nothing more. Give these ideas a chance and they might actually have some worth. And I wouldn't dismiss the education of today and compare it to the ecole. Most of the study of ecole revolved around tirelessly perfecting the Orders, today's education (at certain schools) deals more with complex building systems and the human interaction with the space.
2/14/2012 4:12 PM CST
2/14/2012 3:23 PM CST
2/14/2012 3:14 PM CST
2/14/2012 2:42 PM CST
“Anti Socialists”, “healthy cities” – hilarious! “Eggheady liberal architects”!? LOL Oh how you flatter yourselves! Inexperienced, academic, myopic, global warming eco hustlers who don’t understand the environment, fossil fuels/energy economy, national defense, US economy, our history or American Exceptionalism means that you are incapable of comprehending our future, which robs you of any basis for design. …so as a result we get vanity nonsense like this. ..and wishes for socialism as Athens burns in the wake of spastic entitlement class withdrawal.
Americans were not “given” anything; planning is not a socialist activity in the United States; and the diversity of planning across the country varies from tragic to excellent – something some writing here are obviously unaware of, living in a generation of under-educated, arrogant skepticism of forces you don’t understand.
Market forces drive change, a natural process arrogant socialists have no patience for. You are confused and angry because of the lies you tell yourselves and the turmoil that results. For example: there is no place for over-priced boutique wind/solar power (creates a job killing prosperity tax); oil is cheap and plentiful for hundreds of years; electric cars have already been rejected by the market; human controlled global weather is nonsense (global warming); landfills are a business like any other; recycling is, with few exceptions, just more manufacturing; and you have been betrayed by those who have taught you much of your lives. No matter what eco fantasy world you want to inhabit, everything I’ve written is dead on and there’s not a thing your hatful confusion can do about it.
Take some comfort in knowing that, for better or worse, you are not wise enough to begin to understand our future.
2/14/2012 11:29 AM CST
3/1/2012 8:32 AM CST
Dear Jonathan
I printed out this post a couple of weeks back and have only just got around to reading it. I'm surprised no one has commented so I just wanted to belated say that I think this is an engaging post that covers a lot of important issues. Thanks and keep up the great work.
Dan
I don't..if you find anything, please share with us.
Eichler, yes, I agree Kevin. You know of any contemporary developers that are doing this kind of work with a little more focus on community design and sustainability? I would love to do a little research into this.
I would be interested in hearing from any Nectors who have read the book/visited the exhibit/participated in the studios.
Particularly in light of Guy Horton's recent piece of criticism Thoughts on MoMA's Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream wherein he wrote "This is a shame because there are some valuable ideas. Ironically, most of those are contained in the boring data taken from economists and social scientists. Were the architects trying too diligently to spatialize the data?...As unsettling as the damage the financial crisis has wrought on the fabric of dwelling in America, the distance these proposals travel away from what caused these foreclosures is equally unsettling."
Or Justin Davidson who recently in NY Magazine wrote "Some ideas in the show sit on the border between bold and silly...As a whole, though, the show merges daydreams with pragmatism."
There he specifically critiqued Mr. Bell's vision as seeking to "herd newcomers to Temple Terrace, Florida, into a pair of high-tech megastructures lifted above vast urban plazas."
Finally, more substantively to me was his feeling that "For all its thoughtfulness and rigor, though, a whiff of colonialism blows through the project, with its corps of city-based experts venturing into suburbia with maps and modern technology and plans for reforming the indigenous culture. The visions they come up with have a familiar urban feel, and the show replaces old conventional wisdom with the only slightly fresher dogma of density". Is it inevitable that this sort of project/process will perhaps come across as disconnected from on the ground socio-politics and communities. I wonder how a more organic approach to the problem could be articulated, perhaps even as simple as something like OccupyourHomes but more architecturally or spatially focused....
Also, this item Housing and the 99 Percent recently posted to News feed seem apropos.
Thanks for sharing that keith. Not really sure if I understand what he is proposing with this business plan.
Love it! Cicero is nicely located near downtown and public transport. Agree with first commenter about the bike unfriendly aspect.
[...] few months ago, we wrote a couple of times about the “Foreclosed” exhibit at MoMa (see here and here). Here is an extended “roundtable debate” about the exhibit and a paragraph of [...]
Her response was: "So, how is life with the 1%?" After a career in design, I certainly didn't feel like a member of the 1%, but from my view of the champagne bar in the VIP lounge it was clear that I was in close proximity. Then, I began to wonder:
Has "design" become an activity of, by, and for the 1%?
Wednesday, February 22 at 6:05pm
@Ries is correct. Many people live in the burbs because they don't want to live in city, and visa versa. And, let's not forget that many people live where they live, love it or hate it, because (gasp) they can't afford to live elsewhere. Let's also not forget about the cost of the commute, no matter what form that takes. Design is part of the intrigue, but it's not the whole enchilada.
OK. Perhaps building equestrian centers may be a bazaar idea and taking the American dream idea to an extreme, but re-greening suburbia and adding some local food as Ellen Dunham’s recommends would certainly help point us in the right direction.
Well you've surely said a mouthful here and it is as reasonable and objective and nonconfrontational as they come. The problem is, you'll still have people defending (maybe naturally) the idea that "well that's not us, we're just trying to better xyz."
I can't tell you the number of times I've heard similar sentiments shared by DC residents who don't consider themselves "urbanists" but do rely on their cars and in cases, transit.
Feb 22, 2012 12:57 pm
Yes, the Milwaukee Art Museum, could definitely use a 'architecture curator' in some capacity (free agent, in-residence, visiting, promo-person, ......) or another! Milwaukee has some really tough opportunities in this area. I volunteer to go to Seoul, South Korea to report on their apparently "hugely successful transformation" of a post-Korean Conflict neighborhood! Funds to be paid for by the County of Milwaukee (I am a taxpayer); please do not send any City of Milwaukee employees, they have more than enough to do (from their past and present TRACK RECORDS, COMMITTMENTS, AND COMMENTS)!
Not a lot of love for Moma's "Foreclosed", just check out the @ArchRecordreader comments! http://archrecord.construction.com/news/2012/02/F …
Yes, finally someone who realizes; as soon as most Americans have 2 kids, it's off to the suburbs to stay most of their lives. Also the gentleman points out that the two coasts (and that big city in between) have the greatest access to publications, so the two coasts produce most of the noise about what should be done to improve our built environment.
Excellent critique. I had the same thoughts when I saw the exhibit. Especially about the ridiculous MOS proposal. What a waste.
3/31/2012 10:59 AM CDT
3/7/2012 2:16 AM CST
3/5/2012 10:03 AM CST
No
Knew you could do it but this is over the top. Congratulations. XXX, L
Great review! I like reviews that so into this kind of depth and put the work into context.
Do not get me started.
On the refi problems I have encountered because of rules changes made by the Dodd/Frank law.
The bottom line is simple.
Old refi rules = $120 a month savings.
New refi rules = $230 a month increase in mortgage.
And I am being forced into a refi because of circumstances beyond my control. Show Less -
Thanks for noting, now corrected.
Temple Terrace is on Tampa's NORTH EAST corner.
Felix:
Please see my post in Architect Mag online. Being an architect I am just amazed there were no practical solutions to the myasmatic real estate industry of today. This is a multivariate problem with NO utopian solutions. And I remain saddened that my bretheren in architecture would publish such utter non-sense. Sheesh!!!
@guest #6: This is either the work of a naif or a genius. I'm afraid I don't have the architectural sophistication myself to determine which.
What a juvenile proposal. Looks like student work.
@guest #3: From what I can tell a gyspsy curse was put on Pomona a long time ago. That city just can't get it togther. Ontario an Rancho are more likely the job centers.
@guest #3: Yes, and ONT is owned and being run into the ground by LA World Airports (owns LAX).
3/22/2012 12:15 PM
See Denton, TX public library - a former grocery store turned library: http://archrecord.construction.com/projects/bts/archives/libraries/06_Denton/overview.asp
Published right here, in ArchRecord back in May 2006.
3/21/2012 4:32 PM CDT
3/21/2012 10:38 AM CDT
3/20/2012 2:05 PM CDT
Thanks Alex for a great post with a much-needed critical perspective! I hope I can see the exhibit myself this summer, and I will have your comments in mind. I agree that the discussion needs to be pushed forward, especially as the human tendency all too often is to look back.
Excellent post and great blog!
Do you mind me asking, are you from Windsor? The description is bang on.
I think this is really interesting given that this project is taking shape for real in Detroit. The Detroit Film Theatre is actually featuring a few documentaries this month about urban farming and renewal in the city http://www.dia.org/detroitfilmtheatre/14/DFT.aspx
Very close to Windsor! Fascinating that you guessed it. Thanks very much for pointing me toward that project and thanks for reading and commenting.
Hi there, that's a great suggestion for the designers behind the exhibit. This is a review on the exhibit, so I couldn't include every aspect of the discussion. Opening up for comments allows for that, so don't worry if it hasn't been brought up yet — you're the perfect one to bring it up.
Lady Brett: Just curious. What do you find amazing about owning your home and what are some of the complaints about people who do own their own home and don't like it?
Fantastic post, you hit all my thoughts on this exhibition. I first lost it when looking at the Rialto, CA project that had an elephant in the project section. After all, nothing scales a project in Southern California better than an elephant.
Hehe, nice text!
The German architectural magazine “Bauwelt” wrote about the exhibit too and – if i remember correctly – fancied the artsiest “solution” the most… anyway, it’s very refreshing, that BUILD has both feet on the ground :)
Campari has no “o” in its name.
I hope your Negronis were stirred, not shaken.
And yeah, that’s some bad architecture.
The small gabled cottage is really amazing. This is really an art! After reading the article, I was interested to the other art and creation of Do Ho Suh. Thanks for the art.
I don’t think the downspouts on the back of the cottage will see much rain :)
The disappointment expressed by Mr. Martin, that none of the teams used a public process to inform their entry is legitimate. Based upon lectures at the Alaska Design Forum, it appears that many designers have little interaction with the end users, whether it is housing stock or another product. The most apparently successful designers are those who engage the end users, whether it is residents of Medellin, Colombia, Aboriginal Australians, or buyers at Sacks 5th Avenue.
Mr. Agnotti accurately summarized the problem, that we cannot design ourselves out of a problem, whether it is sprawl, foreclosures, or racial divides. The faith in design to solve problems is similar to the faith in technology to solve our problems. Perhaps it would be useful to step out of the the world view that seems to inhabit these conversations and look for a different one. Take as an example that of social work, where they ideally look for and base their work on the clients' strengths and desires. Lecturing or telling society to change, without asking why it should or what currently drives the actions, will just result in frustration and a smaller and smaller audience.
07.05.12 at 02:52
@VisionVancouver@greenestcityMaking silk purses out of sows' ears? MOMA, "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/exhibitions/1230 …
Very thoughtful piece!
Odd you should mention that. There are actually lawmakers in my corner of the world in the rust belt, that are considering whether the health hazards of chickens are large enought to keep an old prohibition against keeping small number of chickens on your property. It seems we're trending towards bringing the chickens back.
More silly talk
There are still a lot of post Katrina trailers available in New Orleans and they come permeated with formaldehyde at no extra cost.
Thanks Barry. You have done a fine job!!
You seem to be of two minds.
First you say American attitudes need to change, which I agree they must, and they will eventually when they realize how very unsustainable our sprawl pattern of development is.
Then you seem to blame one political group. That doesn't make much sense. Suburbia is filled with people of all political persuasions ... who all will have to come to the realization each one on their own that it is not a sustainable way to live.
@rachelsloerts Thinking of you at the #MoMAexhibit, http://MoMA.org/foreclosed http://instagr.am/p/N6jZShS_Ts/
@rachelsloerts Thinking of you at the #MoMAexhibit, http://MoMA.org/foreclosed http://instagr.am/p/N6jZShS_Ts/
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Really bummed I missed the MOMA exhibit "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream"Did you get to see it? http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/exhibitions/1230 …Impressions?
Jobs (39)
yes i was wondering how i go about not lossing my house it has been in my wifes famlily for over a hundred years my wife was layed off the morgage company wouldnt talk to us because she was layed off and now we are so far behind we cant get cought up so now we are loosing our home is there help out there for me
Arianna - You always write timely, intelligent and articulate posts. Among the most important salient points in your article today is your noting that 'we have a surplus of untapped energy and creativity and talent'. Being a creative professional myself, I do not have the words to describe the devastation myself and my colleagues have suffered during this recession - financially, emotionally and even physically. Brilliant, highly educated and experienced graphic designers, interior designers, architects, painters, artists, musicians, dancers, etc. who have made our country a better place by improving the quality of everything we see, hear, touch, taste and feel have been tossed aside. Many were self-employed and are not able to obtain any unemployment insurance or other types of assistance. Others have been forced to do work where their skills, intellect and ability are demeaned by ridiculously low pay, poor treatment and complete disregard for their talent and the positive aspects it provides. At least during the last depression , the WPA and similar programs existed to tap into these talents and provide recognition, work and intellectual relief to this forgotten segment of our society. Disregarding these talented, creative individuals is proving to be one of the greatest downfalls of our society. It's tragic, sad and truly un-American.
Greater minds than mine are crunching the real numbers, but I can tell you here in Clearwater, Florida how things are. A huge downtown revitilization project went bust 3 years ago, beautiful new high rises overlooking the water, selling for $500k to $1M, EMPTY, 90% of downtown business storefronts...EMPTY, many never leased. Small SHOPPING strip centers throughout the whole town, HALF EMPTY.
Each day, I run 3 miles through the area, hundreds of homeless people everywhere, sleeping in bushes, on benches, just horrible and sad.
My local pub has patron who are plumbers, electricians, welders, carpenters, roofers, auto mechanics...half have either lost their jobs or have had hours cut back.
This is reality here, no hope, no change.
December 20, 2011 at 4:03 pm
December 20, 2011 at 5:14 pm
December 20, 2011 at 2:21 pm
December 20, 2011 at 1:21 pm
December 20, 2011 at 11:06 am
Builders, developers and real estate people have been telling people how to live for years....it's obvious now, more than ever, thats how things are done....people don't know what they want...
If you think it's just builders and developers telling people how to live, you're clearly missing a larger picture. Retailers are a huge factor here too. The problem with suburbia is the lack of "real job" creation.
The problem comes from the concept that many retailers sell products that more-or-less require single-unit, single-family housing units— lawnmowers, automobiles, chest freezers, full-sized appliances, furniture et cetera. The code for this word is "durable goods." And anytime you hear the government, planners or business-types talking about the increase in the purchase of durable goods or stimulating the durable goods market... they're clearly talking about suburbia.
And many of the companies that sell the tools of suburbia actively influence policy development by funding various non-profit and non-governmental organizations. We don't know who does what but there are fair examples.
Cato Insitute, a supporter of laissez-faire capitalism, is quite a staunch critic of urban planning is or has been supported by the likes of General Motors, ExxonMobile, Toyota, Visa, Wal-mart, Volkswagon, Honda, FedEx and Time Warner. None of these companies want to see functioning cities.
And we end up the paradox of...
If most of the jobs are low-wage, who's buying goods and services?
And where do the armies of wage workers live if new suburban development is too expensive?
Ricky Burdett (RB): You just have to look at what’s happened to cities, and unfortunately that’s exactly what’s happening. Most cities are suffering from middle-aged spread. They become really wide, and their footprint is becoming larger and larger. And as was said by many of the speakers in this piece, it’s because the car is there and everyone aspires to it. It’s fantastic that the MoMA, this august institution, instead of doing Deconstructivism or “Edible Minimalism” or whatever, is dealing with this stuff. But you can’t talk about this issue of cities and foreclosure and all that unless you link jobs and housing.
One of the answers to "what is it that you really need?" is, probably, NOT architects.
Since well over 90% of the building in America is done without the aid of an architect, it seems that, particularly in the foreclosed suburbs, an architect is a luxury, a status symbol, and one of the first things to be cut.
Certainly architects can bring value to a project- but, in most cases, its not monetary value, and, in fact, it usually adds quite a bit of cost to any project, well beyond the fee, to bring an architect in.
This is a recession based on financial shenanigans, not one caused by a lack of good design.
I fail to see how, in most exurbs, good design will have any affect on the financial aspects that caused this - the lack of jobs, the predatory lending practices, the upside down real estate market, and the inability of many to sell their homes without going bankrupt.
The reason there is a chasm between urban architects and suburban "architecture" is because the stuff they build in the suburbs is driven by an entirely different set of desires, fashions, fantasies, and, most importantly, price points.
MB: People have looked toward changing or improving the suburbs
for a long time. You can go back to the 1970s, and academics are often
lambasted for not being sensitive about it. But the reason I’m bringing
this up is that what is different at this point in time is everything from
globalization in terms of where is production happening, what are the
jobs. When you talk about housing, you ultimately always—even if you’re
an architect—end up talking about jobs. What will secure that loan in the
future? So, flexibility comes in. But the difference now, I think, is that
what people realize… And the foreclosure crisis is an awful thing, it is
absolutely a crisis, but it does start to create a situation where people
start to imagine that what we have is not inevitable. And, in fact, it was
produced, and it was dreamed. I think, people don’t like change in housing,
and they should worry about change in housing, but what we have is also
not terribly secure. And, so, I think that’s what you’re bringing up, and
Jeanne was bringing that up quite brilliantly.
CH: One of the things I think Detroit forces us to think of is the fact that
the things we think are natural are contingent.
I have been working on new style of urban planing among capital cities. The fundamental difference between urban city and suburb has almost similar meaning of difference between individual-life style and nuclear family-life style. Urban city needs excitement. Suburb needs relax. It is good to be focused on Hispanic-Family's tradition for re-developing suburb community environment. Is there any support to business start-up for those new residents ? Maybe they should develop those project with economists and/or investors to be real american dream makers.....
It's not new housing 'schemes' people want right now in the western world , it's jobs . Provide jobs for people & every other problem generally dissolves into the mist. This is just one more diversion away from the priority.
Instead of spending all this ridiculous time and money on space-age housing concepts, why not solve the REAL problem, and put the American workforce, BACK TO WORK !!
A modern Eastern Europe apartment complex, Chinese, Russian? The architects would be better off spending their idle time finding ways to rid themselves of our current legislators, economic development leadership and others, and begin to lure businesses into the area that will hire locals in huge quantities, companies that will not depend on government handouts and pay their employees a living wage plus benefits.
@guest #5: For what it's worth, Ontario has tried valiantly to remake the town into a jobs center. The area west of the airport is filled with warehouse space for distribution centers and other industrial use. Sadly, the economy tanked and the progress they were making is gone.
@guest #3: From what I can tell a gyspsy curse was put on Pomona a long time ago. That city just can't get it togther. Ontario an Rancho are more likely the job centers.
It would good for everyone if the Pomona became a job center.
Places like Rialto, Fontana, Chino Hills, and Rancho Cucamonga wouldn't be such far-off exurbs.
There's even an international airport (ONT) right next to Pomona.
You are right. But given the existing housing stock, it would be good to have some ideas about transforming suburbs. Are there ways they can be improved? Change zoning? Bring in workplaces?
Land Use & Density (115)
“The drive everywhere for cheaper and cheaper things mentality is unsustainable. It’s getting more crowded and a huge portion of the income goes into transportation,” Dufaux said.
December 20, 2011 at 2:26 pm
December 20, 2011 at 12:51 pm
Following up on KB’s Dec. 15 comment and the article:Ecological principles may not be mutually exclusive with human habitat, but that is not the key issue.The most sustainable approach is to make the human built environment as dense, livable and compact, while leaving the hinterland and wilderness as intact as possible – not the agonizing compromise of low density settlements on the periphery of cities. This suburbanized nature, even with rewilding, is neither feasible or sustainable for the 7 B people on the planet – or any number close to that.
Let’s build good, tight cities and leave as much untouched habitat as possible for other plant and animal species. Introducing green design into the urban environment is fine, but not the crux of the ecological benefits of urbanism.
I sense the MOMA exhibit missed the point to a large extent.
First, I really appreciate the commentary from both KB (12/15) and DK (03/07) regarding the rewilding concepts in relation to suburbanization. I would like to respond first to DK’s point of building dense and compact cities and leaving the “hinterland and wilderness as intact as possible” is the ideal and I certainly do not disagree with this position. That said this is not what is taking place on the ground. Urbanization is continuing to spread into the hinterlands here in the US, in China, India, and Brazil and around the globe. The proposal here is to consider the potential for these exurban developments to adopt an ecological mandate.The focus on the MOMA exhibit and analysis is also very specific and thus the proposal needs to be seen in its context. We were specifically tasked with looking at foreclosure housing projects and how as designers and scientists we might bring federal funding to address some of the issues faced. Thus the site was selected for us, and due to its proximity to the San Bernardino National Forest and the ecologically intact conditions of the surrounding context including the Lytle Creek Wash, we saw the notion of creating a neighborhood focused in part on ecological management as an opportunity for collaboration between developers, the federal government and future homeowners.A third factor to consider is climate change and global warming. The earth is changing in part through large-scale anthropogenic causes. These are creating pressures and constraints on the hinterland ecosystems and organisms. Already, there are discussions of how to foster species migration as their ranges shift north. This is an area that scientists are keenly interested in the role they might play. Consider the species introductions, assisted migrations and other efforts scientists are already participating with the goal of enhancing ecosystems. In other words, just leaving the hinterlands out there “undisturbed” by the built environment does not mean they remain undisturbed, and to maintain ecosystems and organisms human interventions will likely be an important component. Consider John Foley’s diagram of the changing landscape conditions – where is the “hinterlands” in his diagram?Finally, Rewilding (and this goes back to KB’s comments) is a radical proposal and one that is debated amongst ecologist. Much of the issue arises from the concern over human – wildlife conflict that would likely ensue if we were to reintroduce large carnivores etc. to the US. At the same time, most ecologists would agree that top down predation would benefit ecosystem health and lead to greater diversity of species. Thus the issue is one of public acceptance. As a result, getting this concept out there through a variety of venues (given that Rewilding is in the “marketing” stage) should mostly benefit the cause. It is a much more radical concept than simply allowing people to manage biological systems at the urban fringe and is intended to create debate and discussion.The MoMA exhibit is pervaded by architectural discourse of the suburb and could use this layer of integration of knowledge into new suburban forms. The architect and their modes of working and analysis were prioritized and sites open to large development were sites for new visions. Still, the rewilding concept is part of the exhibit, which means that tens of thousands of museumgoers visiting the exhibit will have the opportunity to reflect on what role people can play in managing ecosystems in their neighborhoods, and on the potential value of rewilding as a concept to consider for promoting ecosystem function.
In addition, the team also discovered the importance of organic brownfield remediation in Cicero, even if it meant the land would remain underdeveloped. Through commonplace planting, the toxic industrial sites scattered across the residential fabric would change into safer cleaner zones for future community use. Finally, within certain regions of each parcel, the once zoned industrial land could be converted into a dense collection of affordable modular beds, baths, and public space by using the existing industrial structures and materials on each site such as truss frames and brick partition walls. The new clusters would become and important blend of adaptive reuse and new construction that utilized a sizable amount of Cicero's historical past while creating a new 21st century anchor that can accommodate thousands immediately adjacent to one of Chicago's commuter rail corridors.
rethinking the American home and suburban zoning. See Studio Gang's project at PS1/MOMA's "Foreclosed" http://fb.me/1jwoIU5FR
http://bit.ly/z1vn32 #MoMAlooks @ suburbs can they b saved, need more housing types/densities, innovation not imitation #urbanism#yycplan
and I'm skeptical about how mixed use and highrise translate into low-rise suburbs. See here: http://www.moma.org/explore/inside …
Michael Bell (MB): [laughs] You’re trying to make it sound good.
Sub-urban and suburban are also two very different things. I would argue that sub-urban is not bad. A good example of this is in some parts of Brooklyn, Queens, and Nassau county NY. The density is greater than the typical suburban environment, and there is a small business walkable street scape that flanks a mix of multi and single family housing in many of these neighborhoods. There is also access to public transit in and out of the city. There is a mix of home owners and renters, and the opportunity to own a house and rent out the top floor. There is a sense of community and a feeling of being in a small town within a city. The film "Do the Right Thing" by Spike Lee so clearly expresses this. Another issue is density. More density is not the solution alone. We need to find an appropriate balance of density, production, and economy so that development can be in some sort of sustainable balance. I think that sub-urban form has the greatest potential for a sustainable development because there is enough space to support a mix of agriculture, industry,small business, housing, park space, etc...as well as enough density to support local businesses with regard to employees and consumers. Cities like manhattan will never be able to become hybrid typologies because things like urban agriculture and production will be far too expensive due to crazy high land prices. The only problem with the sub-urban typology is that it sometimes becomes gentrified over time as we see in brooklyn or the opposite happens where it becomes a ghetto due to the home values going down as density goes up like in Jamaica Queens (balance is always a thin line). On the other hand, suburban development lends itself to exploitation by corporate interests as James R. clearly articulates. The American dream of owning a single family home is not going away. It is a part of the American culture that dates back hundreds of years. We need to find a solution to the problem without ignoring the cultural mentality that led to it. This is why ideas like the ones in the MoMA exhibit never work. I believe that we need to study examples that already work like Astoria, and go from there.
sustainable developers?? developers follow incentives and try to minimize risk - without government subsidizing sprawling (i.e. cheap & low capacity) infrastructure and overly restrictive zoning laws they'd very likely build far more high-density mixed-use buildings without parking (but also without green space). without utilities, roads, and other services land is pretty much worthless - and developers typically don't like challenging zoning unless they know the municipality is on board.
also - high-density outside of the city center presents another challenge because of the capacity of the existing services. Some towns in the northeast have put a moratorium on any new building because their existing water and sewer systems cannot handle any additional load. when you think of it, suburban development is often a function of how big the sewer systems are, or how much space is needed for a septic and/or leech field and buffer.
perhaps if as a culture we had a much healthier relationship with our own poop...
ending the subsidies that drastically lower the true cost of many aspects of the suburban lifestyle would be a very strong incentive for many people to move into apartments and denser neighborhoods. If you want urban-style services and utilities with the luxury of low density you should have to pay a premium for it. otherwise there are ways of living more "off the grid" if you're willing to do your own maintenance and pay a little more up front for these systems.
many people do have the dream of living in a detached single-family home, and I think this should be available to people if they can afford it, but I think until the crash people were pretty delusional about how much this lifestyle actually costs (i.e. taking out loans they couldn't afford), and how much it has been costing our country.
Is this guy suggesting Condos are the solution to the real estate crisis? Or does everyone become a renter? Seems like another utopian community to me. And of course... he's going to tell me that if I have ONE child, I only get a two bedroom unit. No thanks. Why does innovation from Architects always have to come in the form of telling people how to live their lives? Maybe innovation could be a business model that allows Architects to incorporate all these good ideas and give the customer what they want instead of telling them what they want?
Some good ideas lost in translation, reducing cost of utilities. Simple solution there. Smaller footprint, better insulation and higher efficiency systems. Hmmm.... looks to be the kind of home that the home builders are putting out right now. Wonder why they're still in business?
Re: the suburbs. Again, its not suburbs that should be demonized, it's sprawl. There is a difference despite the fact that suburbs and sprawl have mostly gone hand in hand for a long time.
Feb 22, 2012 10:41 am
Arlington is only out of the category of "suburban" (to the extent it is) due to the large scale urbanist victories there.
in fact lots of suburban jurisdictions are making urbanist changes -in greater DC (excluding arlington and City of Alex as urban) we have them in Fairfax, in City of Falls Church, in MoCo, and even in PG (and even a tiny bit in Loudoun). Now, those are often only in select locations, or are balanced by antiurbanist decisions. But see, thats where the demonization blinds people - if you can accept that auto centric suburbia is going to continue to be the preferred way to live for many (possibly the majority) then the fact that only 5-10% say, of Fairfax, is going to end up walkable TOD may be an acceptable result.
As for demonization mattering to the political process, I think it does. I have participated in such discussions with fellow NoVans, and I think the more extreme viewpoints including have left people very defensive, and believing things about urbanism that give ammo the antiurbanists, and make their job of persuasion easier. These include the impressions that urbanists beleive A. that everyone should be carfree B. That no one should live in a SFH C. That everyplace on Greater Washington outside of the district is "bad" regardless of density, etc, etc.
Obviously there are larger, real issues that drive suburban politics, not just these discourse focused issues, and obviously there are things in the discourse on these issues that are unhelpful aside from extremist urbanism memes. But they are not trivial in their impact, IMO. And as someone who values urbanism, I find the distortion of urbanism involved in those memes particularly troubling. It makes a sophisticated vision of a reinvented metropolitan america sound like the ravings of naive hipsters.
Feb 22, 2012 10:47 am
The author's jimmies seem to be particularly rustled at the thought of replacing cul-de-secs with a cold, urban grid. "The winding cul-de-sac roads are then met with a grid form. This disrespect for the rhythms of a suburban lifestyle...". We do not need a grid of streets to fix the suburbs, or so he argues.
Actually, you kinda do. IMO, the cul-de-sacs are part of the core of the problem. A landscape that is very permeable for walkers and cyclists is essential. A grid of streets makes it much easier/faster to walk from one place to another. A grid of streets is easier to mentally map. The author doesn't really understand what makes the city different than the burbs.
Feb 22, 2012 12:14 pm
CH: Increased density?
MB: All five projects in the show deal with density, and they also deal with trying to find housing that is probably more financially and size-wise appropriate to its user, but also that would use dramatically less energy to basically dramatically lower carrying costs. But I think many of the people, including ourselves, we were looking at ways to take underutilized property, publicly held or publicly controlled, and increase density around infrastructure because the public has already paid for all of that infrastructure and isn’t using it.
MB: […] In the 1990s you had a booming economy, you had a kind ofpush to alter, if not end, the welfare state. By the 2000s, you have a real estate bubble. And today you have a foreclosure crisis. But in all of these situations, there are a couple things that have been consistent. The amount of money people spend on housing and transportation is immense. They can’t afford it. You don’t want to tell people they can’t afford something and say that’s the reason to change. You want to be more positive than that. But there are many, many factors about affordability, about energy consumption, and frankly about the role of design in any of it. The American single-family house is a commodity product that has virtually no research and development, no design. Architects, in a spec house in Houston in the late 1990s—their fee was about twelve dollars per house. These are mass-produced commodities. There is no professional engagement. […] I think most of the people in this exhibition are quite
positive and excited about the suburbs. We know it’s a deeply, deeply important part of the American ethos, if not just everyday life of course. But, they’re not inevitable. And the financial underpinnings of them have really dramatically shifted in the last five, ten, fifteen years—not just the last two.
CH: Talk about that R&D thing. You made a point in the video in the exhibition that blew my mind about the comparison between how much money in R&D goes into your iPhone or anti-lock brakes versus an American home.
MB: I did mention anti-lock brakes. For many commodities, before they hit the market, there are billions of dollars that might precede it, whether it’s Clorox or whether it’s an iPhone or a Honda Civic which is quite an ingenious product. Housing as we know it has kind of ironed all of that
out of it, and it did it a long time ago. […] They are paying Mercedes Benz prices for a twenty-year-old used car. The single-family house market atomizes out all of the financial processes, and you still are spending large sums of money, but you’re not getting the sophisticated product. It’s not that it’s not a nice product or something people love, but it could be much, much better in energy and everything else.
This stuff looks like the public housing experiments of the 60s given an absolutely fabulous facelift and a couple of pairs of mahnolos. I'm all into walking and dense housing and good public transport, and lived that for 8 years in Cologne, but this stuff gives me the screaming hebijibies.
“Privacy is a sense of realising who is where and what they are doing, and that allows you to be calm.” ? WTF
I think that contemporary architecture should reflect the community needs of the current population. The idea of changing the old style of living into more dynamic one is great. Replacing bungalows by the condo style type of living is just a great idea. I can see the European and Canadian influence in the battle against the old English style of living.
From my point of view, creating the new "centers" of life in the suburbs is also very interesting idea. Sometimes it is much better to reconstruct everything from the scratch than to continue with the old structures and ideas. Never ending House Flipping can not sustain the houses forever and sooner or later, the old suburb has to be replaced by a new one.
With new model of suburb, you get more possibilities to evade old mistakes and give people better life conditions and space for their everyday lives.
What a strange review. It seems that anyone questioning the car in American urbanism is considered ridiculous. MOS's Orange NJ proposal is completely reasonable in a world where our policies towards automobile driven urbanism is making the working poor even poorer and more unhealthy/obese. It's based around pedestrians and mass transit, not really that radical actually.... To propose a dense city based upon the pedestrian instead of car seems like the type of urban thinking we need.
It looks to me like the Orange NJ proposal is to place buildings in the centers of certain street segments to create
1 - density
2 - mixed use (neighborhood retail/commercial services)
3 - capillary cul-de-sacs (where kids can play without through traffic)
These could put services close to residents, and make walking/biking to them more attractive at the same time. This, in turn, could reinvigorate the local economy and sense of community. Not an easy task in existing grids, so we must begin thinking of unconventional solutions. Fire engines, by the way, routinely serve cul-de-sacs.
I have also long championed flexibility in housing to better accomodate the diverse life paths taken in modern times and other cultures. The American Dream/white picket fence/Mayberry suburb fails badly at this, making your Cicero concept another valuable exercise. In 2012 America, we have a working class that may marry 3 times or not at all. We are all step-this and step-that. College kids might need to return home for years. Grandma might need closer care. Families aren't really nuclear, they are fissile, fusile, orbital and subatomic. So bring back the courtyard, with apartments around it.
The reintegration of nature into our communities is another worthy goal. I think creek daylighting, community gardens, and village greens are all good ideas. The cougar idea must be whimsy, but it helps us avoid getting trapped in the fallacy that land is a purely human medium.
CH, I advise you to spend more time off the island of Manhattan. Go to Alaska. Go to Detroit. Go to a hutong. And go to a desolate American suburb. Then go back to MoMA and tell me what you see.
Did anyone see any Churches? I would love to see a drive in movie theater. I love really wide streets, and wide parking spots.
@Tony Of course we all aspire to live in our own homes, but that does not mean it's possible for everyone. These projects seek a solution to the problems of urban sprawl, foreclosures, and environmental pollution. For those who cannot afford a single home, who cities are too densely populated for single homes, and for those who want to change our impact on the environment, these projects could be an amazing solution. Personally, I'm not that fond of the architecture, but ecologically and in terms of the amount of green space, they're a pretty good solution to a LOT of needs.
I'll stick to my cabin on 12 wooded acres thanks.
This won't fly...
@studiogangproposed multi-family housing and rewriting the zoning code for Cicero IL http://ow.ly/9ncB4 #ShiftingSuburbia
Here, Studio Gang proposes literally deconstructing an existing factory to salvage its materials and build a new mixed-use group of buildings. I liked the image style very much.
3/22/2012 12:33 AM CDT
This study, I have not read it, seems to advocate a reversal of that movement. A compaction of the habitable structures into higher density areas with less reliance on the automobile but with the option of public transportation.
Those first two words came from a long conversation I had with a loosely knit group of home builders and developers over coffee one morning.
Consensus was that without a paradign shift in buyer attitude about whether they could expect the livibility, security and comfort and a level of freedom in a high density housing project as they would expect in a "normal" development, it had limited appeal. (Their demographic target(s) were the first/second time home buyer with children).
I don't believe that shift will occur without a far more serious change than the foreclosure crisis. And, knowing a bit about govmint and how it "thinks" I'd venture a guess that their stereotypes of high density housing is limited to a condominium complex with a swimming pool and 2car attached garages. Ciao
Architectural models offer stylized solutions to suburban ills. Suburbs accessible by proposed high-speed rail corridors are retrofitted with high-density developments, which in some cases are stripped of streets. Instead of oversized single-family suburban houses narrowly tailored for the nuclear family, the show provides a variety of housing models for people in different groupings, such as empty nesters and extended families.
AU: The Museum of Modern Art has a tradition of putting on---
Sandra Smith [blonde]: I was going to say, artists are never political.
SV: It's always the elite telling the rest of us how we should live, isn't it?
AU: No, it's---
SV: Always.
AU: No, in fact, the state of California is enacting zoning policies to make suburbs more dense. You know, and the Wall Street Journal just pointed out last week that they are trying to, instead of having four houses per acre, they're going to have twenty houses per acre.
fascinating! just great – i want to watch all of these.
i live in a city that is wholly embracing (sub)urban sprawl – it's a small city, so this is a (relatively) recent development. the difficult part is that it feels so unstoppable when the entire system of city government is set up to encourage single-use, encourage sprawl (things like zoning laws that make home business illegal, or lack of impact fees, so that developers don't have to pay a cent to get utilities run to new developments outside the current city). and discourage historic preservations, as angie said (or, more accurately, only encourage it in affluent neighborhoods).
this from someone who has wholly embraced the home part of the american dream, if not the other parts. but owning a home has been a dream of mine for…ever – and it is just as amazing as i always thought. the thing that really strikes me is the number of homeowners i know who don't actually like owning a home (or at least none of the details that come with the concept).
Bell told me what his team was thinking: “One basic understanding of REITs that I often heard people criticize is that they’re essentially hedging instruments.” So the upswing in home prices in one part of the world might be played off a drop in value elsewhere. “Instead of real estate being held as a local asset, it gets bundled up as a global asset.
What bothered me most about this exhibit was that the teams didn’t even respond to the very data that launched the project. When the number of “overcrowded units” in the U.S. is only 3% how did they arrive at answers that massively increase the density of the suburbs? Math doesn’t lie, but apparently architecture does.
Some of us don't like living shoulder to shoulder with strangers.
I believe in density, as in cities, where efficient distribution infrastructure is established and leave more open space around the city for everybody to enjoy. This is also less harmful to the environment when we concentrate habitat with a smaller footprint. Cities are vibrant places where people actually interact and encourage understanding and learn to live together. While I understand the urge to want to own ones home, I don't understand the continued sprawl of suburban areas that are so far away from the cities. What does one do in these boring tract homes that all look the same and where nobody gets out of their cars until they are in their garage. It's kind of depressing.
That is changing. People are forcing their cities to alter their zoning codes to be more sensible.
Zoning itself has caused myriad problems.
It is called "edible landscaping". It does not have to involve tall corn stalks. It is a very intriguing idea. I have done some of this type of landscaping. Every year I grow a hedge of indeterminate, small tomatoes that greets you as you come up to my door.
Too tall corn stalks? Maybe, maybe if they were blocking a view of traffic and causing a hazard. You can get into that situation with too tall shrubbery, as well.
"Arresting angles and curves" DO NOT equate to usable space! Higher density yes, walkable neighborhoods yes. As a degree in civil engineering, design practical floor plans in various sizes for a diverse market. Forget wasted spaces in weird angles and oddly shaped rooms. You pay a premium for a useless layout with strange angles where you can't live.
This tax exemption just subsidizes more sprawl.
You are right. But given the existing housing stock, it would be good to have some ideas about transforming suburbs. Are there ways they can be improved? Change zoning? Bring in workplaces?
"We need another housing boom."
We need a "community" boom. Sprawling suburbs don't build community. Neither does living on top of each other (recall what has happened to public housing). Most disappointing is that we do not even seem able to recognize what "community" is or what it might look like.
I don't blame builders; it's a lot bigger than that. Most of us do not want any outsiders sticking their noses into our business. Just look how hard it is to protect children, women, and the elderly. Our cities require pioneers, and most of us are simply not up to that, as heroic as it might sound.
No, there is no easy answer. But can't we at least begin asking the right question? "Why can't we just get along together?" Then let's build whatever that takes.
There are many good ideas and many bad ones. What is important is remain clear that one solution will not work for everyone and in every area. Plus all ideas will have to manage the actual implementation. Making it a reality often takes quite a bit of compromise. I do not like the over populations idea..that has proven to be a failure and a cesspool for disease. Those zoning laws prohibiting it are there for a reason. This is not a solution, but a night mare.
The installation for Keizer, Oregon, seeks to increase the density of the city to increase the public’s access to nature.
It’s refreshing that the team unabashedly suggests that much of these new ribbons of housing would be developed as public housing. But if this is a serious idea, not simply a gesture or metaphor, then one must confront the fact that public housing in the United States, apart from unfortunately being in ideological disrepute, is also grossly underfunded.
Liberal Versus Conservative (34)
December 20, 2011 at 1:09 pm
December 20, 2011 at 5:14 pm
December 20, 2011 at 3:27 pm
December 20, 2011 at 1:44 pm
2/17/2012 1:25 PM CST
2/16/2012 6:23 PM CST
I think you mean - "The theme of the show is the disconnect between the housing Americans need and the half-baked elitist ideas that pretentious liberal academics would like to impose on them."
R.D. Caldora, New York City
2/15/2012 5:58 PM CST
2/15/2012 4:23 PM CST
Quasi-intellectual architect-driven initiatives have rarely had the same positive result. Almost a century of bombastic architectural "visions' from Corb's plan to level Paris, to Pruitt-Igoe and beyond have repeatedly shown that many architects know less about how people really want to live than do the developers they so easily criticize. So much for the fruits of half-baked liberal thinking rooted in "speculation" rather than informed analysis. Typically, the more theoretically driven the project, the worse were the results. - QED "Foreclosure".
2/15/2012 12:50 PM CST
One of the beauties of the American Dream is that people can aspire to living in a large home, or a cave if they so prefer. The unilateral imposition of small standardized homes on the masses is an idea best left to the few countries that still embrace the mistaken ideology that was Communism. If these rather naive architects are so committed to that concepts they endorse for others, then I suggest they emmigrate to a former Soviet Bloc country where they will feel more fulfilled. They should take their hypocrisy with them. It has no place in the US.
2/14/2012 6:41 PM CST
2/14/2012 2:34 PM CST
“Anti Socialists”, “healthy cities” – hilarious! “Eggheady liberal architects”!? LOL Oh how you flatter yourselves! Inexperienced, academic, myopic, global warming eco hustlers who don’t understand the environment, fossil fuels/energy economy, national defense, US economy, our history or American Exceptionalism means that you are incapable of comprehending our future, which robs you of any basis for design. …so as a result we get vanity nonsense like this. ..and wishes for socialism as Athens burns in the wake of spastic entitlement class withdrawal.
Americans were not “given” anything; planning is not a socialist activity in the United States; and the diversity of planning across the country varies from tragic to excellent – something some writing here are obviously unaware of, living in a generation of under-educated, arrogant skepticism of forces you don’t understand.
Market forces drive change, a natural process arrogant socialists have no patience for. You are confused and angry because of the lies you tell yourselves and the turmoil that results. For example: there is no place for over-priced boutique wind/solar power (creates a job killing prosperity tax); oil is cheap and plentiful for hundreds of years; electric cars have already been rejected by the market; human controlled global weather is nonsense (global warming); landfills are a business like any other; recycling is, with few exceptions, just more manufacturing; and you have been betrayed by those who have taught you much of your lives. No matter what eco fantasy world you want to inhabit, everything I’ve written is dead on and there’s not a thing your hatful confusion can do about it.
Take some comfort in knowing that, for better or worse, you are not wise enough to begin to understand our future.
2/14/2012 11:29 AM CST
The solution (according to the people responding to this article): Ignore the "eggheady" liberal architects and do what the American people want: ie more of the same.
No wonder America is so incompetent when it comes to healthy cities. Only a small minority of intelligent liberal green architects and planners embrace a healthy productive path forward, and an overwhelming majority of ignorant architects and free market thinkers couldn't care less or think the solution to the problem is to ignore the solutions and embrace the problem as the only answer - I guess because Ronald Reagan told them to (during a period in his life when he had a debilitating mental illness I might add).
2/13/2012 5:40 PM CST
2/13/2012 5:22 PM CST
Their design responses always seem to find answers in central planning socialism (or communism) where the lord in charge decrees how the little people shall live. In the context of the greatest economy on earth, these solutions always vary from amusing and trendy to useless. Ironically and predictably, the housing solutions generated by real world socialists and communists are among the worst on the planet!
Two years ago I outlined a grant project to design and build "the next American Home" using an award winning, very expensive, AE design and development team that no market rate home owner could ever afford. My local region's weather, utility rates, standard of living, aesthetic sensibilities and real estate market would all form the basis for this project. Once constructed, it would be leased and its overall performance measured over years – including elements like comfort, pride of ownership and livability in addition to the boring engineering stuff like energy performance.
The goal would be to offer a platform for the next generation of America’s homebuilders to reference when that industry recovers. I will not give away all the beans because I may resurrect it someday but needless to say, even in this economy I became too busy to fuss around with it.
2/13/2012 4:12 PM CST
By way of a comparison: gay people have been struggling for marriage equality for decades now. Many cultural conservatives are very angry about this, and feel their way of life is under assault. It's a difficult thing to persuade them. Frequently, you'll see footage of some gay pride parade somewhere, which is repeated on a loop for the express purpose of stoking this outrage.
Do gay pride parades make arguing for gay marriage more difficult? Of course. But that's not the fundamental problem.
Same goes for environmentalism: if it weren't for that guy with dreadlocks on that college campus somewhere in the midwest who goes on about Gaia, would folks like George Will have signed on to "cap and trade" by now?
If no one ever said anything mean about suburban cul-de-sacs on GGW, do you think the Randall O'Toole's of the world would cease talking about shadowy urbanists trying to take away your car? Or UN initiatives that threaten our freedom? After all, that's where your average "man on the street" gets such nonsense, not because they read some urbanist gadfly in the comments section of an obscure blog somewhere.
C'mon. Municipalities are trying to retrofit to urbanism because the experts feel they don't have a choice, long-term. But industries (and that includes conservative political parties) that benefit from suburban sprawl will fight with every fiber of their being to prevent that from happening. Do you really think the Rush Limbaughs of the world are going to find TOD religion if the David Alperts of the world start praising ample parking?
Sure there are individuals with essentially zero influence who bad-mouth suburbia, and that may register with the very, very few people who read GGW, but in the larger debate, they're hardly even background noise.
Feb 22, 2012 11:47 am
Im not concerned about randall otoole and Rush limbaugh - Im concerned about my neighbors in Fairfax county. And yes, they do hear the memes floating around - GGW may have a small audience, but they see this stuff in City Data, in City Paper, etc, etc.
WRT to gay pride parades - presumably they help individuals finding their identities. I presume urbanists have no such needs, as a general rule.
And yeah, I would suggest that over the top environmentalism ("industry must die" types) DO impact the conversation on cap and trade.
yes, there are powerful lobbies against the kinds of changes a place like FFX needs. There are ALSO powerful lobbies for, including owners of land that is suitable for high density development. When those powerful forces clash, the inclinations of the citizenry can matter. And yes, the belief by some folks who dont listen to Rush that urbanism is about demonizing their way of life, is an obstacle.
Feb 22, 2012 11:58 am
The use of charged buzzwords words and phrases like “activist” and “socially or environmentally conscious dimension” suggests some serious import where none is evident in the work itself. It is a common liberal ploy to distract from any more intuitive thought processes that would likely conclude that these ill-conceived experiments will almost certainly be the slums of tomorrow.
Dr. D.S. Abrams
New York City
3/23/2012 12:31 PM CDT
My roomie is a fan of central-planned designs to beautify cities. I was always skeptical based on libertarian principle. Now I'm just mystified anyone let these people out of high-school.
Of course it's rubbish and will never get built. I have an American friend who is an architect and he tells me that due to the economic situation unemployment amongst architects is exceptionally high maybe 50%. This is probably just a marketing ploy by the company to get their name in the headlines by being controversial, similar ploys are used by artists to get their names around and create a level of recognition in the so called liberal elite who always know what is best for everyone else.
Bleak. They look like prison blocks - only condos instead of cells. This certainly looks like part of the NWO/Agenda 21 propaganda, and brings the film "Camp FEMA" to mind. Please watch this documentary on YouTube. They just want to herd us up like cattle...
Looks like PR for Agenda 21 aka Smart Cities, Sustainable Living, Plannedopolis etc, nice pack 'em and stack 'em blocks close to PUBLIC transit, suggest cars and private property a thing of the past, American Dream or NWO nightmare? If you are going to seduce us with slick packaging and sophisticated propaganda, do try to make it slick or half sophisticated, this is embarrassingly see through.
my local Socialist council "has this dream" about one of our sea side towns that looks like Beirut on a bad day, ......dream on, dream on!
Rating 50
AU: The Museum of Modern Art has a tradition of putting on---
Sandra Smith [blonde]: I was going to say, artists are never political.
SV: It's always the elite telling the rest of us how we should live, isn't it?
AU: No, it's---
SV: Always.
AU: No, in fact, the state of California is enacting zoning policies to make suburbs more dense. You know, and the Wall Street Journal just pointed out last week that they are trying to, instead of having four houses per acre, they're going to have twenty houses per acre.
We need a sea change in American attitudes before anything will change. First, does everyone really need a lawnmower ALL OF THEIR OWN?? Pooled resources would help a great deal. And why do people need so much land? We live in a patio home with a small back yard and very small front yard. It is more environmentally responsible. Then there is the trend to obscenely large houses. Does a couple with no children really NEED a 5K sf house? It is environmentally irresponsible to have such a house. Look at the wasted space and energy.
We must get past the concept of individualism and "what's here for me" and into the concept of sharing in our communities and doing what is best for all of us. The Republicans, of course, don't play well with others and want their individual "rights" regardless of how damaging it is to the community. In the end, it is unlikely that anything will be done that is intelligent until we're falling completely apart. Individualism is the curse of humanity.....and may well be the end of it.
So you would let Romney and his ilk continue to use every available loophole and remove the largest middle class tax tax exemption? You are pert of the problem, not the solution.
BL: One of the things I thought to do in preparation for this talk was to chart, from the Bush administration through the Obama administration, the number of times the word “housing” appears in the State of the Union address. I got really depressed, so I stopped. In essence—again, because it is so polarizing, and I can’t wait to see what they said on Fox News—you’re going to have to wait until December. You’re going to have to wait until he gets reelected. You’re going to have to wait until Shaun Donovan has four more years. Then we can start to have a meaningful discussion. But until then, I don’t think anything that you put on the national political agenda that talks about “public” or “housing” other than possibly bailing out mortgages and/or bailing out more bank —I don’t know how that’s going to gain any traction or do anything other than alienate more voters. But once December comes, then it’s a different story.
MJ: I wouldn’t disagree with that. I think there’s a curious rupture between the importance of housing in our lives and the importance of it in the political discourse, if you will. I think in New York City there are two things that are important to New Yorkers: real estate and romance. And real estate inevitably trumps romance. “Who’s got the right rent-stabilized apartment? I’ll take that one!” “Ok, you’re moving in with me. I’m not moving in with you.” Here it is so central to our lives. Go to a party in a single-family house in a neighborhood or something: “So, did you hear the house down the street went for so-many dollars?” It dominates our conversation in so many ways, and yet it’s so difficult for it to enter into the discussion even in the aftermath of this colossal, this calamity that has occurred. […] In some ways, when it gets into the public policy realm, it’s like “My eyes glaze over.” I’m talking about QRMs [Qualified Residential Mortgages], and you’re falling asleep. Let’s admit it. It is hard. It’s really hard to raise this issue in an effective manner.
The Market (149)
Join us Saturday May 7, 2:00-6:00pm for Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream Symposium http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/events/12430
Andrew Zago has achieved a new level of ignorance regarding the New Urbanism. I searched the net for a picture of him and was surprised to find that he does not look quite as slack-jawed stupid as he sounds, even though appearance is apparently how he judges substance.
Now (LORD grant me patience!), “significant” architecture is not really how New Urbanists keep score. We do so in many other ways: how many cars not bought; how many vehicle miles reduced; how much transit supported; how much carbon not spewed into the atmosphere; how many children and old folk walk to their daily needs; how much infrastructure cost saved; how much less expended on the delivery of municipal services; how many HOPE VI houses cherished by their residents; how much real estate value created; how many total acres under design (either as New Urbanist communities or through form-based codes); how many downtowns revitalized; how much choice available regionally to those whom suburbia does not serve well; and so on.
But Architect Zago keeps score by other means — like securing the good opinion of about a half-dozen critics in Los Angeles and New York. Indeed, he operates in a world so marginal that I need to be reminded of its existence, monthly, by Metropolis.
That his statement was thoroughly engaged by Director Martin, rather than being ignored as the antics of a simpleton, shows what kind of emissions pass for discourse in academia these days.
But let’s have a look at it from Architect Zago’s point of view. It turns out that even by the tight little standards of his world, and within just one little project (Seaside), there might be as much “significant” architecture as Architect Zago himself might hope to achieve in a lifetime. Seaside has Steve Holl’s first large building. Machado/Silvetti’s first large building. The first buildings (at least three each, and darn good, too) of Deborah Berke, Alex Gorlin, and Walter Chatham. The only building of Roger Ferri. The first building of Leon Krier. The only American house by Aldo Rossi. A wonderfully melancholic house by Sam Mockbee. Clever and charming pavilions by Michael McDonough, Stuart Cohen and Jersey Devil. A national AIA award-winning and gorgeous church by Scott Merrill. And those are only some of the modernism by the “names,” not all the best buildings.
Architect Zago is doubly ignorant: first of what New Urbanism intends to achieve on its own terms, and then of what it has achieved even on his terms.
Am I to understand that he teaches somewhere?
May 26, 2011, @ 2:49 pm
Unfortunately, it was a house of cards that could not be sustained because the country wasn’t paying close enough attention. We were building up debt with no R&D for our future. We got involved in expensive wars, and put off stem cell research and genetic engineering. We just sell the world fast food and entertainment now.I actually saw the crash coming, and managed to take advantage of the greed and chaos to find myself as the dust settles in very comfortable digs. I was 15 feet away from John Paulson at a gala last summer and was tempted to speak to him and mention that he and I were the only 2 that I know of that came out ahead from the whole mess. I decided to wait….
The American Dream has always been based on the freedom to pursue your dreams and the enabler for the American Dream has always been our Constitution, the rule of law, and economic liberty. Our free enterprise system lifted more people out of poverty than any other system this earth has ever known. Government exists to protect your rights and to prevent other people from interfering with your pursuit of these dreams, free of harm.
The American Dream is different for every person in this country. For some it is to own a home. For some it is to have a successful business. Whatever that Dream is to be achieved through your own personal perseverance, drive, determination and responsibility. It's not anybody else's job to deliver your American Dream to your doorstep, and that includes the government. The American government is in the business of protecting the freedom of its citizens to pursue their dreams.
Greater minds than mine are crunching the real numbers, but I can tell you here in Clearwater, Florida how things are. A huge downtown revitilization project went bust 3 years ago, beautiful new high rises overlooking the water, selling for $500k to $1M, EMPTY, 90% of downtown business storefronts...EMPTY, many never leased. Small SHOPPING strip centers throughout the whole town, HALF EMPTY.
Each day, I run 3 miles through the area, hundreds of homeless people everywhere, sleeping in bushes, on benches, just horrible and sad.
My local pub has patron who are plumbers, electricians, welders, carpenters, roofers, auto mechanics...half have either lost their jobs or have had hours cut back.
This is reality here, no hope, no change.
It is our Post-Modern condition. We have focused so much in ‘consuming’ that it has made us forget about the true meaning of ‘design’. Designers have forgotten about their social purpose, and have focused on the consumer driving tools to fulfill people’s desires. However, not everything is lost. I feel that modernism is coming back strong once again because is becoming a necessity of our future societies.
I am afraid design has lost touch with the sacred. Solutions that do not revere our connection and dependence on nature are Band-Aids. Foreclosure is the result of a capitalist business model on two fronts. First, homes are built on inexpensive land that require infrastructure. Less expensive than infill, the market is sold a bigger is better value, demeaning the essence of design itself. Inexpensive, huge homes have destroyed millions of acres of farmland and aquifers and are ready to do so again after the recession is over regardless of what you do at MoMA. These homes are expensive and are deteriorating rapidly. Second, a failed industry at the core is not in a position to repair itself without a new revolutionary system approach only slightly identified in LEED and the Green Building initiative.
There must be a return to the building practices from the past that had one core leader in the design and delivery process. Trained as an engineer, these master builders were schooled in a natural, sacred geometric methodology that was philosophical and practical. The difference between this and our existing 3 tiered architect, engineer and builder approach is innate conflict.
A building is a sacred thing, manifest from nature and in accordance with her underlying principles. Until we regain this relationship, any attempts to solve our nightmare of expensive, cheap, environmentally dysfunctional buildings will be superficial. A much deeper view of the problem is the challenge and the work is philosophical,spiritual,professional and health related.
The only way to fight this would be to have mainstream media to spread article and discussion like this piece, so people would actually paid more attention and begin to question things.
November 21, 2011 at 9:58pm
December 20, 2011 at 6:35 pm
December 25, 2011 at 2:05 am
December 20, 2011 at 12:36 pm
December 20, 2011 at 5:14 pm
December 20, 2011 at 1:21 pm
December 20, 2011 at 11:57 am
"It's just irresponsible to have a model that encourages moving out onto green fields and leaving behind decaying rings of an ever-fattening tree," he said. "I'm interested in not just letting the path of least resistance exist. It's cheaper for a developer to build on virgin territory, but it's not cheaper for people to live on it or get to it."
For A Regular Guy(Written after reading the story in L.A. Times of a dead man found in a foreclosed home in Westchester, CA on 7/20/2009 by a real estate agent preparing to show the house to a prospect.)
Three bedroom 2 bath
garage backyard lawn
rambling family style
home for kids pets. 1957.
Needs work
refinancing available
forbearance provided
for small fee.
A sunny southern Cal
kind of Monday
in Westchester.
Realty Modern
shows same home
once bestowed
with bank notes
loans interest rates
derivatives
credit-default swaps.
Brokered down by
adjustable rates
pre-payment penalties.
Now liberated by the
free market.
Lien holders
mean holder
sof bankrupt dreams.
FORECLOSED.
Ready to buy
best terms
and cheap!
But oh dear!
What’s a 45-year-old
dead man doing here?
Didn’t we clean this
property up?
Who could
miss the odor
of late payments ?
The gruesome smell
of maxed out credit?
The stench of the
unemployed?
What’s an agent to do?
Come back later.
This regular guy
Laid off. Laid out cold
in the family room.
Second mortgage borrowerr
avaged by pyramid
schemes. No modification
no public offering
for him. No gold man of stocks
no Fed unreserved no inside track
no parachute for this everyday chump.
Lien holdersmean holders
of bankrupt dreams.
FORECLOSED.
UltioThe fact that loans are rneittesg in the near term is completely irrelevant. First of all, you make the assumption that just because loans are rneittesg, people are unable to cover any change. Second and most importantly, you clearly have forgotten that many of these adjustments are going to be lower. Every single major rate that they could possibly be tied to (LIBOR, 11th District, Prime, etc) are at all time lows. The “shadow” inventory of foreclosures that you keep referring to are of questionable existence, at best. Banks, by charter, are not allowed to be long term holders of real estate. They have been rapidly selling bulk REOs to vulture funds directly. The absence of these shadow foreclosures hitting the market in the last six months is further proof of this. Supply/demand? Supply is off more than 70% in 18 months and demand is very steady. A 6 month inventory of homes is generally considered the goal and currently San Diego hovers at 3 months. Sounds like their is an inverse supply/demand curve situation at the moment.Pretty feeble insight provided here in the original advice.
2/15/2012 6:44 PM CST
Quasi-intellectual architect-driven initiatives have rarely had the same positive result. Almost a century of bombastic architectural "visions' from Corb's plan to level Paris, to Pruitt-Igoe and beyond have repeatedly shown that many architects know less about how people really want to live than do the developers they so easily criticize. So much for the fruits of half-baked liberal thinking rooted in "speculation" rather than informed analysis. Typically, the more theoretically driven the project, the worse were the results. - QED "Foreclosure".
2/15/2012 12:50 PM CST
2/14/2012 2:24 PM CST
“Anti Socialists”, “healthy cities” – hilarious! “Eggheady liberal architects”!? LOL Oh how you flatter yourselves! Inexperienced, academic, myopic, global warming eco hustlers who don’t understand the environment, fossil fuels/energy economy, national defense, US economy, our history or American Exceptionalism means that you are incapable of comprehending our future, which robs you of any basis for design. …so as a result we get vanity nonsense like this. ..and wishes for socialism as Athens burns in the wake of spastic entitlement class withdrawal.
Americans were not “given” anything; planning is not a socialist activity in the United States; and the diversity of planning across the country varies from tragic to excellent – something some writing here are obviously unaware of, living in a generation of under-educated, arrogant skepticism of forces you don’t understand.
Market forces drive change, a natural process arrogant socialists have no patience for. You are confused and angry because of the lies you tell yourselves and the turmoil that results. For example: there is no place for over-priced boutique wind/solar power (creates a job killing prosperity tax); oil is cheap and plentiful for hundreds of years; electric cars have already been rejected by the market; human controlled global weather is nonsense (global warming); landfills are a business like any other; recycling is, with few exceptions, just more manufacturing; and you have been betrayed by those who have taught you much of your lives. No matter what eco fantasy world you want to inhabit, everything I’ve written is dead on and there’s not a thing your hatful confusion can do about it.
Take some comfort in knowing that, for better or worse, you are not wise enough to begin to understand our future.
2/14/2012 11:29 AM CST
The solution (according to the people responding to this article): Ignore the "eggheady" liberal architects and do what the American people want: ie more of the same.
No wonder America is so incompetent when it comes to healthy cities. Only a small minority of intelligent liberal green architects and planners embrace a healthy productive path forward, and an overwhelming majority of ignorant architects and free market thinkers couldn't care less or think the solution to the problem is to ignore the solutions and embrace the problem as the only answer - I guess because Ronald Reagan told them to (during a period in his life when he had a debilitating mental illness I might add).
2/13/2012 5:40 PM CST
2/13/2012 5:30 PM CST
2/13/2012 5:22 PM CST
Their design responses always seem to find answers in central planning socialism (or communism) where the lord in charge decrees how the little people shall live. In the context of the greatest economy on earth, these solutions always vary from amusing and trendy to useless. Ironically and predictably, the housing solutions generated by real world socialists and communists are among the worst on the planet!
Two years ago I outlined a grant project to design and build "the next American Home" using an award winning, very expensive, AE design and development team that no market rate home owner could ever afford. My local region's weather, utility rates, standard of living, aesthetic sensibilities and real estate market would all form the basis for this project. Once constructed, it would be leased and its overall performance measured over years – including elements like comfort, pride of ownership and livability in addition to the boring engineering stuff like energy performance.
The goal would be to offer a platform for the next generation of America’s homebuilders to reference when that industry recovers. I will not give away all the beans because I may resurrect it someday but needless to say, even in this economy I became too busy to fuss around with it.
2/13/2012 4:12 PM CST
“Foreclosed” to Open at MoMA - Feb 15 thru July 30; highlights disconnect in the American housing market #architecturehttp://ow.ly/92Rid
"He who pays the piper, dictates the tune." Housing delivery, its design and the general structure of the industry is controlled by the institutions that provide the money; whether GSEs(Fannie &Freddie) or banks, these are the true puppeteers. Even the physical architecture, the cookie cutter nature of everything is dictated by the "appraised value", the only language the money lenders understand. Builders, designers and architects can dream all they want, unless there are new ways of structuring how houses are paid for, what consumers want will always be compromised and subverted by dictators of finance.
#MoMAexhibit, "Foreclosed" shows gap between housing available in U.S. and housing Americans need http://bit.ly/zk1dJ2
Builders, developers and real estate people have been telling people how to live for years....it's obvious now, more than ever, thats how things are done....people don't know what they want...
If you think it's just builders and developers telling people how to live, you're clearly missing a larger picture. Retailers are a huge factor here too. The problem with suburbia is the lack of "real job" creation.
The problem comes from the concept that many retailers sell products that more-or-less require single-unit, single-family housing units— lawnmowers, automobiles, chest freezers, full-sized appliances, furniture et cetera. The code for this word is "durable goods." And anytime you hear the government, planners or business-types talking about the increase in the purchase of durable goods or stimulating the durable goods market... they're clearly talking about suburbia.
And many of the companies that sell the tools of suburbia actively influence policy development by funding various non-profit and non-governmental organizations. We don't know who does what but there are fair examples.
Cato Insitute, a supporter of laissez-faire capitalism, is quite a staunch critic of urban planning is or has been supported by the likes of General Motors, ExxonMobile, Toyota, Visa, Wal-mart, Volkswagon, Honda, FedEx and Time Warner. None of these companies want to see functioning cities.
And we end up the paradox of...
If most of the jobs are low-wage, who's buying goods and services?
And where do the armies of wage workers live if new suburban development is too expensive?
sustainable developers?? developers follow incentives and try to minimize risk - without government subsidizing sprawling (i.e. cheap & low capacity) infrastructure and overly restrictive zoning laws they'd very likely build far more high-density mixed-use buildings without parking (but also without green space). without utilities, roads, and other services land is pretty much worthless - and developers typically don't like challenging zoning unless they know the municipality is on board.
also - high-density outside of the city center presents another challenge because of the capacity of the existing services. Some towns in the northeast have put a moratorium on any new building because their existing water and sewer systems cannot handle any additional load. when you think of it, suburban development is often a function of how big the sewer systems are, or how much space is needed for a septic and/or leech field and buffer.
perhaps if as a culture we had a much healthier relationship with our own poop...
Builders, developers and real estate people have been telling people how to live for years....it's obvious now, more than ever, thats how things are done....people don't know what they want...Architects stopped telling people what they want in the 1960's....see what we have now? I think as far as far as something develor driven, the Eichler approach today would be a good start....Developer, hiring good and great Architects, offering something different that makes sense.
Is this guy suggesting Condos are the solution to the real estate crisis? Or does everyone become a renter? Seems like another utopian community to me. And of course... he's going to tell me that if I have ONE child, I only get a two bedroom unit. No thanks. Why does innovation from Architects always have to come in the form of telling people how to live their lives? Maybe innovation could be a business model that allows Architects to incorporate all these good ideas and give the customer what they want instead of telling them what they want?
Some good ideas lost in translation, reducing cost of utilities. Simple solution there. Smaller footprint, better insulation and higher efficiency systems. Hmmm.... looks to be the kind of home that the home builders are putting out right now. Wonder why they're still in business?
I thought I would post this interesting interview w/ Michael Bell. It seems we are always discussing ways to put architects back in the driver's seat of the building process. I thought he posed some interesting solutions to immediate, real problems.
I really liked his holistic approach of re-casting the financing business model and working with members of that community to create a new paradigm.
http://www.reuters.com/video/2012/02/14/reuters-tv-a-radical-approach-to-homeownership-feli?videoId=230166482&videoChannel=117757
I am hoping the show runs through June so I can see it in NY.
I really liked his holistic approach of re-casting the financing business model and working with members of that community to create a new paradigm.
Jeanne Gang (JG): I think we can’t afford not to realize something. We have so many issues especially in the inner ring suburbs where we were looking at, like Cicero, where developers kind of hop-skip over them and sprawl out into further and further-out suburbs, which just increases our dependence on the car.
Barry Bergdoll (BB): It is astounding to what extent people’s dreams are fulfilled by images that are supplied to them by the marketplace, by advertising, by television, but I do think that that is shifting. And even some of the dream producers like movies, like television series, are beginning to address the complex realities of suburbs and are starting to show us images of suburbs which are arrival cities for immigrants which have multigenerational families living in the same house. Some of the kind of covering up of those realities in popular entertainment is itself beginning to erode. So, there are many many cracks in the dream.
[...] the middle of a review of the Foreclosed exhibit at MoMA, a housing analyst makes an interesting statement about the surplus of housing currently in the [...]
@Ries is correct. Many people live in the burbs because they don't want to live in city, and visa versa. And, let's not forget that many people live where they live, love it or hate it, because (gasp) they can't afford to live elsewhere. Let's also not forget about the cost of the commute, no matter what form that takes. Design is part of the intrigue, but it's not the whole enchilada.
One of the answers to "what is it that you really need?" is, probably, NOT architects.
Since well over 90% of the building in America is done without the aid of an architect, it seems that, particularly in the foreclosed suburbs, an architect is a luxury, a status symbol, and one of the first things to be cut.
Certainly architects can bring value to a project- but, in most cases, its not monetary value, and, in fact, it usually adds quite a bit of cost to any project, well beyond the fee, to bring an architect in.
This is a recession based on financial shenanigans, not one caused by a lack of good design.
I fail to see how, in most exurbs, good design will have any affect on the financial aspects that caused this - the lack of jobs, the predatory lending practices, the upside down real estate market, and the inability of many to sell their homes without going bankrupt.
The reason there is a chasm between urban architects and suburban "architecture" is because the stuff they build in the suburbs is driven by an entirely different set of desires, fashions, fantasies, and, most importantly, price points.
Do you mean in terms of the long view on sustainability wrt enegry and health? B/c I think part of the short term motivation for the retro-fit is economic factors; e.g. demand, attracting/retaining people by providing what the "market" indicates people want, etc.
Feb 22, 2012 12:38 pm
Do you mean in terms of the long view on sustainability wrt enegry and health? B/c I think part of the short term motivation for the retro-fit is economic factors; e.g. demand, attracting/retaining people by providing what the "market" indicates people want, etc.
No, absolutely. You make a good point about what's driving the short-term urgency. I was thinking in terms of "what happens if the deadlock can't be broken". Eventually that which can't be sustained comes to an end.
What we have now is a deadlock between market forces (and owners of developable property as AWalker pointed out) on the one hand, and existing owners (call them NIMBYs at the risk of starting a fight). Of course, the property owners are few, and potential residents don't necessarily get a vote. So obviously the influence of existing owners is large.
Anyway, I think you see the defenders of the status quo harnessing the power of the culture war. That's why, in my opinion, it makes little sense to say, "I don't care what [the WSJ editorial page] says, I care what my neighbors think." The debate is informed (and distorted) by the big outlets. Not to be too cynical, but your neighbors thing what the WSJ/WaPo editorial page tells them to. And that goes for the city as well as the suburbs.
As far as ambient city-mouse/country-mouse trash-talking goes ("they insulted Franconia in the City Paper!"), I doubt we'll ever be completely free of that. My guess is that cultural trends (and hopefully not decreasing quality of life) will be what drives the transformation of these "urbanizing nodes" in the suburbs.
Feb 22, 2012 1:01 pm
MB: I personally think that the people that invest in housing will be fearful of investing in the old versions of housing and they’re going to look for a new product to invest in.
investment banking. There’s the Wagner-Steagall Act which funded public housing. Steagall was on both.
CH: Interesting.
MB: It’s very interesting.
CH: Now we’ve got huge conglomerate banks and no public housing.
MB: People have looked toward changing or improving the suburbs
for a long time. You can go back to the 1970s, and academics are often
lambasted for not being sensitive about it. But the reason I’m bringing
this up is that what is different at this point in time is everything from
globalization in terms of where is production happening, what are the
jobs. When you talk about housing, you ultimately always—even if you’re
an architect—end up talking about jobs. What will secure that loan in the
future? So, flexibility comes in. But the difference now, I think, is that
what people realize… And the foreclosure crisis is an awful thing, it is
absolutely a crisis, but it does start to create a situation where people
start to imagine that what we have is not inevitable. And, in fact, it was
produced, and it was dreamed. I think, people don’t like change in housing,
and they should worry about change in housing, but what we have is also
not terribly secure. And, so, I think that’s what you’re bringing up, and
Jeanne was bringing that up quite brilliantly.
CH: One of the things I think Detroit forces us to think of is the fact that
the things we think are natural are contingent.
MB: […] In the 1990s you had a booming economy, you had a kind ofpush to alter, if not end, the welfare state. By the 2000s, you have a real estate bubble. And today you have a foreclosure crisis. But in all of these situations, there are a couple things that have been consistent. The amount of money people spend on housing and transportation is immense. They can’t afford it. You don’t want to tell people they can’t afford something and say that’s the reason to change. You want to be more positive than that. But there are many, many factors about affordability, about energy consumption, and frankly about the role of design in any of it. The American single-family house is a commodity product that has virtually no research and development, no design. Architects, in a spec house in Houston in the late 1990s—their fee was about twelve dollars per house. These are mass-produced commodities. There is no professional engagement. […] I think most of the people in this exhibition are quite
positive and excited about the suburbs. We know it’s a deeply, deeply important part of the American ethos, if not just everyday life of course. But, they’re not inevitable. And the financial underpinnings of them have really dramatically shifted in the last five, ten, fifteen years—not just the last two.
CH: Talk about that R&D thing. You made a point in the video in the exhibition that blew my mind about the comparison between how much money in R&D goes into your iPhone or anti-lock brakes versus an American home.
MB: I did mention anti-lock brakes. For many commodities, before they hit the market, there are billions of dollars that might precede it, whether it’s Clorox or whether it’s an iPhone or a Honda Civic which is quite an ingenious product. Housing as we know it has kind of ironed all of that
out of it, and it did it a long time ago. […] They are paying Mercedes Benz prices for a twenty-year-old used car. The single-family house market atomizes out all of the financial processes, and you still are spending large sums of money, but you’re not getting the sophisticated product. It’s not that it’s not a nice product or something people love, but it could be much, much better in energy and everything else.
were each assigned a suburban community with a higher foreclosure rate than the national average and asked to imagine in the design a vision for what sustainable, vibrant, post-crisis communities could be if we rethink our most fundamental beliefs about the American house.
Barry Bergdoll (BB): “The show, I should say, in general is not trying to solve the mortgage crisis. That’s for the banks to sort out. We’re saying that, since we also have learned from it, that the way we build is part and parcel of this massive foreclosure crisis.”
That’s the idea, good patrons. Free markets don’t just mean liberty. They also mean progress. They mean development that turns unseen worlds out of science fiction into reality.
Felix, thank you. Over the last four decades over half of all the single family homes were built in this country, most of them in the suburbs, through a production system that is inextricably bound up with bankers, builders and brokers. The good news is we will need the same number again over the next four decades, but we must offer a viable alternative to the suburban status quo, just as we have done with the IPad or the Hybird car. The current system in bankrupt-- physically, psychologically, and financially--but America has the capacity to constantly reinvent itself. Unfortunately, academic exercises like "Foreclosed" only put those off who can make the changes and need our help the most.
Here we go again - architects attempting to be the deciders on who lives in a cooked up utopian paradise. I agree with Dee - didn't we go through this before - actually several times before - go back to Lutyens and others pre-Victorian UK for other references. This argument is as old as time in architecture circles and frankly something I believe in my bones architects need to stay way far away from.
The problems associated with the current debacle in housing goes way beyond just cooking up alternatives to a model that for decades had worked pretty well until the restraints of the banking system and the policy makers in DEE CEE were unshackled. Thank you Barney Frank, Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, Sarbanes / Oxley, CRA, Derivatives, MBS, CDO's, Wall Street, Glass Steagle (no more), FHA, HMA, Phil Gramm, Rudman, Fannie, Freddie, National Assoc. of Realtors, Mortgage Banking Association, TARP, QE whatever, Helicopter Ben, HARP, HAMP, Obama and the porkulus - the list of imposters posing as statesmen and policy wonks and their attendant fixes goes on and on. To just read this article on the surface and agree would be in my humble opinion horribly misguided and naive.
Wake up architects - putting the design blinders on only will not serve you nor your clients well. A much broader and active view is needed - bone up on economics, finance, politics, local government, proper spheres of authority, the scriptures - you name it. Without a broader and DEEPER view of the market the profession will continue to wallow in the ditch it finds itself in, unable to provide any added value to projects and their sponsoring clients. Clients want value - not just ideas!!! And one final thing......
I LIKE LIVING IN THE SUBURBS!!!
I agree with you 100%. The problem is that the market is not controlled by people with ideas but by people seeking profit. And building a sustainable and children-friendly environment is not that important. Each building has its own architect, own solutions and etc. But look on the wonderful planning of Brasil (the capital of Brazil), with the coherent architecture and sustainable environment. And it is almost 50 years old right now, but it looks wonderful!
Foreclosures - done to benefit the banksters who pull the strings of whatever government is sitting in the White-house.
More grandiose plans....which will entail the usual results.....after the motivators have been paid.
How about these in your face truths.
Government forced mandates made it legal for banks to offer mortgages to people that had no capability to pay back the loans.
The number of people artificially allowed into the housing market by these policies triggered crazy bidding wars, that I was a victim of, and artificially drove up real estate values.
Which in turn drove up rental costs which overall drove a spike in the national cost of housing.
Which resulted in a net loss of real income because wages did not keep up.
The loans the banks were legally allowed to sell to people who could not afford them had time bombs in them like adjustable rates and interest only loans that our poorly educated masses were too dumb to realize would financially destroy them.
And the biggest architect of this mess, Congressman Barney Frank of MA, is being allowed to retire and not go to prison for his part in building this mess.
In places like Mumbai, where arguably a majority of the city is inhabited---and much of it was literally developed---by squatters in slums and shanties, this commodification of land is very risky. Shutting (poor) squatters out of land is precisely what governments in Mumbai and Beijing are doing now, by bulldozing slums. And this is harmful not just for reasons of justice and equity, but also because the urban poor contribute a great deal of labor and economic activity to the city.
Blocks and grid systems would facilitate that process by specifically defining plots of land and putting a price on them, which would then be an "opportunity cost" of housing the poor.
How does this "Fix" anything?
The problems are economic stupidity and corruption, not architecture.
Gorgeous renderings, but I can't imagine houses like this actually selling or being nice to be in, not that the current suburban developer offerings are so nice but at least they are what people want.
3/22/2012 12:33 AM CDT
This study, I have not read it, seems to advocate a reversal of that movement. A compaction of the habitable structures into higher density areas with less reliance on the automobile but with the option of public transportation.
Those first two words came from a long conversation I had with a loosely knit group of home builders and developers over coffee one morning.
Consensus was that without a paradign shift in buyer attitude about whether they could expect the livibility, security and comfort and a level of freedom in a high density housing project as they would expect in a "normal" development, it had limited appeal. (Their demographic target(s) were the first/second time home buyer with children).
I don't believe that shift will occur without a far more serious change than the foreclosure crisis. And, knowing a bit about govmint and how it "thinks" I'd venture a guess that their stereotypes of high density housing is limited to a condominium complex with a swimming pool and 2car attached garages. Ciao
3/21/2012 5:00 PM CDT
Bell told me what his team was thinking: “One basic understanding of REITs that I often heard people criticize is that they’re essentially hedging instruments.” So the upswing in home prices in one part of the world might be played off a drop in value elsewhere. “Instead of real estate being held as a local asset, it gets bundled up as a global asset.
So I believe the hybrid approach is the likeliest way to achieve real innovation in housing as well as in real estate development practices. What might be the role of architects in this effort? The South African architect Iain Low has described a building as a manifesto, a declaration of what is possible. (“I work within the possibility of significantly transforming reality, as opposed to reinventing it," he said.) And indeed, the five projects in Foreclosed show us the possibilities of dreaming big.
(2) Motherhood and childhood are entitled to special care and assistance. All children, whether born in or out of wedlock, shall enjoy the same social protection.
— Article 25, Universal Declaration of Human Rights, United Nations
It is a sign of the times that this exhortation has proved controversial not because it reminds us of the economic inequity, the structural racism, and the gender violence that has marked every stage of so much welfare-state public housing, from inception to management, even as it challenges the apparent inevitability of such results. It is controversial because it suggests that the state, or the public sector — conceived along with civil society in terms of multiple, overlapping, virtual and actual publics — might play a more active, direct and enlightened role in the provision of housing and, by extension, of education, health care and other infrastructures of daily life in the United States. In other words, it is a direct challenge to the now-dominant paradigm of privatization. That the design teams did not entirely take up this challenge is, in my view, at least as interesting as what they actually did propose, and is perhaps symptomatic of how deeply the politics of privatization has shaped design culture. Simply put, can we no longer imagine architecture without developers?
In some of the harder hit areas A investors are buying up properties for cash and renting them out.
This means that huge sections of the community will be rentals which is not good.
Toss out the tax exemption on mortgage interest and RE will bottom in 6 months. Cut the current exemption to two thirds the first year, then to one third the second and then to zero exemption for the third year, for all interest over $4k per year per house.
"We need another housing boom."
We need a "community" boom. Sprawling suburbs don't build community. Neither does living on top of each other (recall what has happened to public housing). Most disappointing is that we do not even seem able to recognize what "community" is or what it might look like.
I don't blame builders; it's a lot bigger than that. Most of us do not want any outsiders sticking their noses into our business. Just look how hard it is to protect children, women, and the elderly. Our cities require pioneers, and most of us are simply not up to that, as heroic as it might sound.
No, there is no easy answer. But can't we at least begin asking the right question? "Why can't we just get along together?" Then let's build whatever that takes.
At worst, like the whip and buggy mode, sprawling suburbs must die a natural death.
At best, many prefab'd sub-divisions of suburban labyrinths will have to die off - ebb and flow - to satisfy the natural attrition due to dwindling market demand...
Either way, no intervention is necessary...let's walk away from the 2008 debacle with the lessons learned and a commitment not to repeat it again.
Since the mexican drug lords and international high-dollar real estate speculators have pretty much cornered the market on having a roof overhead, when can we expect The Government/associated business entities to start setting up the low-cost campsites and RV/trailer parks, or the high-capacity public confinement facilities/gas chambers/whatever?
I'm not sure how I see the deflation of an over-inflated housing market brought about by greedy mortgage bankers and speculators has anything whatsoever to do with Obama. If we had kept sensible regulations in place during the Reagan/Bush/Clinton/Bush years, 2008's crash wouldn't have happened, and housing would not have shot through the roof. Obama is picking up the pieces. The previous 4 presidents and previous Congresses caused the problem through being in bed with the criminal international banking cartel.
Mary, thank you I have said this all along. It took 30+ years for the bubble to burst it will take many to inflate again.
During the 1930's depression, 50% of the houses were foreclosed on. So Obama didn't do too badly.
There was no way to keep the housing bubble at that high rate, foreclosures are a result of natural market settle.
Americans demanded gleaming houses on individual squares of lawn far removed from urban centers, and the people who finance and construct real estate delivered the goods. This is how we wound up with expanding rings of suburban sprawl orbiting every metropolitan area. This is how we turned ever-larger swaths of open space into grids of look-alike homes, the inventory that came to be tinder for the foreclosure inferno. The developers, bankers, salespeople and their government enablers were merely working to satisfy a public craving.
But the real estate bubble was in fact an orgy of profiteering run by and for the benefit of special interests that stuck the public with the cleanup. Investment banks poured money into housing because mortgages had become raw materials for a lucrative business churning out mortgage-backed securities. Homebuilders carved acreage into subdivisions far in excess of demand because money was free and volume was good for share prices. Money was free because the Federal Reserve kept interest rates low while Fannie and Freddie kept guaranteeing mortgages. Land was accessible because the government expanded highways and subsidized gas prices.
BL: What you essentially did in maybe two minutes is cut a broad swath right through just about every problem that we kind of touched upon up here and hopefully to some extent a lot of these projects started to poke at. I would, with all due respect to my colleagues, suggest they didn’t really get into that cut. And, when Barry said this would be a little more nuts and bolts, I didn’t realize we were talking this nuts and bolts, but you’re absolutely right. You point out a whole series of problems starting from the fact that you’ve been displaced, put in a position where you could no longer afford your house because of the taxes on that house. Now you’re being left with very few options. I would hope on a really basic level that your voucher is portable, so that you aren’t stuck just looking for housing in Fort Lee which I know can be somewhat challenging. […] The whole Affordable Housing Trust Fund is a problem because it’s like the old George Bernard Shaw play Major Barbara: It allows these guys to buy their way out of providing affordable housing. […] As long as you continue to take what amounts to developers’ ransom money, you’re going to continue to have segregated neighborhoods. You’re going to continue to have folks like yourself who are stuck, getting forced out of their neighborhood…
A New Conversation (132)
“Zago vehemently attacked Dunham-Jones and New Urbanism for not having produced a single piece of “significant” architecture, asking when they would give up in failure.” Probably as heated af a forum of this type could be.
May 25, 2011, @ 3:29 pm
I am 58-year-old education professional. I also write for the local paper. This morning I decided to create a blog to chronicle my foreclosure experience because it is a very interesting story, and I am a story-teller. Would my posts fit with what is going on here?
One such effort is being sponsored by the Museum of Modern Art. The 14-month program is called "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream," and is an effort to rethink America's suburbs in the wake of the foreclosure crisis -- and spur dialogue and debate around the subject. The project is "premised on reframing the current crisis as an opportunity," writes curator Barry Bergdoll, "an approach that is in keeping with the fundamental American ethos where challenging circumstances engender innovation and out-of-the-box thinking."
Innovation and out-of-the-box thinking are exactly what we need right now. Among the many tragedies unfolding across the country because of the tectonic shifts going on in our economy is the horrible waste of human resources. We don't just have a surplus of under-utilized workers, we have a surplus of untapped energy and creativity and talent.
Thank you, Barry, for helping us learn from architecture's past and enabling us to benefit from great minds working to solve the new problems we face today. Your thought-provoking exhibitions are a serve to all who are grappling with the environmental, social, financial and other issues that keep us awake at night. Thanks for providing us with forum for discussion to discover a range of solutions.
Excellent article! Orange is the perfect subject for this study. What is needed is a larger vision that breaks free of local politics and entrenched special interests. Unfortunately, that will be very difficult.
“Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream,” an ongoing series of workshops that will culminate in an exhibition at MoMA in February, aims to do nothing less than provide new models for how metropolitan areas-specifically large suburbs in five areas around the country-might be improved. “The projects are not meant to provide solutions to immediate site,” says Barry Bergdoll, MoMA’s chief curator of architecture and design. “They are meant to provide ideas for fundamental change.”
"Change the dream and you change the city." The line could describe their hopes exactly. Instead, it helps introduce five other plans for suburban America, each with a commitment to cities and to dreaming. The Museum of Modern Art calls the show "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream." Yet, the curators are not looking for new architecture to house an older ideal. Rather, they want to change thinking, the kind that brought the tangle of postwar suburban sprawl and, in their minds, the doomed housing bubble.
All five teams have responded to this directive to some degree by proposing social and infrastructural systems that attempt, on a large scale, to align with the new cultural desires and economic realities of American suburban living. Amale Andraos and Dan Wood of WORK Architecture Company, working on SalemKeizer, Oregon, propose a contemporary update on the notion of a garden city, addressing a range of ecological issues. Hilary Sample and Michael Meredith of MOS, analyzing the Oranges, New Jersey, explore the potential of suburban streets to offer a new kind of civic space in a less car-dependent future. Jeanne Gang of Studio Gang, focusing on Cicero, Illinois, seeks a new flexibility in housing that will accommodate the rapidly shifting immigrant populations in the suburbs outside Chicago. Andrew Zago of Zago Architecture, studying Rialto, California, subverts the strict hierarchies of property boundaries that have traditionally structured suburban space. And Michael Bell of Visible Weather, examining Temple Terrace, Florida, considers the relationship between relatively homogenous Florida suburbs and the more diverse and less prosperous neighboring urban communities.
The only way to fight this would be to have mainstream media to spread article and discussion like this piece, so people would actually paid more attention and begin to question things.
November 21, 2011 at 9:58pm
December 20, 2011 at 12:57 pm
First, I really appreciate the commentary from both KB (12/15) and DK (03/07) regarding the rewilding concepts in relation to suburbanization. I would like to respond first to DK’s point of building dense and compact cities and leaving the “hinterland and wilderness as intact as possible” is the ideal and I certainly do not disagree with this position. That said this is not what is taking place on the ground. Urbanization is continuing to spread into the hinterlands here in the US, in China, India, and Brazil and around the globe. The proposal here is to consider the potential for these exurban developments to adopt an ecological mandate.The focus on the MOMA exhibit and analysis is also very specific and thus the proposal needs to be seen in its context. We were specifically tasked with looking at foreclosure housing projects and how as designers and scientists we might bring federal funding to address some of the issues faced. Thus the site was selected for us, and due to its proximity to the San Bernardino National Forest and the ecologically intact conditions of the surrounding context including the Lytle Creek Wash, we saw the notion of creating a neighborhood focused in part on ecological management as an opportunity for collaboration between developers, the federal government and future homeowners.A third factor to consider is climate change and global warming. The earth is changing in part through large-scale anthropogenic causes. These are creating pressures and constraints on the hinterland ecosystems and organisms. Already, there are discussions of how to foster species migration as their ranges shift north. This is an area that scientists are keenly interested in the role they might play. Consider the species introductions, assisted migrations and other efforts scientists are already participating with the goal of enhancing ecosystems. In other words, just leaving the hinterlands out there “undisturbed” by the built environment does not mean they remain undisturbed, and to maintain ecosystems and organisms human interventions will likely be an important component. Consider John Foley’s diagram of the changing landscape conditions – where is the “hinterlands” in his diagram?Finally, Rewilding (and this goes back to KB’s comments) is a radical proposal and one that is debated amongst ecologist. Much of the issue arises from the concern over human – wildlife conflict that would likely ensue if we were to reintroduce large carnivores etc. to the US. At the same time, most ecologists would agree that top down predation would benefit ecosystem health and lead to greater diversity of species. Thus the issue is one of public acceptance. As a result, getting this concept out there through a variety of venues (given that Rewilding is in the “marketing” stage) should mostly benefit the cause. It is a much more radical concept than simply allowing people to manage biological systems at the urban fringe and is intended to create debate and discussion.The MoMA exhibit is pervaded by architectural discourse of the suburb and could use this layer of integration of knowledge into new suburban forms. The architect and their modes of working and analysis were prioritized and sites open to large development were sites for new visions. Still, the rewilding concept is part of the exhibit, which means that tens of thousands of museumgoers visiting the exhibit will have the opportunity to reflect on what role people can play in managing ecosystems in their neighborhoods, and on the potential value of rewilding as a concept to consider for promoting ecosystem function.
MoMA| Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream This foreclosure mess might be the catalyst for rethinking our cities. bit.ly/tAUJ66
2/13/2012 4:36 PM CST
Problem no. 1 for architects today is entering and starting to lead that discussion. Otherwise we will be ignored... vigorously. And probably planners are more important in the discussion than architects.
James W. Hadley AIA (aka anonymous)
2/13/2012 2:54 PM CST
Controversial + causing a lot of discussion: American housing exhibit “Foreclosed” Opens at MoMA : http://bit.ly/AAyLIF #architecture
http://bit.ly/z1vn32 #MoMAlooks @ suburbs can they b saved, need more housing types/densities, innovation not imitation #urbanism#yycplan
February 22, 2012, @ 12:50 p.m.
MoMA’s Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream is inspiring interesting discussions about the suburban/urban divide: http://goo.gl/MYJYy
By way of a comparison: gay people have been struggling for marriage equality for decades now. Many cultural conservatives are very angry about this, and feel their way of life is under assault. It's a difficult thing to persuade them. Frequently, you'll see footage of some gay pride parade somewhere, which is repeated on a loop for the express purpose of stoking this outrage.
Do gay pride parades make arguing for gay marriage more difficult? Of course. But that's not the fundamental problem.
Same goes for environmentalism: if it weren't for that guy with dreadlocks on that college campus somewhere in the midwest who goes on about Gaia, would folks like George Will have signed on to "cap and trade" by now?
If no one ever said anything mean about suburban cul-de-sacs on GGW, do you think the Randall O'Toole's of the world would cease talking about shadowy urbanists trying to take away your car? Or UN initiatives that threaten our freedom? After all, that's where your average "man on the street" gets such nonsense, not because they read some urbanist gadfly in the comments section of an obscure blog somewhere.
C'mon. Municipalities are trying to retrofit to urbanism because the experts feel they don't have a choice, long-term. But industries (and that includes conservative political parties) that benefit from suburban sprawl will fight with every fiber of their being to prevent that from happening. Do you really think the Rush Limbaughs of the world are going to find TOD religion if the David Alperts of the world start praising ample parking?
Sure there are individuals with essentially zero influence who bad-mouth suburbia, and that may register with the very, very few people who read GGW, but in the larger debate, they're hardly even background noise.
Feb 22, 2012 11:47 am
Im not concerned about randall otoole and Rush limbaugh - Im concerned about my neighbors in Fairfax county. And yes, they do hear the memes floating around - GGW may have a small audience, but they see this stuff in City Data, in City Paper, etc, etc.
WRT to gay pride parades - presumably they help individuals finding their identities. I presume urbanists have no such needs, as a general rule.
And yeah, I would suggest that over the top environmentalism ("industry must die" types) DO impact the conversation on cap and trade.
yes, there are powerful lobbies against the kinds of changes a place like FFX needs. There are ALSO powerful lobbies for, including owners of land that is suitable for high density development. When those powerful forces clash, the inclinations of the citizenry can matter. And yes, the belief by some folks who dont listen to Rush that urbanism is about demonizing their way of life, is an obstacle.
Feb 22, 2012 11:58 am
Well you've surely said a mouthful here and it is as reasonable and objective and nonconfrontational as they come. The problem is, you'll still have people defending (maybe naturally) the idea that "well that's not us, we're just trying to better xyz."
I can't tell you the number of times I've heard similar sentiments shared by DC residents who don't consider themselves "urbanists" but do rely on their cars and in cases, transit.
Feb 22, 2012 12:57 pm
Do you mean in terms of the long view on sustainability wrt enegry and health? B/c I think part of the short term motivation for the retro-fit is economic factors; e.g. demand, attracting/retaining people by providing what the "market" indicates people want, etc.
No, absolutely. You make a good point about what's driving the short-term urgency. I was thinking in terms of "what happens if the deadlock can't be broken". Eventually that which can't be sustained comes to an end.
What we have now is a deadlock between market forces (and owners of developable property as AWalker pointed out) on the one hand, and existing owners (call them NIMBYs at the risk of starting a fight). Of course, the property owners are few, and potential residents don't necessarily get a vote. So obviously the influence of existing owners is large.
Anyway, I think you see the defenders of the status quo harnessing the power of the culture war. That's why, in my opinion, it makes little sense to say, "I don't care what [the WSJ editorial page] says, I care what my neighbors think." The debate is informed (and distorted) by the big outlets. Not to be too cynical, but your neighbors thing what the WSJ/WaPo editorial page tells them to. And that goes for the city as well as the suburbs.
As far as ambient city-mouse/country-mouse trash-talking goes ("they insulted Franconia in the City Paper!"), I doubt we'll ever be completely free of that. My guess is that cultural trends (and hopefully not decreasing quality of life) will be what drives the transformation of these "urbanizing nodes" in the suburbs.
Feb 22, 2012 1:01 pm
MB: I personally think that the people that invest in housing will be fearful of investing in the old versions of housing and they’re going to look for a new product to invest in.
CH: How’s this: “Embrace the Dream: Rent.” Anyone? Any takers on that?
Michael Bell (MB): We were asked by the Museum to work on a site called Temple Terrace, Florida. It’s the northeast corner of Tampa, and a little town. It’s 22,000 people. It was an incorporated city in 1926. It preceded the growth of Tampa. Tampa eventually came to meet Temple Terrace, in a kind of typical American situation where something that was very rural became urban, “quasi-urban” one could say. Temple Terrace actually had a relatively low foreclosure rate: 168 foreclosures in a town of 10,000 households. So, in looking at all of this, it actually became much more of a scenario of looking at “How did Temple Terrace operate historically? Financially? What was its density?” Etc., etc. It became much more of a project about trying to produce a future that would be more secure against those kinds of problems, rather than being immediately reactive to the problem now. And I think that’s true for the whole exhibition.
MOMA maps new routes through the mortgage-foreclosure crisis http://bit.ly/xezq27
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Not a lot of love for Moma's "Foreclosed", just check out the @ArchRecordreader comments! http://archrecord.construction.com/news/2012/02/F …
Felix, thank you. Over the last four decades over half of all the single family homes were built in this country, most of them in the suburbs, through a production system that is inextricably bound up with bankers, builders and brokers. The good news is we will need the same number again over the next four decades, but we must offer a viable alternative to the suburban status quo, just as we have done with the IPad or the Hybird car. The current system in bankrupt-- physically, psychologically, and financially--but America has the capacity to constantly reinvent itself. Unfortunately, academic exercises like "Foreclosed" only put those off who can make the changes and need our help the most.
I saw the show two days ago with my husband and kids (9 and 11). It's been the topic of conversation since then. I hate to think about what sort of world we are leaving our children, not only are our cities and infrastructure falling apart but more importantly there seems to be nobody proposing an alternative to our current state of decay. Although they look very well considered, I'm not sure all the proposals are reasonable, but it's wonderful to have people seriously proposing an alternative to our sinking status quo. I wish there was more of exhibitions like this forcing us to think how we are all responsible for the construction of our world, our cities and suburbs. And more importantly that urban development and infrastructure are our legacy we leave our children.
plus ca change...
And with the problem of widespread foreclosures embodying the issues faced by families and communities across the county, leading designers have now offered a new vision of the future.
The ideas in the exhibit prompted much commentary about how realistic they were, from James Russell, Blair Kamin, Diana Lind, Bryan Bell and my colleague Sarah Goodyear. Members of the team that re-imagined a factory site in Cicero, Illinois, Jeanne Gang and Greg Lindsay, penned a New York Times op-ed calling for a fresh design and policy approach to housing for the 21st century. Curator Barry Bergdoll said the proposals were meant to be "provocations."
This study, I have not read it, seems to advocate a reversal of that movement. A compaction of the habitable structures into higher density areas with less reliance on the automobile but with the option of public transportation.
Those first two words came from a long conversation I had with a loosely knit group of home builders and developers over coffee one morning.
Consensus was that without a paradign shift in buyer attitude about whether they could expect the livibility, security and comfort and a level of freedom in a high density housing project as they would expect in a "normal" development, it had limited appeal. (Their demographic target(s) were the first/second time home buyer with children).
I don't believe that shift will occur without a far more serious change than the foreclosure crisis. And, knowing a bit about govmint and how it "thinks" I'd venture a guess that their stereotypes of high density housing is limited to a condominium complex with a swimming pool and 2car attached garages. Ciao
Thanks Alex for a great post with a much-needed critical perspective! I hope I can see the exhibit myself this summer, and I will have your comments in mind. I agree that the discussion needs to be pushed forward, especially as the human tendency all too often is to look back.
SV: But don't you think we can decide for ourselves...?
Shibani Joshi [brunette]: But this is what artists are doing. This is what they do. They inspire thoughts. They inspire discussion. What's wrong with it?
If we can change the dream we can, possibly, change reality.
http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …Saw this exhibit on Friday...just wow. This will change the world.
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/keizer/
Instead, the dream is conjured out of these material things and fed back into them as a guiding norm. Similarly, architectural projects, no matter how fanciful or abstract, are real, material things (models, drawings, and videos, in this case) that put ideas (and maybe dreams) on the table for detailed debate by interested parties. Yes, this too could be a distraction, and the still unmet challenge is to assemble all of the parties, from residents to public officials to investment bankers, in an agonistic yet equitable setting. Nevertheless, the large models of large-scale proposals sitting on tables in a MoMA gallery represent a deliberate curatorial decision, since models have a way of generating discussion and assembling publics around themselves. The tables on which the models sit might even foreshadow our efforts with this online roundtable, which the Buell Center has convened in collaboration with Architects, Designers, and Planners for Social Responsibility to explore the contours that configure the debate surrounding housing and suburbanization itself.
The disappointment expressed by Mr. Martin, that none of the teams used a public process to inform their entry is legitimate. Based upon lectures at the Alaska Design Forum, it appears that many designers have little interaction with the end users, whether it is housing stock or another product. The most apparently successful designers are those who engage the end users, whether it is residents of Medellin, Colombia, Aboriginal Australians, or buyers at Sacks 5th Avenue.
Mr. Agnotti accurately summarized the problem, that we cannot design ourselves out of a problem, whether it is sprawl, foreclosures, or racial divides. The faith in design to solve problems is similar to the faith in technology to solve our problems. Perhaps it would be useful to step out of the the world view that seems to inhabit these conversations and look for a different one. Take as an example that of social work, where they ideally look for and base their work on the clients' strengths and desires. Lecturing or telling society to change, without asking why it should or what currently drives the actions, will just result in frustration and a smaller and smaller audience.
07.05.12 at 02:52
On Places, a debate inspired by the MoMA exhibition Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream, organized by the B... http://bit.ly/OkzuhV
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
We need a sea change in American attitudes before anything will change. First, does everyone really need a lawnmower ALL OF THEIR OWN?? Pooled resources would help a great deal. And why do people need so much land? We live in a patio home with a small back yard and very small front yard. It is more environmentally responsible. Then there is the trend to obscenely large houses. Does a couple with no children really NEED a 5K sf house? It is environmentally irresponsible to have such a house. Look at the wasted space and energy.
We must get past the concept of individualism and "what's here for me" and into the concept of sharing in our communities and doing what is best for all of us. The Republicans, of course, don't play well with others and want their individual "rights" regardless of how damaging it is to the community. In the end, it is unlikely that anything will be done that is intelligent until we're falling completely apart. Individualism is the curse of humanity.....and may well be the end of it.
You are right. But given the existing housing stock, it would be good to have some ideas about transforming suburbs. Are there ways they can be improved? Change zoning? Bring in workplaces?
"We need another housing boom."
We need a "community" boom. Sprawling suburbs don't build community. Neither does living on top of each other (recall what has happened to public housing). Most disappointing is that we do not even seem able to recognize what "community" is or what it might look like.
I don't blame builders; it's a lot bigger than that. Most of us do not want any outsiders sticking their noses into our business. Just look how hard it is to protect children, women, and the elderly. Our cities require pioneers, and most of us are simply not up to that, as heroic as it might sound.
No, there is no easy answer. But can't we at least begin asking the right question? "Why can't we just get along together?" Then let's build whatever that takes.
Instead of letting the recent crisis go to waste, the MoMA’s Architecture and Design Department and Columbia University’s Temple Hoyne Buell Center for the Study of American Architecture created some dynamic new architectural visions to address the needs of American communities
Very often disciplines divide serious issues, which are then studied in one silo when the problem and the solution transcend many silos and disciplines. As the exhibit clearly demonstrates, we can "rehouse the American dream" but certainly not by doing the same old things in the same old ways. See the exhibit before it closes on August 13th or pick up the book which has the same title. Economics and architecture never looked better together.
BL: One of the things I thought to do in preparation for this talk was to chart, from the Bush administration through the Obama administration, the number of times the word “housing” appears in the State of the Union address. I got really depressed, so I stopped. In essence—again, because it is so polarizing, and I can’t wait to see what they said on Fox News—you’re going to have to wait until December. You’re going to have to wait until he gets reelected. You’re going to have to wait until Shaun Donovan has four more years. Then we can start to have a meaningful discussion. But until then, I don’t think anything that you put on the national political agenda that talks about “public” or “housing” other than possibly bailing out mortgages and/or bailing out more bank —I don’t know how that’s going to gain any traction or do anything other than alienate more voters. But once December comes, then it’s a different story.
MJ: I wouldn’t disagree with that. I think there’s a curious rupture between the importance of housing in our lives and the importance of it in the political discourse, if you will. I think in New York City there are two things that are important to New Yorkers: real estate and romance. And real estate inevitably trumps romance. “Who’s got the right rent-stabilized apartment? I’ll take that one!” “Ok, you’re moving in with me. I’m not moving in with you.” Here it is so central to our lives. Go to a party in a single-family house in a neighborhood or something: “So, did you hear the house down the street went for so-many dollars?” It dominates our conversation in so many ways, and yet it’s so difficult for it to enter into the discussion even in the aftermath of this colossal, this calamity that has occurred. […] In some ways, when it gets into the public policy realm, it’s like “My eyes glaze over.” I’m talking about QRMs [Qualified Residential Mortgages], and you’re falling asleep. Let’s admit it. It is hard. It’s really hard to raise this issue in an effective manner.
Populations & Demographics (58)
You forgot the burden on the non existentent middle class.
Truth is, the Great Migration destroyed the great cities of Detroit, Cleveland, Chicago (Orly the Daley’s could hold this wondrously toddlin’ town together; Rahm’s clueless), Newark, L.A., Philadelphia and NYC. They aren’t coming back. Neither are places like Orange and Irvington, the former Camptown. Parasites will use our tax dollars in a quixotic attempt to recapture history, while pocketing some easy Money. Then, a thesis can be griten, a PhD for someone’s daughter in Urban Planning? Sure, why not? Then, a fellowship on the tazxpayers’ cuff. The rip-off.
It seems like only yesterday, that I could hop on the bus, for a dime, with friends and go “downtown”, to catch a ballgame, a movie or just mingle with the delightful crowds. Then, around 1958, that became dangerous for kids under 15….then under 20….then EVERYONE. The jostling started. The Huggins, the 5 vs. 2 shakedowns. The stabbings and the shootings and the rapes. A cannonball, they said, could be fired down every “Main Street”, without injuring a soul…because everyone had fled. What a helluva migration, as we look back over what was, and can never be again. Only yesterday.
All five teams have responded to this directive to some degree by proposing social and infrastructural systems that attempt, on a large scale, to align with the new cultural desires and economic realities of American suburban living. Amale Andraos and Dan Wood of WORK Architecture Company, working on SalemKeizer, Oregon, propose a contemporary update on the notion of a garden city, addressing a range of ecological issues. Hilary Sample and Michael Meredith of MOS, analyzing the Oranges, New Jersey, explore the potential of suburban streets to offer a new kind of civic space in a less car-dependent future. Jeanne Gang of Studio Gang, focusing on Cicero, Illinois, seeks a new flexibility in housing that will accommodate the rapidly shifting immigrant populations in the suburbs outside Chicago. Andrew Zago of Zago Architecture, studying Rialto, California, subverts the strict hierarchies of property boundaries that have traditionally structured suburban space. And Michael Bell of Visible Weather, examining Temple Terrace, Florida, considers the relationship between relatively homogenous Florida suburbs and the more diverse and less prosperous neighboring urban communities.
As an urbanist and lawyer, I think deeply about these issues. I find the efforts in Cicero to be interesting, but somehow missing the point of other communities of “outsiders” on the inside, like the Chatham of my youth. I am sympathetic to the plight of hardworking immigrants but would offer the story of the middle class community that is suffering by bureaucratic malfeasance of displacing the black poor into these neighborhoods with insufficient support systems and resources. Chicago is, according to the Manhattan Institute, the most segregated city in the US. It is also still has a large black population..for historical reasons. What design opportunities exist to revitalize the far south side? Is a Walmart the key to salvation? (I think, not) Mr Gates, I saw your show here in LA at the Moca Geffen and am very intriqued by the synergy that you create with your interests…arts, urban planning. I would like the opportunity to meet with you in Chicago to discuss ideas and opportunities for creating interest in saving Chatham.
December 20, 2011 at 5:44 pm
It affected gender roles and pollution sky-rocketed because they through these homes up with NO regard to solar orientation and etc. It increased dependency on the car and was a nightmare for the family that had one car... which was almost everyone...
Not only that it also decreased the amount of diversity in a given area which has added to more social problems in our communities
December 20, 2011 at 1:18 pm
December 20, 2011 at 2:21 pm
My roommates help with housework, maintenance, and even watching the dogs when I am not home. It's like a small family here. I expect to have this house paid off within 8-10 years if I can do it. Can you say that?
December 20, 2011 at 3:13 pm
Brookings' William Frey said suburbs used to be associated with the white middle class. That's no longer the case: "The suburbs are kind of a microcosm of America. It used to be, when you said you lived in the suburbs, you were telling somebody something about who you are demographically, and now you're not telling anything about who you are."
In addition, the team also discovered the importance of organic brownfield remediation in Cicero, even if it meant the land would remain underdeveloped. Through commonplace planting, the toxic industrial sites scattered across the residential fabric would change into safer cleaner zones for future community use. Finally, within certain regions of each parcel, the once zoned industrial land could be converted into a dense collection of affordable modular beds, baths, and public space by using the existing industrial structures and materials on each site such as truss frames and brick partition walls. The new clusters would become and important blend of adaptive reuse and new construction that utilized a sizable amount of Cicero's historical past while creating a new 21st century anchor that can accommodate thousands immediately adjacent to one of Chicago's commuter rail corridors.
I think there's no doubt that there is a trend towards "large multigenerational groupings" given the immigrant population explosion.
It's never been part of our culture.
Our goal used to be to become an adult and get out on one's own.
What crap. For example, says Jeanne Gang, "Cicero’s code also defines "family" in a way that excludes the large, multigenerational groupings." Too much trouble to look? Here is the definition, from the Cicero Illinois Code of Ordinances, sec 46-466:
"Family means a single individual, doing his own cooking, and living upon the premises as a separate housekeeping unit, or a collective body of persons doing their own cooking and living together upon the premises as a separate housekeeping unit in a domestic relationship based upon birth, marriage, or other domestic bond, as distinguished from a group occupying a boardinghouse, lodginghouse, club, fraternity or hotel."
So, multigenerational, and related by birth? That's a family. Large? Not in the definition. Not related by blood, nor by marriage, but cooking and living together, based on a domestic bond? Family, again.
I have no love for Cicero, but Jeanne Gang can make municipal ordinances look reasonable by comparison.
Let's go on to the very next phrase, "now common across the country." Are we to believe that large multigenerational groupings are now common across the country? If they are common, then these onerous regulations aren't having much effect. If they aren't common, then we have Jeanne Gang reporting what she wishes were true, in place of what is. Tool.
Sub-urban and suburban are also two very different things. I would argue that sub-urban is not bad. A good example of this is in some parts of Brooklyn, Queens, and Nassau county NY. The density is greater than the typical suburban environment, and there is a small business walkable street scape that flanks a mix of multi and single family housing in many of these neighborhoods. There is also access to public transit in and out of the city. There is a mix of home owners and renters, and the opportunity to own a house and rent out the top floor. There is a sense of community and a feeling of being in a small town within a city. The film "Do the Right Thing" by Spike Lee so clearly expresses this. Another issue is density. More density is not the solution alone. We need to find an appropriate balance of density, production, and economy so that development can be in some sort of sustainable balance. I think that sub-urban form has the greatest potential for a sustainable development because there is enough space to support a mix of agriculture, industry,small business, housing, park space, etc...as well as enough density to support local businesses with regard to employees and consumers. Cities like manhattan will never be able to become hybrid typologies because things like urban agriculture and production will be far too expensive due to crazy high land prices. The only problem with the sub-urban typology is that it sometimes becomes gentrified over time as we see in brooklyn or the opposite happens where it becomes a ghetto due to the home values going down as density goes up like in Jamaica Queens (balance is always a thin line). On the other hand, suburban development lends itself to exploitation by corporate interests as James R. clearly articulates. The American dream of owning a single family home is not going away. It is a part of the American culture that dates back hundreds of years. We need to find a solution to the problem without ignoring the cultural mentality that led to it. This is why ideas like the ones in the MoMA exhibit never work. I believe that we need to study examples that already work like Astoria, and go from there.
Barry Bergdoll (BB): It is astounding to what extent people’s dreams are fulfilled by images that are supplied to them by the marketplace, by advertising, by television, but I do think that that is shifting. And even some of the dream producers like movies, like television series, are beginning to address the complex realities of suburbs and are starting to show us images of suburbs which are arrival cities for immigrants which have multigenerational families living in the same house. Some of the kind of covering up of those realities in popular entertainment is itself beginning to erode. So, there are many many cracks in the dream.
Michael Bell (MB): We were asked by the Museum to work on a site called Temple Terrace, Florida. It’s the northeast corner of Tampa, and a little town. It’s 22,000 people. It was an incorporated city in 1926. It preceded the growth of Tampa. Tampa eventually came to meet Temple Terrace, in a kind of typical American situation where something that was very rural became urban, “quasi-urban” one could say. Temple Terrace actually had a relatively low foreclosure rate: 168 foreclosures in a town of 10,000 households. So, in looking at all of this, it actually became much more of a scenario of looking at “How did Temple Terrace operate historically? Financially? What was its density?” Etc., etc. It became much more of a project about trying to produce a future that would be more secure against those kinds of problems, rather than being immediately reactive to the problem now. And I think that’s true for the whole exhibition.
I have been working on new style of urban planing among capital cities. The fundamental difference between urban city and suburb has almost similar meaning of difference between individual-life style and nuclear family-life style. Urban city needs excitement. Suburb needs relax. It is good to be focused on Hispanic-Family's tradition for re-developing suburb community environment. Is there any support to business start-up for those new residents ? Maybe they should develop those project with economists and/or investors to be real american dream makers.....
It looks to me like the Orange NJ proposal is to place buildings in the centers of certain street segments to create
1 - density
2 - mixed use (neighborhood retail/commercial services)
3 - capillary cul-de-sacs (where kids can play without through traffic)
These could put services close to residents, and make walking/biking to them more attractive at the same time. This, in turn, could reinvigorate the local economy and sense of community. Not an easy task in existing grids, so we must begin thinking of unconventional solutions. Fire engines, by the way, routinely serve cul-de-sacs.
I have also long championed flexibility in housing to better accomodate the diverse life paths taken in modern times and other cultures. The American Dream/white picket fence/Mayberry suburb fails badly at this, making your Cicero concept another valuable exercise. In 2012 America, we have a working class that may marry 3 times or not at all. We are all step-this and step-that. College kids might need to return home for years. Grandma might need closer care. Families aren't really nuclear, they are fissile, fusile, orbital and subatomic. So bring back the courtyard, with apartments around it.
The reintegration of nature into our communities is another worthy goal. I think creek daylighting, community gardens, and village greens are all good ideas. The cougar idea must be whimsy, but it helps us avoid getting trapped in the fallacy that land is a purely human medium.
CH, I advise you to spend more time off the island of Manhattan. Go to Alaska. Go to Detroit. Go to a hutong. And go to a desolate American suburb. Then go back to MoMA and tell me what you see.
The suburbs may be in need of change, but surely not the changes proposed here.
The exhibition is disappointing largely because its premise is so fascinating. Barry Bergdoll, MoMA's chief curator of architecture and design, and Reinhold Martin, director of Columbia University's Buell Centre, set out to explore five struggling suburbs. These pockets of the American landscape are in the midst of a transformation. Yes, they were ravaged by the housing crisis, but they were changing even before the recession. Suburban poverty rose by 53% from 2000 to 2010, compared with a 26% jump in cities. In many suburbs, white, nuclear families have been replaced by multigenerational Hispanic ones. The old car culture has become unsustainable, as petrol guzzles a greater share of families' budgets and the need for exercise becomes ever more apparent. All this begs for new types of transport and housing. MoMA wisely seized the chance to imagine a new future for the suburbs. The result, unfortunately, is absurd.
It is time we re-imagined and retooled the old, stale notions of what constitutes a stable home.
SV: Yes.
AU: --- that are completely financially unsustainable?
SV: Who says they're completely financially unsustainable? Who says this?
AU: Well, why is poverty increasing at double the rate in suburbs as it is in cities?
SV: Because maybe poor people have moved out of the city and gotten a place in suburbs.
AU: Well that's the only place they can afford to buy houses.
@jaredhechtDid you see the Foreclosed exhibit at MOMA? Really cool stuff related to that shift. http://www.moma.org/foreclosed/
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
What builds community is working together, and families intermarrying. But we don't need to work together, since survival needs are all provided for on the whole, plus we have this American mythos of individual independence. And we move around a lot, that is also a disadvantage. If you go someplace where people do need to work together and have lived there a couple of generations, you will find community.
Press & Links (422)
Read about our work on the exhibit “Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream” for the New York City MOMA http://ow.ly/84APG ...
MoMA- Foreclosed “will enlist five interdisciplinary teams of architects to envision a rethinking of housing,” http://bit.ly/hgTBQz
RT @KatieandWalter MoMA- "Foreclosed " uses 5 interdisciplinary architect teams to envision rethinking of housing http://tinyurl.com/3hbt3ml
Board Prez Michael Sorkin will participate in the symposium #Foreclosed: Re-housing the #AmericanDreamat MoMA this Sat.: http://ht.ly/4N5GN
If you can't make it to Streetfest tomorrow, check in on the Foreclosed symposium at MoMA PS1 http://ow.ly/4OVup
Can art help fix our gridlocked suburban dysfunction? MOMA takes on sprawl w/"Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" http://bit.ly/kzLr7b
Check out my first of many blog posts for Metropolis Magazine on the new #MoMA/ Buell Center project #Foreclosedhttp://bit.ly/kCEJcY
MoMA kicks off Foreclosed, bringing the architect, curator, and historian together. "Architect in the Middle" http://bit.ly/kCEJcY
RT @metropolismag: MoMA kicks off Foreclosed, bringing the #architect, curator, and historian together. http://bit.ly/kCEJcY #architecture
@MetropolisMagreviews the kick-off of MoMA's Foreclosed, calling Board Prez Michael Sorkin's opener an "eloquent rant": http://ht.ly/53HSo
I have been photographing in and around foreclosed houses across the country for over two years, starting in April 2009, in a project I call “Foreclosed Dreams.” You can see the work and read more about that at: http://www.davidhwells.com/docuForeclosedDreams/index.html#_self
Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream: You can’t drive very far in most American cities before you see the ef... http://bit.ly/iUXzvU
Barry Bergdoll, MoMA's Chief Curator of Architecture and Design, introduces "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream." http://bit.ly/lzEPSn
MoMA 4ur Mind from NY>> Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream http://tiny.ly/bNzC
MoMA: Barry Bergdoll, introduces "Foreclosed," the new project in the Issues in Contemporary Architecture series. http://bit.ly/lzEPSn
MoMA | Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream http://fb.me/ZmCbs088
Urban planners - go to this on 6/18 at PS1 RT @MoMAlearning: MoMA | Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream http://bit.ly/mMvChX
#BytheCity/For the City juror and MoMA #architecturecurator Barry Bergdoll writes about the museum's Foreclosed project: http://ht.ly/5etlj
@studiogang, MOS, @Workac—what a group! RT @MoMAPS1: Meet the five interdisciplinary teams at MoMA PS1's "Foreclosed." http://bit.ly/ijH31m
Meet the teams of "Foreclosed" at @MoMAPS1. Learn about the project & interact with the architects on Sat, 6/18 4-6:30pm.http://t.co/wIZTrNh
MoMA | Foreclosed Open Studios Meet the five interdisciplinary teams at the first opportunity for the public to... http://fb.me/ZWqhEcew
Saturday is the first public viewing of architect-in-residence studios @MoMAPS1for the MoMA Foreclosed project. moma.org/visit/calendar
MoMA: "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream"; Learn about project, view progress + interact with architects: http://bit.ly/mwBanL
Debrief. http://t.co/2IkZnDkhttp://t.co/joYhaWThttp://t.co/kRG2Lt9#Socrates#GlobalCity#AmericanDream
5 teams rethinking the rules by which housing ought to be designed, produced, and made available http://bit.ly/kARHd9 (via @MuseumModernArt)
This is Very interesting...presentations are available for viewing online. Check it out. http://fb.me/17X8B51wh
“@MuseumModernArt: 5 teams rethinking the rules to design and produce housing in the US. http://bit.ly/kARHd9 ” My kinda fun #architecture
Check out Foreclosed: Rewriting the Script at MoMA http://bit.ly/jmfsix Thank you @museumofmodernart for posting this.
MT @brainpicker: 5 teams rethinking rules for housing design, production, availability http://bit.ly/kARHd9 (via @MuseumModernArt)
RT @brainpicker: 5 teams rethnkng rules re how housing have 2 b designed produced made available http://bit.ly/kARHd9 (via @MuseumModernArt)
MoMA | Foreclosed: Rewriting the Script: http://bit.ly/jqhZnP via @addthis
Cool #MOMAcompetition on affordable-housing design/production, esp in developing world: http://bit.ly/kARHd9. #NYUWagnerMUPs, go get 'em!
RT @brainpicker5 teams rethink rules by which housing is designed, produced and made available http://bit.ly/kARHd9 (via @MuseumModernArt)
@poundforpoundI literally read about this just hours before getting your email http://www.moma.org/explore/inside …. Sounds like an awesome project!
Foreclosed : Narratives, Typologies, and Property: The five multidisciplinary teams working on projects for the ... http://bit.ly/qJ1qlp
Foreclosed : Narratives, Typologies, and Property: The five multidisciplinary teams working on projects for the ... http://bit.ly/qJ1qlp
New MoMA project my sister is working on. Looks at architectural options for US cities in recent foreclosure crisis. http://bit.ly/oG0VSp
Food for thought; Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream @ MoMA/PS1 http://ping.fm/nIzb9 via http://urbanomnibus.net/2011/07/foreclosed-between-crisis-possibility-and-revision/
Food for thought; Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream @ MoMA/PS1 http://ping.fm/nIzb9 via http://ping.fm/B68Kz
Foreclosed: Title and Model Scenarios: The five multidisciplinary teams working on projects for the exhibition F... http://bit.ly/p7wMC5
MoMA | Foreclosed: Title and Model Scenarios http://fb.me/AHd10aVK
Interesting study of changing populations & housing needs RT @MuseumModernArtForeclosed: Rehousing the American Dream http://bit.ly/q2AodR
Foreclosed: The Halfway Mark: The five multidisciplinary teams working on projects for the exhibition Foreclosed... http://bit.ly/nKqgZ5
"we believe to operate as avant-hyper-self-conscious architects." #MOShttp://www.moma.org/explore/inside …
Halfway done w/ the workshop phase of @MuseumModernArt's Foreclosed exhibition! Find out what we've been up to: http://bit.ly/rbRMEI
Foreclosed: Constructing an Exhibition Narrative: The five multidisciplinary teams working on projects for the e... http://bit.ly/nbJr5q
MoMA 4ur Mind from NY>> Foreclosed: Constructing an Exhibition Narrative http://tiny.ly/aSwS
MoMA: "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" teams begin conceptualizing/constructing their exhibition displays: http://bit.ly/mXFByg
MoMA | Foreclosed: Constructing an Exhibition Narrative < deep http://fb.me/16zLT0xMM
Foreclosed: Visualizing the Invisible: The five multidisciplinary teams working on projects for the exhibition F... http://bit.ly/rlJwMh
Foreclosed: Five Weeks to Go: The multidisciplinary teams working on projects for the exhibition Foreclosed: Reh... http://bit.ly/pwrqBW
D&B commentator Barry Bergdoll curates "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" at the MoMA. http://ow.ly/60I1I
Check out Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream at MoMA http://bit.ly/kKqGDJ
My MoMA "Foreclosed" teammate. RT @ccoletta@Ra_Joy: Fire Hose Art Brings Fame to Hot Urban Recycler Theaster Gates http://t.co/ur0
Foreclosed: Prioritizing Project Elements: The multidisciplinary teams working on projects for the exhibition Fo... http://bit.ly/oKPjN3
MoMA: The five teams behind "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" close in on their final proposals: http://bit.ly/mRF4eV
Foreclosed: Prioritizing Project Elements: The multidisciplinary teams working on projects for the exhibition Fo... http://bit.ly/oQrj6s
I want to see it “@MuseumModernArt: "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" close in on their final proposals: http://bit.ly/o8AENj ”
Counting down to PST.... One of the most intriguing large-scale exhibs... http://bit.ly/puo6uq
Sat 9/17 Foreclosed Open Studios by Barry Bergdoll and MoMA includes keynote by HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan @HUDNews. http://bit.ly/qcPjIv
U.S. Sec. of Housing Shaun Donovan speaks at the last “Foreclosed” open house, Sat. @MoMAPS1. Info & livestream: http://bit.ly/n7sbwh
Sat 9/17 Foreclosed Open Studios by Barry Bergdoll and MoMA includes keynote by HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan @HUDNews. http://bit.ly/qcPjIv Sat 9/17 Foreclosed Open Studios by Barry Bergdoll and MoMA includes keynote by HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan @HUDNews. http://bit.ly/qcPjIv
U.S. Sec. of Housing Shaun Donovan speaks at the last “Foreclosed” open house, Sat. @MoMAPS1. Info & livestream: http://bit.ly/n7sbwh
Shaun Donovan's #foreclosedkeynote address live at: http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar …. 4pm at @MoMAPS1#Buell
Secretário da Hab. e Desenvolvimento Urbano dos EUA no MoMA: os desafios da arquitetura americana em era dos foreclosed http://ow.ly/6xit5
I am enjoying this @museummodernartlivestream of FORECLOSED keynote address: http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar …
US Sec HUD Shaun Donovan highilghts #ArtPlacein keynote at MoMA's Foreclosed event. http://bit.ly/n58jye
U.S. Secretary of HUD Shaun Donovan delivers the "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" keynote address at MoMA PS1 http://bit.ly/pRir83
MoMA 4ur Mind from NY>> Foreclosed: Close of the Workshop Phase http://goo.gl/D3wBJ
Foreclosed: Close of the Workshop Phase: U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Shaun Donovan delivers ... http://bit.ly/nCyddG
MoMA | Foreclosed: Close of the Workshop Phase http://fb.me/12Vb1Gdoh
Check out Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream at MoMA http://bit.ly/kKqGDJ
At the #CIWArchtalk, Jeanne Gang talked about her Studio's contribution to MoMA's Foreclosed exhibit - http://bit.ly/resqu7 #ciw11#cicero
Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream - definitely going to check this out. http://nymag.com/homedesign/urb …
To Jeanne Gang's Cicero project in that she envisions the buildings as multi-use "kits" that can be used in anywhere http://bit.ly/resqu7
November 14, 2011 at 10:52pm
Foreclosed: MoMA Takes on Suburbia: The severe effects of the current economic crisis on suburbs across America ... http://bit.ly/uq80l0
Foreclosed Open House: Studio Gang at http://MoMA.org http://bit.ly/ksDYQU #sckr
MOMA: Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream: February 15–July 30, 2012 http://bit.ly/vDB4xe
Theaster Gates, Jr., shares his thoughts on MoMA's "Foreclosed" project vis-à-vis Cicero, Illinois. http://bit.ly/t6vakf
MoMA 4ur Mind from NY>> Foreclosed: Thoughts on Cicero and Collaboration with Jeanne Gang http://goo.gl/4zvjU
Important thoughts on telling the human story of blight from our @MuseumModernArtForeclosed team member Theaster Gates http://bit.ly/spoKHv
Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream at MOMA: exploration of new possibilities in aftermath of foreclosure crisis http://bit.ly/tAUJ66
Foreclosed: Reversed Engineering: MoMA and The Buell Center invited a series of team participants and observers w…bit.ly/rsHitl
RT @MargaretNYC: ...#MoMAenlisting arch. teams to find solutions in 5 U.S. regions. http://bit.ly/oez2hm
Heartbreaking story on foreclosed homes on #60Minutes. #MoMAenlisting arch. teams to find solutions in 5 U.S. regions. http://bit.ly/oez2hm
Heartbreaking story on foreclosed homes on #60Minutes. #MoMAenlisting arch. teams to find solutions in 5 U.S. regions. http://bit.ly/oez2hm
RT @MargaretNYC: ...#MoMAenlisting arch. teams to find solutions in 5 U.S. regions. http://bit.ly/oez2hm
Foreclosed: The role of the team in the design process http://dlvr.it/11Zvzp#Moma
Foreclosed: The Role of the Team in the Design Process: The Museum of Modern Art and The Buell Center invited a ... http://bit.ly/srzrPN
MoMA 4ur Mind from NY>> Foreclosed: The Role of the Team in the Design Process http://goo.gl/ctVUv
Foreclosed: The Role of the Team in the Design Process: The Museum of Modern Art and The Buell Center invited a ... http://bit.ly/srzrPN
Foreclosed: The role of the team in the design process http://dlvr.it/11Zvzp#Moma
MoMA 4ur Mind from NY>> Foreclosed: The Role of the Team in the Design Process http://goo.gl/ctVUv
MoMA| Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream This foreclosure mess might be the catalyst for rethinking our cities. bit.ly/tAUJ66
Read about our work on the exhibit “Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream” for the New York City MOMA http://ow.ly/84APG ...
Read about our work on the exhibit “Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream” for the New York City MOMA http://t.co/GOcIAhXf...
Read about our work on the exhibit “Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream” for the New York City MOMA http://t.co/GOcIAhXf...
Jesse M. Keenan (CURE) on RED Tech @ MoMA Foreclosed 2012 moma.org/explore/inside …
Structural engineer Zak Kostura discusses his contribution to "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream." http://bit.ly/wt5ecc
RT @museummodernart: Structural engineer Zak Kostura discusses his part in "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream." http://bit.ly/wt5ecc
“@MuseumModernArt: "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream." http://bit.ly/wt5ecc ” /// important of process vs. product in isolation
Monday, look for my new series on @archinect, called The Crit. Crit 001: thoughts on MoMA's Foreclosed workshop and exhibition.
"Make no little plans; they have no magic to stir men's blood and probably themselves will not be realized. Ma... http://bit.ly/wQrDCr
only 2 weeks until the opening! The CRIT: Thoughts on MoMA's Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream http://archinect.com/features/artic …
A future w/o foreclosures...sort of. The CRIT: Thoughts on MoMA's Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream http://archinect.com/features/artic …
Watching tonight...MoMA's Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream [videos], http://ow.ly/8OV25 #landarch#suburbia
MoMA rethinks architectural possibilities around foreclosures: Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream, a major... http://bit.ly/zyEVBW
MoMA Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream http://bit.ly/zHc4Qn inventive #designsolutions, future of US #suburbs#architecture#4futr
rethinking the American home and suburban zoning. See Studio Gang's project at PS1/MOMA's "Foreclosed" http://fb.me/1jwoIU5FR
exhibit "Foreclosed: rehousing the American Dream" Foreclosed Homes Breathe Inspiration into Architects http://awe.sm/5fJOe
At MoMA, curators and architects seek a way out of the cul-de-sac http://ow.ly/926hW #architecture
Blair Kamin on Jeanne Gang's "blueprint" for a future Cicero, outside of Chicago. Part of new MoMA show "Foreclosed." http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/ct- …
MoMA #Foreclosedexhibit calls on architects and designers to take on the suburb as their next great challenge. http://www.moma.org/explore/inside …
@BrianBMaddenlet's go to NYC to see this @MoMAon urban #design. There is life after cul de sacs! http://nymag.com/arts/architect …
http://lnkd.in/h8K3iU moma Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream Feb 15–July 30 2012 @joshstackand more
“Foreclosed” Opens at MoMA - Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream at the Museum of Modern Art proposes five solu... http://ow.ly/1hm7o0
“Foreclosed” to Open at MoMA - Feb 15 thru July 30; highlights disconnect in the American housing market #architecturehttp://ow.ly/92Rid
Controversial + causing a lot of discussion: American housing exhibit “Foreclosed” Opens at MoMA : http://bit.ly/AAyLIF #architecture
Review of new MoMA exhibit 'Foreclosed' about designers n the suburbs. Will it have the impact of 'Rising Currents.' http://nymag.com/arts/architect …
http://bit.ly/z1vn32 #MoMAlooks @ suburbs can they b saved, need more housing types/densities, innovation not imitation #urbanism#yycplan
The art of real estate at MoMA: “Foreclosed Rehousing the American Dream,” fb.me/1b801jTdm
Smart take on "Foreclosed", new MOMA architecture show, by Justin Davidson @nymaghttp://nymag.com/arts/architect …
and I'm skeptical about how mixed use and highrise translate into low-rise suburbs. See here: http://www.moma.org/explore/inside …
really interesting article from nymag about an architecture/design exhibition at moma: http://bit.ly/whHkX2 #nyuisva
must read review of foreclosed by @guyhortonhttp://archinect.com/features/artic …
WORKac’s Nature-City will be unveiled today in the MoMA exhibition Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream. http://tinyurl.com/8x62xjp
The new #MoMA#architectureexhibition #Foreclosedcontinues the museum's exploration of issues in contemporary living http://bit.ly/A5NXF6
The American Dream Revised - @buttermilk1on the new MOMA "Foreclosed" exhibit - http://bit.ly/xEE6Mm via @emilybadger
MoMA has addressed the financial crisis and possible ways for the regeneration of Am. suburbia http://nymag.com/arts/architect …http://www.archdaily.com/170180/update- …
The new MoMA exhibit, “Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream", shows a radical approach to home ownership: http://reut.rs/zVU8jU
At MoMA in NYC- what to become of foreclosed suburbs? The American Dream, Revised zite.to/ABSiJ7 via @zite
The new #MoMA#architectureexhibition #Foreclosedcontinues the museum's exploration of issues.. http://bit.ly/A5NXF6 @DomusWeb▄▀ví @cihru
#Architects+ economists = #foreclosed: change the dream...& you change the #cityhttp://ow.ly/1GvZS7 #citiesftw#MoMA#futrchat
#MoMAexhibit, "Foreclosed" shows gap between housing available in U.S. and housing Americans need http://bit.ly/zk1dJ2
The exhibit I've been waiting to see! “Foreclosed” at MoMA: http://bit.ly/yd1pZU
Urbanism museum combo! "Foreclosed" opens at MoMA, while "Greatest Grid" exhibit is up at MCNY. http://archrecord.construction.com/news/2012/02/F …(via @cristinabe)
Recently saw that ICON took the same general critical tone regarding the exhibition.
"This sort of vague, non-ideological collectivism hangs over the entire show. Designs by Visible Weather and, in particular, Zago Architecture, stress the blurring of the usual lines between public and private, renting and owning, residential and commercial sites. Such imprecise boundaries give these projects a Ballardian air: what use is changing the dream if you replace it with a nightmare?"
More http://www.iconeye.com/news/news/foreclosed-rehousing-the-american-dream
Or to reference a line from Blair Kamin's review of Jeanne Gang studios contribution to the exhibit maybe what is needed is less concept more blueprint?
I would be interested in hearing from any Nectors who have read the book/visited the exhibit/participated in the studios.
Particularly in light of Guy Horton's recent piece of criticism Thoughts on MoMA's Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream wherein he wrote "This is a shame because there are some valuable ideas. Ironically, most of those are contained in the boring data taken from economists and social scientists. Were the architects trying too diligently to spatialize the data?...As unsettling as the damage the financial crisis has wrought on the fabric of dwelling in America, the distance these proposals travel away from what caused these foreclosures is equally unsettling."
Or Justin Davidson who recently in NY Magazine wrote "Some ideas in the show sit on the border between bold and silly...As a whole, though, the show merges daydreams with pragmatism."
There he specifically critiqued Mr. Bell's vision as seeking to "herd newcomers to Temple Terrace, Florida, into a pair of high-tech megastructures lifted above vast urban plazas."
Finally, more substantively to me was his feeling that "For all its thoughtfulness and rigor, though, a whiff of colonialism blows through the project, with its corps of city-based experts venturing into suburbia with maps and modern technology and plans for reforming the indigenous culture. The visions they come up with have a familiar urban feel, and the show replaces old conventional wisdom with the only slightly fresher dogma of density". Is it inevitable that this sort of project/process will perhaps come across as disconnected from on the ground socio-politics and communities. I wonder how a more organic approach to the problem could be articulated, perhaps even as simple as something like OccupyourHomes but more architecturally or spatially focused....
Also, this item Housing and the 99 Percent recently posted to News feed seem apropos.
I thought I would post this interesting interview w/ Michael Bell. It seems we are always discussing ways to put architects back in the driver's seat of the building process. I thought he posed some interesting solutions to immediate, real problems.
I really liked his holistic approach of re-casting the financing business model and working with members of that community to create a new paradigm.
http://www.reuters.com/video/2012/02/14/reuters-tv-a-radical-approach-to-homeownership-feli?videoId=230166482&videoChannel=117757
I am hoping the show runs through June so I can see it in NY.
MoMA Misses by 99%: By Bryan Bell The newly opened show at the Museum of Modern Art, Foreclosed: Rehousing the A... http://bit.ly/ytqs3G
MoMA Misses by 99% http://bit.ly/AaLr3L Great insights from Bryan Bell on "Foreclosed"; Droog's/DSR's Levittown show had same issues
Good urban design is achieved through collaboration, not imposition. http://bit.ly/AaLr3L Insights from Bryan Bell on "Foreclosed" at MoMA
MT @johncaryDesign Corps' Bryan Bell claims the new "Foreclosed" exhibition at the MoMA sets design back 10 years http://bit.ly/wNi18W
http://bit.ly/jzwmxC Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream at the MoMA: By Irina Vinnitskaya(click here for o... http://huff.to/y4m7ad
[...] few months ago, we wrote a couple of times about the “Foreclosed” exhibit at MoMa (see here and here). Here is an extended “roundtable debate” about the exhibit and a paragraph of [...]
[...] seems to be provoking a lot of strong reactions (see Brian’s previous commentary here). Diana Lind, editor in chief of Next American City, questions both the motives and the [...]
Up now: Jeanne Gang, presenting our project, "The Garden in the Machine" and telling the story of Cicero,. http://bit.ly/uxXO4f #foreclosed
Up now: Jeanne Gang, presenting our project, "The Garden in the Machine" and telling the story of Cicero,. http://bit.ly/uxXO4f #foreclosed
The topic of discussion: "nature," "town & country" and the suburb is neither. http://bit.ly/uxXO4f #foreclosed
Streaming at noon: "Public Dreams & Private Needs." Teams share projects in "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream." http://bit.ly/xhjScE
Justin Davidson on MoMA's Architectural Response to the Financial Crisis (in the suburbs) -- http://bit.ly/w6oWRJ #urbanplanning, #cities
RT @inhabitat: Architects re-imagine Amer suburb for MoMA's new exhibit, “Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream.” http://bit.ly/wNs5Wk
Five brilliant ideas to fix our nation's foreclosure crisis are now on display at MoMA: http://bit.ly/zE5axn
Our exhibition site "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" (show open through July 30) has launched: http://bit.ly/yNOJZZ
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Get a glimpse of the future of #housingat "Foreclosed," new exhibit @MuseumModernArthttp://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
@Moma's take on walkable cities. View the various projects @OPinDC@DDOTDChttp://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
What do you think? RT @edestesdesign: @Moma's take on walkable cities. View the various projects @OPinDC@DDOTDChttp://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
So, the “Foreclosed” show at MoMA is not really about foreclosures. Not is it any “good”. Give it a miss. #AAG2012 moma.org/visit/calendar…
Great Cicero designs http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …MoMa's Foreclosed exhibit also re-imagines Kezier, Rialto, Temple Terrace & The Oranges.
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Rather Utopian approaches to reconfiguring US suburbs. http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …Not sure people would actually want to live in these...
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
What do you think about a bit different neighborhood ? ... http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
MOMA #Foreclosedexhibit showcases suburrbs. Are suburbs dead? We think not! #realestateNext #AmericanCity: http://americancity.org/buzz/entry/337 …
MoMA’s Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream is inspiring interesting discussions about the suburban/urban divide: http://goo.gl/MYJYy
On-target @dianalindindexreview of the suburban annihilation in MoMA's "less visionary than ignorant" Foreclosed show. http://americancity.org/buzz/entry/337 …
As an unashamed suburbanite, I'm so happy to see this whip-smart review of MoMA's Foreclosed by @dianalindindexhttp://americancity.org/buzz/entry/337 …
Wish I had more time to write this blog post, but nonetheless, thoughts on suburbia and MoMA's Foreclosed @nextamcityhttp://americancity.org/buzz/entry/337 …
Some thoughts about MoMA’s exhibit on the American Dream and the “Buell Hypothesis” What do you think Socrates… fb.me/1yZab8T3M
“Is it better to annihilate suburbia or perfect it?” bit.ly/xQy57s Check out this fantastic critique of MoMA’s “Foreclosed” exhibit.
When it rains it pours: Foreclose exhibition at MoMA http://www.metropolismag.com/pov/20120216/m …http://americancity.org/buzz/entry/337 …http://nymag.com/arts/architect …http://observersroom.designobserver.com/alexandralange …
When it rains it pours: Foreclose exhibition at MoMA http://www.metropolismag.com/pov/20120216/m …http://americancity.org/buzz/entry/337 …http://nymag.com/arts/architect …http://observersroom.designobserver.com/alexandralange …
When it rains it pours: Foreclose exhibition at MoMA http://www.metropolismag.com/pov/20120216/m …http://americancity.org/buzz/entry/337 …http://nymag.com/arts/architect …http://observersroom.designobserver.com/alexandralange …
MOMA exhibit examining foreclosures in Orange and discussing the redesign of its housing and supporting infrastructure moma.org/interactives/e…
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Important new show @MuseumModernArt- "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" http://chf.to/vZ4OUN - architecture during crisis
MoMA's new exhibit "springs from the belief that fewer and fewer Americans have or want the lives that suburbs... http://fb.me/1s7GTzCU8
Rewriting the rules of urban repair, MOS imagines an unconventional solution: http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
hey @WiedenKennedydon't worry that you're taking money from polluters like chevrolet as long as you do hipster art http://bit.ly/zVOynk
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Buell Hypothesis: examining cultural assumptions of the American Dream in the context of foreclosures & sprawl http://bit.ly/AnixCO #cplan
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/buell_hypothesis
Is MOMA's _Foreclosed_ too critical of the suburbs? http://americancity.org/buzz/entry/337 …
Would love to live in Nature City. @Workachttp://ow.ly/9fP5p
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
The Buell Hypothesis, at its most basic, argues as follows: Change the dream and you change the city http://ow.ly/9faRb #placemaking
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/buell_hypothesis
This exhibit at the MOMA on re conceptualizing housing and suburbs in the wake of the foreclosure crisis is incredible http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
RT @JenniferRaitt: Rehousing proposals. Can zoning/ local policies support them? "Foreclosed" opens at MoMA http://bit.ly/ztBuCN
Foreclosed at http://MoMA.org http://bit.ly/wQpxaR Imagining new housing models in wake of crisis. Seen on #UP#creativity#innovation
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
MOMA maps new routes through the mortgage-foreclosure crisis http://bit.ly/xezq27
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Yesterday @MuseumModernArtand visited #BuellHypothesis. Great analysis. Yet, what about the projects? http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/buell_hypothesis
@CNNhas a story today on "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream," interviews curator & architects from exhibition: http://cnnmon.ie/yrwAmr
“New MoMA exhibit rethinks foreclosure, housing & the American Dream via @PoppyHarlowCNN & @JulianCummings) http://cnnmon.ie/y7gGzB"
Building a "new america" after the foreclosure crisis: http://cnnmon.ie/zpertA #CNNMoney
"Foreclosed" at the MOMA asks what people really like about suburban living - from @langealexandra: http://dogroup.co/zCQPPb
RT @jsanchezcnn: Supercool story by @PoppyHarlowCNNon how great design could help cities w/foreclosures http://cnnmon.ie/znnAvJ
"But 'Foreclosed' seethes with disdain for the suburbs..." - @NextAmCity's Diana Lind on MoMA's new exhibit. http://americancity.org/buzz/entry/337 …
"Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" @MOMA- Architects re-imagine foreclosed cities http://ow.ly/9k5rO
Very cool: Architects re-imagine foreclosed cities http://money.cnn.com/video/news/201 …
How do you fix America's foreclosure crisis? Architects at MoMA think they have the answer. Watch: http://cnnmon.ie/ArchForeclosed …
Architects re-imagine #foreclosedcities - Video - Business News - http://goo.gl/8p7WA #realestate#fb
Thoughts on MoMA's <i>Foreclosed</i>: Rehousing the American Dream http://www.huffingtonpost.com/guy-horton/mom …via @huffingtonpost
Buildings in the streets? Check out a video on how "Architects re-imagine foreclosed cities" http://ow.ly/9l3J5
MoMA's Architectural Response to the Financial Crisis -- Suburbs, reimagined http://bit.ly/yUY2mc
A future w/o foreclosures...sort of. The CRIT: Thoughts on MoMA's Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream http://archinect.com/features/artic …
@MuseumModernArt"Foreclosed" exhibition challenged designers to reexamine the American Dream. See what changed. http://bit.ly/wqFcxE
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Not a lot of love for Moma's "Foreclosed", just check out the @ArchRecordreader comments! http://archrecord.construction.com/news/2012/02/F …
Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream | If you are visiting New York, you should see this great exhibit at the MoMA: http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/about
I'm now saving for a trip to NYC | Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream at http://MoMA.org http://bit.ly/wOPHGE
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/about/
Can I live here? Keizer, ORE. at http://MoMA.org http://bit.ly/xaQ3Tu
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …Watch the video to understand the concept. #yestermorrow
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Check out the Dwell article on 'Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream' in http://tinyurl.com/7hl5853 - praise for Nature-City
@MOMAtoday for Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream...suburban retrofitting after the crisis http://tinyurl.com/8x62xjp pic.twitter.com/MaUTyQ7G
can't wait to check this out next week: Foreclosed at http://MoMA.org http://bit.ly/wQpxaR
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
One truly impressive effort @ MOMA's #Foreclosed. Studio Gang's design. http://bit.ly/yUcYVp East test: would I live there? Yep.
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/cicero/
Architects, planners, ecologists, engineers, and landscape designers rethink suburbia at the moma.. looks cool. http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream is an exploration of new architectural possibilities for cities and... http://fb.me/TJVkk02D
"Death" of the suburban auto? Architects re-imagine foreclosed cities http://money.cnn.com/video/news/201 …via @CNNMoney
Note to MOMA's Foreclosed Exhibition Architects (and viewers). Suburban redesign that works. http://bit.ly/AxFFsp #greendesign
Suburban design: Pomp and paternalism | The Economist reviews MoMA "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" http://econ.st/wK2PHU
“Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream” Architects come up w/ eccentric ideas ina new exhibit at #MoMA. #art#designhttp://www.economist.com/blogs/prospero …
The Economist calls bullshit on the MOMA's Foreclosed exhibit. It does look like a good opportunity missed. http://ow.ly/9rSzA
Karen Kubey: Look at Your Neighborhood: Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream recently opened at the Museum o... http://huff.to/vYXagl
Nature-City: Suburban housing for agrarians at heart: Essentially, it's the kind of set-up where bot... http://bitly.com/xDINZl #composting
@We_Live_GreenHere's the Cicero, Il. plan. Fascinating. not sure i understand it all. http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/cicero/
MOS interrupted the street network with housing to make Orange a pedestrian paradise http://ow.ly/9ncre #ShiftingSuburbia
@studiogangproposed multi-family housing and rewriting the zoning code for Cicero IL http://ow.ly/9ncB4 #ShiftingSuburbia
checking out the inspiring work at Foreclosed - @MuseumModernArtloved the nature-city from @WORKac#GeoDesignhttp://bit.ly/xP50qb
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Mortgage Refinance
While interest rates have never been more attractive, the number of people taking advantage of the historically low rates and refinancing their mortgages has dropped substantially, most of them dont even aware of the rates, i recommend 123 Refinance for refinance
Is there a different kind of suburb in our future? Can you see it at MoMA's exhibition "Foreclosed"? My review is here http://bit.ly/x3tOvi
"Foreclosed" (at MOMA): Art museums can do serious political/economic/technology shows - why can't history museums?? http://j.mp/A8afgQ
Alexandra Lange: Reassembling the American Dream, a review of MOMA's "Foreclosed" http://bit.ly/yc8wCw
Open Access study: The Buell Hypothesis responds to the ongoing mortgage foreclosure crisis, not with narrow .. http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/buell_hypothesis/
'Change the dream & you change the city' - food for thought at 'Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream' exhibit, MoMA http://bit.ly/wqFcxE
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Foreclosed Homeowners Inspire Museum's Architects Show: James S. Russell: The MoMA show “Foreclosed: Rehousing t... http://bit.ly/z3Hr7D
"There's something almost colonialist about this exhibition:" Felix Salmon on MoMA's Foreclosed, http://www.architectmagazine.com/exhibitions/dr …
Architects float ideas for underwater homeowners at MoMA: http://bloom.bg/ACDs4Q #architecture#urban
Review> Hissing about suburban lawns at MoMA's Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream: http://bit.ly/y4W2dT
New show at MoMA! "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream." Ecologists, landscape designers reimagine suburbia http://bit.ly/wICVTt
Like the forum we co-sponsored on MoMA's Foreclosed exhibit, Bloomberg's James Russell http://bloom.bg/xojIY2 likes the whimsy/provocation
Dream Deferred; Felix Salmon on MoMA's "Foreclosed": one driving idea of the show holds firm, Bergdoll’s binder ... http://bit.ly/xax0BP
one driving idea of the show holds firm, Bergdoll’s binder notwithstanding: Suburbs are generally an architect-f... http://bit.ly/xax0BP
Dream Deferred; Felix Salmon on MoMA's "Foreclosed" http://bit.ly/yen7pV
What is Foreclosed? Caitlin Blanchfield reports from a Columbia Univ forum marking the opening of the MoMA/Buell exh. http://j.mp/zqbKIY
Over 20 years ago Angela Brooks was looking at this condition in a proposal in Southern California. The proposal was titled “Post Suburbia” and won a PA Award in 1992. Her proposal looks at how to add density to the tracts of single family homes by allowing new zoning and modest expansion of Single family homes to allow more dwelling units. You can see more of the proposal just posted on the Brooks + Scarpa Facebook page at:
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Brooks-Sc arpa-Architects/131136066935667
The Buell Hypothesis: "Change the dream and you change the city." Food for thought #architecture#changehttp://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/buell_hypothesis/
Some thoughts on work done and work left to do: http://bit.ly/wUvKwv #Foreclosed#MoMA#MetropolisMag
RT @kristoncapps: Bloomberg Businessweek on "Foreclosed" at @MoMA. http://buswk.co/zrVbx7 This is not a show beloved by biz writers.
Check out this post from our own Nadine Maleh re:@MuseumModernArtexhibit, "Foreclosed, Rehousing The American Dream" http://www.moma.org/explore/inside …
Though the panelists agreed that the foreclosure crisis will lead to major changes in suburban development, they... http://bit.ly/H6nSeG
If you get a chance, visit the awesome Foreclosed exhibit at MoMA NY. Reimaginations of housing models in suburbs. http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
bloomberg, has a succinct if appropriate review of the MoMA 'foreclosed' show: http://bloom.bg/ySERJf
Zago Architecture's proposal for fixing recession-ravaged Rialto, CA, showing now as part of MoMA's FORECLOSED http://curbed.cc/xTQhjk
“Shifting Suburbia” brings visionary thinking down to earth. Not top-down, give people the design tools they need. http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Re-imagined areas devastated by housing crisis for MOMA http://bit.ly/yr57AO << Brilliant use of a digital narrative
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Fascinated by Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream @MuseumModernArthttp://bit.ly/tO5FUi Great work emerging on critical subject
My review in #TheNation of #MoMA#ForeclosedShow that questions American Dream of homeownership and suburbia http://bit.ly/GLs7Z6 .
http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …Cool exhibit with work by architects, and planners, in NYC...
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Reality Check: Developers React to MoMA’s Show, “Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream” http://bit.ly/H6rXzm
Really thoughtful piece on MOMA's "Foreclosed" at polis http://www.thepolisblog.org/2012/03/new-yo …(HT@pdsmith)
I can't stop looking at the models. http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …(Read about it here: http://www.thepolisblog.org/2012/03/new-yo …) #LIFEINTHEFUTURE???
Much's been written about MoMA's Foreclosed exhibit, but when Alex Schafran writes, you should read: http://www.thepolisblog.org/2012/03/new-yo …short & sweet.
Nature buildings?? http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Foreclosed is MoMA's exhibition of proposed ideas to address the American housing problem http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Shifting #Suburbia, Developers React to MoMA's “Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream” |@ ArchRecord http://archrecord.construction.com/news/2012/03/S …
How to rehouse the American dream: The Nation's Alex Ulam on MoMA's "Foreclosed" http://bit.ly/GWfP3Q
Somehow the 'nature' in Nature City proposal for "Foreclosed" @momafeels not so relaxing. Nice models, though. pic.twitter.com/QlYmNtqx
Somehow the 'nature' in Nature City proposal for "Foreclosed" @momafeels not so relaxing. Nice models, though. pic.twitter.com/QlYmNtqx
SO COOL. I want to go! Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream at the MoMA | ArchDaily http://www.archdaily.com/199094/foreclo …via @archdaily
April 2, 2012, 1:30 p.m. - Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream http://dlvr.it/1NnPtB
April 2, 2012, 1:30 p.m. - Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream: Lectures & Gallery Talks ... http://bit.ly/HDXXJj @aplusk@theonion
gr8 project by @studiogang: Closed factory dismantled & parts used to build combinable living spaces > http://bit.ly/H88gIn #MoMAForeclosed
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/cicero/
Art + Policy , makes me giddy! Foreclosed at http://MoMA.org http://bit.ly/wQpxaR
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Just Received: "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream," the companion to the MoMA exhibition of the same name: http://amzn.to/HedrTe
5 fantastic US housing research and urban/suburban design proposals http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Change the dream and you change the city. MoMA | Foreclosed | The Buell Hypothesis | via @SpaceSyntaxGirl- http://bit.ly/HWtGGY
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/buell_hypothesis/
Smart cities: MoMA art exhibit rethinks suburban America - http://bit.ly/IgbWBr
Foreclosed: MoMA Exhibition Re-Thinks Suburban American Life http://bit.ly/I7TuQK
Foreclosed: MoMA Exhibition Re-Thinks Suburban American Life: The recent foreclosure crisis has taken a heavy t... http://bit.ly/HYOD3V
#FoxBusiness News interviewed me about my Nation article on #MoMA's exhibit Foreclosed: Rehousing The American Dream http://bit.ly/Iw8Vk4
Fox Business gets everything wrong about "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream," including the museum. http://bit.ly/Ibm8A5 #MoMA
Siza's winery, a review of Foreclosed at MoMA, April diary and Founded's rethink of the Dulux paint tin: all on http://iconeye.com now
.@baruch,@huffpostny,A Must See: Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream, MoMA,http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar …
April 15, 2012, 11:30 a.m. - Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream http://dlvr.it/1RRn7L
Have you stopped by this exhibit at the MOMA? Definitely worth your time! http://fb.me/TKfqUuhj
.@MoMA,@baruch,@huffpostny,Solutions to the Housing Crisis: Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream, MoMA,http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar …
Moma's #Foreclosedexhibitors fail to ground proposals in reality or pragmatism. http://nyti.ms/HMyoX5
Amazing work by @Workac& others at Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream at http://MoMA.org http://bit.ly/tO5FUi
Foreclosed exhibit @ MoMA - Museum of Modern Art http://instagr.am/p/JvMhFViGXk/
An exhibit I saw at MoMA. Very interesting and impressive architectural project. :) Foreclosed at http://MoMA.org http://bit.ly/wQpxaR
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
The CRIT: Thoughts on MoMA's Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream | Features | Archinect http://fb.me/1mBUJqjDR
innovative approaches to re-designing suburbs sustainably - exhibition at MOMA http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …@MGCY_UNCSD#sustainability
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
@namhendersonre : @iconeyereview of #MoMAForeclosed forgot, link here http://www.iconeye.com/news/news/fore …
RT @namhenderson: on #MoMAForeclosed Rehousing the American Dream "This sort of vague, non-ideological collectivism" http://www.iconeye.com/news/news/fore …
A MUST: #MoMAExhibition "Half of America live in suburbs - treated as inhospitable wilderness" - http://bit.ly/whHkX2 /@NYMAG
Policy: Can #Architecture#Innovationsave Suburbs? MoMA for new alliance of planning & building #cities. http://bit.ly/whHkX2
[POLICY] Can Architecture Innovation save Suburbs? #MoMAfor new alliance of planning #citieshttp://bit.ly/whHkX2 /RT @Bernd_Fesel
MOMA Exhibition. Foreclosed. Rehousing the American Dream. MOS’s Thoughts on a Walking City pr http://pinterest.com/pin/2426314986 …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
foreclosed: rehousing the american dream @ Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) http://instagr.am/p/KVh-tVFBxw/
Discover what we love about MOMA's latest architecture exhibition in todays blog post http://anchalproject.wordpress.com/2012/05/14/mom …
MOMA's "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" Exhibition
@metropolismagon MoMA: Foreclosed "struck me as yet another poster child for The MoMA Problem" http://bit.ly/L4Ikby #REITs
Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream at http://MoMA.org http://bit.ly/tO5FUi
A look at visions for the future of housing - Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream at the MoMA http://huff.to/wa93fX via @HuffPostCulture
Checking out: "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" (@ Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) w/ 24 others) [pic]: http://4sq.com/JSUVkm
Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream, in which I ramble on about MoMa and architecture: http://theoncominghope.blogspot.com/2012/05/art-as …#architecture#moma
Hehe, nice text!
The German architectural magazine “Bauwelt” wrote about the exhibit too and – if i remember correctly – fancied the artsiest “solution” the most… anyway, it’s very refreshing, that BUILD has both feet on the ground :)
The Bauwelt review mentioned above is actually predominantly critical of the MoMA exhibition. Just some quick snippets: Susanne Schindler, Princton, writes that her first impression was along the line “seen it all before”. And that the mix and application of those styles/solutions was not always justified (Temple Town, FL). Most teams had given only cursory answers to the obvious and essential question of ownership. What’s more, with the exception of Gang Studio those answers did not seem to have influenced the proposals. Schindler also finds it strange that only Gang Studio has actually used the forclosed, now empty spaces in the solution of the problem they are part of. She laudes MOS Architects, NYC, for playing to the museum setting.
http://www.bauwelt.de/cms/artikel.html?id=5504855#.T9DDM5ig9ac
Aft'noon @Foreclosed, v. thoughtful show on alternative suburban living by @columbiaunivarchitect Prof. Martin @MOMApic.twitter.com/3Ugp1A25
Modern Art: : Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream: Febru... http://bit.ly/K994x0 - Robert Lyn Nelson
Foreclosed:#Housing the #American Dream – mixing urbanism, debt & #architecture archinect.com/features/artic…
Thoughts on MoMA`s Foreclosed:... http://tinyurl.com/6u6ypzx #adaptablere-use #affordable#architecture#design#green#sustainable
#Keizer#Oregonfeatured in amazing @MuseumModernArt#sustainable#housingexhibit featuring @WiedenKennedyhttp://ow.ly/bdkCI
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Build Blog » MOMA widens the gap … again. http://blog.buildllc.com/2012/05/moma-w …via @DiigoThe folks at BUILD LLC aren't too happy with "Foreclosed".
Redesigning suburbia in exhibition Foreclosed at http://MoMA.org http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …#d#suburbia#urbanculture
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
"Pretty Little Pictures" Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream http://www.metropolismag.com/story/20120511 …#MOMAouch!
Archive: Foreclosed: Reverse #engineering| Jesse Keenan #housing#infrastructurehttp://www.moma.org/explore/inside …
Amazing exhibit on redefining our suburbias but changing the 'America Dream'. Worth seeing if you're able http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …#MOMA
My favorite was Garden City. public pool is warmed by the heat radiated from the methane composting site underneath it! http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/keizer/
@EC1Nnope! This was on though, really excellent, might interest you http://www.moma.org/explore/inside …
Of all the art & sculpture at #MOMAthis was the standout- really interesting ideas http://www.moma.org/explore/inside …
Nature City: city-living in nature. Impossible? http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …#innovation#greenliving#citylife
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/keizer/
Love that this vision of a future city is basically a remix of classic townhouse design. Lets focus on reuse/repurpose. http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/keizer/
Rethink the designs of our suburban landscapes. http://www.moma.org/explore/inside …
MoMa's blog on ‘Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream’. Sustainable urbanism http://www.moma.org/explore/inside …
Super interesting exposition at MoMa. Forclosed: Rehousing the American Dream. Revitalizing suburbia in the US http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/keizer/
Amale Andraos and Dan Wood of WORKac asked, "What if we could live sustainably and close to nature?">>> Nature-City. http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/keizer/
New blog posting, Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream at MoMa - http://tinyurl.com/c4jxwfs
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
MoMA | Foreclosed: The Role of the Team in the Design Process http://fb.me/21P5zUi5D
MoMA | Foreclosed: The Role of the Team in the Design Process http://fb.me/21P5zUi5D
"In the summer of 2011, New York's Museum of Modern Art invited five teams of architects, planners, ecologists,... http://fb.me/24gFxCald
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
The beauty of architecture and creative problem solving - MoMa's solutions to the Housing Crisis in the USA http://archidose.org/wp/2012/06/11/ …
Closing down Foreclosed #Suburbstake on MoMA #architecture(@ Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) w/ 7 others) [pic]: http://4sq.com/LEBVqR
Closing down Foreclosed #Suburbstake on MoMA #architecture(@ Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) w/ 7 others) [pic]: http://4sq.com/LEBVqR
The "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" exhibit at @MuseumModernArtis worth checking out. http://moma.org/foreclosed
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Interesting for me to read that Rodney King apparently lived & died in Rialto, CA. http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …Has anyone picked up on that story?
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/rialto/
Check out MoMa's "Foreclosed" project! Five teams of architects, ecologists, city planners put together visions... http://fb.me/1tStIYQAk
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
note to self: http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …#urbanplanning
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
@schuschnyTHE BUELL HYPOTHESIS, Rehousing the american Dream http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …#vivirencomunidad
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/buell_hypothesis/
Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream at http://MoMA.org http://bit.ly/tO5FUi
Brilliant: Go see Foreclosed exhibit @MuseumModernArtCan US remake suburbs post-crash? Architects tackle 5 communities http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
MrCotain: Thoughts on MoMA`s Foreclosed:... http://tinyurl.com/6u6ypzx #adaptablere-use #affordable#architecture#design#green#sustainableI...
http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …Saw this exhibit on Friday...just wow. This will change the world.
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/keizer/
Great roundtable debate on @designobserveraround MOMA's Foreclosed exhibition: http://places.designobserver.com/feature/forecl …
Here is debate about the MOMa exhibit where RTTC Alliance and organizations are mentioned as being at the... http://fb.me/28jBzUIxN
In Places, a virtual roundtable about Foreclosed (on view through August 13), a collaboration between MoMA and th... http://gsapp.org/l2p
Totally going to see this exhibit at @museummodernartwhen I am in NYC: Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar …
On Places, a debate inspired by the MoMA exhibition Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream, organized by the B... http://bit.ly/OkzuhV
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Have folks seen the foreclosure exhibit at the MOMA-Rehousing the American Dream? Please check it out.... http://fb.me/1IoHNJPhM
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
RT @ourcityforeclosure exhibit at the MOMA-Rehousing the American Dream Please check it out http://fb.me/1IoHNJPhM << wish I cld see this ...
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Appreciate Tom Angotti's remarks in @PlacesJournalroundtable on MoMA's Foreclosed: design is not primary http://bit.ly/NxrSm1
@jaredhechtDid you see the Foreclosed exhibit at MOMA? Really cool stuff related to that shift. http://www.moma.org/foreclosed/
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream @ Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) http://instagr.am/p/Md4MjBvx5N/
#foreclosedhomes | Art (not) imitating life: MoMA hosts foreclosure-themed exhibit http://bit.ly/OM6Z6s | http://ow.ly/c1a1A
Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream: Lectures & Gallery Talks ... http://bit.ly/ONxpJn @aplusk@theonion
Rehousing the American Dream - #Foreclosed, fantastic book featuring @jfl184James Lima working with #WORKac~ http://www.archdaily.com/199094/foreclosed-rehousing-the-american-dream-at-the-moma/ …
Rehousing the American Dream - #Foreclosed, fantastic book featuring @jfl184James Lima working with #WORKac~ http://www.archdaily.com/199094/foreclosed-rehousing-the-american-dream-at-the-moma/ …
One of the most interesting museum exhibits I've ever seen: Foreclosed at http://MoMA.org http://bit.ly/wQpxaR @MuseumModernArt
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
@VisionVancouver@greenestcityMaking silk purses out of sows' ears? MOMA, "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/exhibitions/1230 …
MoMA Foreclosed - http://bit.ly/Q7OpwH - great exhibit! - #cplan#design#architecture#housing#sustainability
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
I attended this exhibition - some innovative ideas for delivering infrastructure and financing housing projects....... http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/ …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Portie Kunst Foreclosed: An Urbanist Reflects on Nature-City http://ow.ly/1lA3xV
Foreclosed: An Urbanist Reflects on Nature-City: The Museum of Modern Art and The Buell Center invited a series ... http://bit.ly/PLWZeC
Foreclosed: An Urbanist Reflects on Nature City moma.org/explore/inside…by @jfl184 #Architecture #urbanDesign #foreclosed
#foreclosedhomes | MoMA | Foreclosed: An Urbanist Reflects on Nature-City http://bit.ly/NQIF4x | http://ow.ly/c1a1A
A talk with Galina Tachieva, author of 'The Sprawl Repair Manual'
http://grist.org/article/2010-12-15-a-talk-with-galina-tachieva-author-of-the-sprawl-repair-manual/
Sprawl Repair Manual
http://www.amazon.com/Sprawl-Repair-Manual-Galina-Tachieva/dp/1597267325
Check Out Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream at MoMA http://bit.ly/tO5FUi
Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream at MoMA ow.ly/cqHOf
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
MOMA's Foreclosed, a thematic exhibition on new models of housing in response to mortgage crisis, closes soon: http://bit.ly/wQpxaR
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
MoMA | Foreclosed http://fb.me/1Xurkl94V
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Need a break from the Olympics? Only 2 days left to see @MuseumModernArt's Foreclosed exhibit. http://ow.ly/cz2lo
Foreclosed at http://MoMA.org http://bit.ly/wQpxaR
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Here's some great coverage from Reuters and @MacroScopeon the Buell Center's work with @MoMAon "Foreclosed" http://ow.ly/cH5cF
From the Museum of Modern Art in New York's exhibition on Foreclosure...http://t.co/huK8wTwk http://fb.me/19v8pOS4v
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream February 15–August 13, 2012:... http://fb.me/1kOFY0oEW
@rachelsloerts Thinking of you at the #MoMAexhibit, http://MoMA.org/foreclosed http://instagr.am/p/N6jZShS_Ts/
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
'Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream' explores new architectural possibilities for cities and suburbs #MOMAhttp://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/ …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Portie Kunst Foreclosed: Re-examining Possibilities - As we prepare for the closing and de-installation of Foreclose... http://ow.ly/1lSQg5
Foreclosed: Re-examining Possibilities: As we prepare for the closing and de-installation of Foreclosed: Rehousi... http://bit.ly/MvNpLG
'Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream' featuring #GrahamGrantee#AndrewZagocloses 8/13. Go now! @MuseumModernArthttp://bit.ly/wqFcxE
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
closing this Monday at MoMA: "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" (FREE w/ valid CUNY ID!) http://ow.ly/cRfaY
The CRIT: Thoughts on MoMA's Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream http://lnkd.in/dbBX_M
A #NYCmust see…“@MuseumModernArt: Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream: http://bit.ly/MoD8pf || Exhibition site: http://bit.ly/NuiBvI ”
Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream closes Monday, 8/13! More info: http://bit.ly/MoD8pf || Exhibition site: http://bit.ly/NuiBvI
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
MT @MuseumModernArtForeclosed: Rehousing the American Dream closes Monday, 8/13! Exhibition site: http://bit.ly/NuiBvI
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
A #NYCmust see…“@MuseumModernArt: Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream: http://bit.ly/MoD8pf || Exhibition site: http://bit.ly/NuiBvI ”
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
A quick note that we'll be open tomorrow (we're usually closed on Tuesdays) & every Tuesday through September 25! http://bit.ly/MUaCpI
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream: Lectures & Gallery Tal... http://bit.ly/MRonwO @aplusk@theonion
Next on my reading list: The Buell Hypothesis: http://ow.ly/cZmOQ #endofsuburbia
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Really bummed I missed the MOMA exhibit "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream"Did you get to see it? http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/exhibitions/1230 …Impressions?
Professional Practice (97)
May 25, 2011, @ 9:27 am
May 24, 2011, @ 6:13 pm
"we believe to operate as avant-hyper-self-conscious architects." #MOShttp://www.moma.org/explore/inside …
Arianna - You always write timely, intelligent and articulate posts. Among the most important salient points in your article today is your noting that 'we have a surplus of untapped energy and creativity and talent'. Being a creative professional myself, I do not have the words to describe the devastation myself and my colleagues have suffered during this recession - financially, emotionally and even physically. Brilliant, highly educated and experienced graphic designers, interior designers, architects, painters, artists, musicians, dancers, etc. who have made our country a better place by improving the quality of everything we see, hear, touch, taste and feel have been tossed aside. Many were self-employed and are not able to obtain any unemployment insurance or other types of assistance. Others have been forced to do work where their skills, intellect and ability are demeaned by ridiculously low pay, poor treatment and complete disregard for their talent and the positive aspects it provides. At least during the last depression , the WPA and similar programs existed to tap into these talents and provide recognition, work and intellectual relief to this forgotten segment of our society. Disregarding these talented, creative individuals is proving to be one of the greatest downfalls of our society. It's tragic, sad and truly un-American.
It is our Post-Modern condition. We have focused so much in ‘consuming’ that it has made us forget about the true meaning of ‘design’. Designers have forgotten about their social purpose, and have focused on the consumer driving tools to fulfill people’s desires. However, not everything is lost. I feel that modernism is coming back strong once again because is becoming a necessity of our future societies.
I am afraid design has lost touch with the sacred. Solutions that do not revere our connection and dependence on nature are Band-Aids. Foreclosure is the result of a capitalist business model on two fronts. First, homes are built on inexpensive land that require infrastructure. Less expensive than infill, the market is sold a bigger is better value, demeaning the essence of design itself. Inexpensive, huge homes have destroyed millions of acres of farmland and aquifers and are ready to do so again after the recession is over regardless of what you do at MoMA. These homes are expensive and are deteriorating rapidly. Second, a failed industry at the core is not in a position to repair itself without a new revolutionary system approach only slightly identified in LEED and the Green Building initiative.
There must be a return to the building practices from the past that had one core leader in the design and delivery process. Trained as an engineer, these master builders were schooled in a natural, sacred geometric methodology that was philosophical and practical. The difference between this and our existing 3 tiered architect, engineer and builder approach is innate conflict.
A building is a sacred thing, manifest from nature and in accordance with her underlying principles. Until we regain this relationship, any attempts to solve our nightmare of expensive, cheap, environmentally dysfunctional buildings will be superficial. A much deeper view of the problem is the challenge and the work is philosophical,spiritual,professional and health related.
In 2007, the overlapping worlds of architecture and design, much like the worlds of politics and finance and thus of building and spatial development more generally, were very much persuaded that the old laws of cycles and periods had definitively yielded to new models of uninterrupted growth and limitless possibilities — and perhaps even the transcendence of the cyclical and sometimes violent swings of economic growth and building demand. That mood now seems hard to recapture. The neologism "starchitect" has lost much of its luster; indeed, it seems increasingly clear that the term did little service even to the handful of design talents whose works were thus lauded according to some superficial criteria of relevance largely to affluent citizens of the G20 countries. In any case, it is no longer a viable role model for future designers, given that the subprime mortgage crisis and economic crash have been accompanied by an equally impressive crash of new commissions for expensive private houses and showy museum additions, the building types that sustained the starchitect portfolio.
Thank you, Barry, for helping us learn from architecture's past and enabling us to benefit from great minds working to solve the new problems we face today. Your thought-provoking exhibitions are a serve to all who are grappling with the environmental, social, financial and other issues that keep us awake at night. Thanks for providing us with forum for discussion to discover a range of solutions.
photo piece of the plight of Detroit along with a possible solution involving GIVING homes and commercial property or free rent to folks outside the city; photos of recipients revamping them and buisinesses starting up to support the new arrivals.
theme; how creativity along with left brain thinking can be used to solve vitsl cultural problems!
or pass on to “New Yorker” magazine for One City’s Museum of TOTAL Creativity Helps Save the Culture of Another
As far as pre-fab construction. there is nothing wrong with it, so long as it abides by building codes. My home in Florida requires cinderblock framing for the ground floor...for hurricane resistance. Even though we're more than 50 miles from the coast, it's just the way it is here. Many people assume that something different is always bad. That's not the case. The house is gorgeous, with a nice stucco exterior, and nice finishes inside. It was still relatively affordable for a brand new house...and would have been less had I not had a porch, lanai, or extra room added.
I agree that a LOT of new constructions are wasteful, and people worry more about getting granite counter tops, high end appliances, upgraded fixtures, etc....instead of getting something more functional and workable. That's what many people want, but they shouldn't be complaining when their mortgage is much higher than mine or can't afford their "dream house". Cookie cutter houses are fine if that is what is in your budget. I won't complain about them. :)
December 20, 2011 at 3:01 pm
December 20, 2011 at 12:36 pm
Thank you for critiquing the collaboration process. As President of the Board of Directors for The Wildlands Network, we applaud your efforts in attempting to include ‘rewilding’ into this concept. And while it is encouraging that the design team included an ecologist, it is most unfortunate that the execution did not respect your input. We see this time and again, where some sort of abstract design aesthetic is forced onto the landscape, marginalizing or worse yet, ignoring the basic tenants of ecology, and then championed in the name of ‘sustainability’. Once again, it goes to show that many architects (and landscape architects) talk a good talk about ecological issues but rarely understand the science and almost certainly don’t know how to fully integrate sound ecological principles into their work. The two are not mutually exclusive.
“@MuseumModernArt: "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream." http://bit.ly/wt5ecc ” /// important of process vs. product in isolation
2/17/2012 11:23 AM CST
2/17/2012 9:58 AM CST
2/16/2012 11:43 AM CST
- The focus of WALKac's urbanism is a giant compost heap anchoring their plan.
- Studio Gang envisions a world where residences look like scaleless shipping containers.
- Andrew Zago thinks the future rests in a childish vision of LegoLand with skewed walls.
I’m surprised Barry Bergdoll let his name be associated with such obvious rot. No doubt pretentious architects will buy into this. It fulfills their idea of themselves as intellectuals even as it highlights the degree to which they have not fully developed as sentient human beings.
2/16/2012 10:56 AM CST
2/14/2012 3:23 PM CST
2/14/2012 3:14 PM CST
Problem no. 1 for architects today is entering and starting to lead that discussion. Otherwise we will be ignored... vigorously. And probably planners are more important in the discussion than architects.
James W. Hadley AIA (aka anonymous)
2/13/2012 2:54 PM CST
2/23/2012 5:05 PM CST
2/23/2012 6:01 PM CST
2/25/2012 2:22 PM CST
3/2/2012 2:07 AM CST
I am 62 years old.
I have worked honestly & hard my whole life (since I was 14) because that is how you "realize the American Dream."
I was a home builder & designer.
In 1980, the "Savings & Loan Crisis" forced me out of work & out of business. (The gov’t helped the banks survive ...)
In 2007, the "Sub-prime Mortgage Crisis" crushed me again. I lost my home, my wife & my belief in that "American Dream." (The gov’t saved the banks again ...)
I thought I would post this interesting interview w/ Michael Bell. It seems we are always discussing ways to put architects back in the driver's seat of the building process. I thought he posed some interesting solutions to immediate, real problems.
I really liked his holistic approach of re-casting the financing business model and working with members of that community to create a new paradigm.
http://www.reuters.com/video/2012/02/14/reuters-tv-a-radical-approach-to-homeownership-feli?videoId=230166482&videoChannel=117757
I am hoping the show runs through June so I can see it in NY.
I really liked his holistic approach of re-casting the financing business model and working with members of that community to create a new paradigm.
For architecture to reach its full potential the public must be involved, inviting designers to be a part of their conversations and solutions in addressing social needs. But before this happens, the public must first understand the newly-emerging role of design. And it is here that this show wastes so much possibility and a timely opportunity.
Her response was: "So, how is life with the 1%?" After a career in design, I certainly didn't feel like a member of the 1%, but from my view of the champagne bar in the VIP lounge it was clear that I was in close proximity. Then, I began to wonder:
Has "design" become an activity of, by, and for the 1%?
Wednesday, February 22 at 6:05pm
One of the answers to "what is it that you really need?" is, probably, NOT architects.
Since well over 90% of the building in America is done without the aid of an architect, it seems that, particularly in the foreclosed suburbs, an architect is a luxury, a status symbol, and one of the first things to be cut.
Certainly architects can bring value to a project- but, in most cases, its not monetary value, and, in fact, it usually adds quite a bit of cost to any project, well beyond the fee, to bring an architect in.
This is a recession based on financial shenanigans, not one caused by a lack of good design.
I fail to see how, in most exurbs, good design will have any affect on the financial aspects that caused this - the lack of jobs, the predatory lending practices, the upside down real estate market, and the inability of many to sell their homes without going bankrupt.
The reason there is a chasm between urban architects and suburban "architecture" is because the stuff they build in the suburbs is driven by an entirely different set of desires, fashions, fantasies, and, most importantly, price points.
MB: […] In the 1990s you had a booming economy, you had a kind ofpush to alter, if not end, the welfare state. By the 2000s, you have a real estate bubble. And today you have a foreclosure crisis. But in all of these situations, there are a couple things that have been consistent. The amount of money people spend on housing and transportation is immense. They can’t afford it. You don’t want to tell people they can’t afford something and say that’s the reason to change. You want to be more positive than that. But there are many, many factors about affordability, about energy consumption, and frankly about the role of design in any of it. The American single-family house is a commodity product that has virtually no research and development, no design. Architects, in a spec house in Houston in the late 1990s—their fee was about twelve dollars per house. These are mass-produced commodities. There is no professional engagement. […] I think most of the people in this exhibition are quite
positive and excited about the suburbs. We know it’s a deeply, deeply important part of the American ethos, if not just everyday life of course. But, they’re not inevitable. And the financial underpinnings of them have really dramatically shifted in the last five, ten, fifteen years—not just the last two.
CH: Talk about that R&D thing. You made a point in the video in the exhibition that blew my mind about the comparison between how much money in R&D goes into your iPhone or anti-lock brakes versus an American home.
MB: I did mention anti-lock brakes. For many commodities, before they hit the market, there are billions of dollars that might precede it, whether it’s Clorox or whether it’s an iPhone or a Honda Civic which is quite an ingenious product. Housing as we know it has kind of ironed all of that
out of it, and it did it a long time ago. […] They are paying Mercedes Benz prices for a twenty-year-old used car. The single-family house market atomizes out all of the financial processes, and you still are spending large sums of money, but you’re not getting the sophisticated product. It’s not that it’s not a nice product or something people love, but it could be much, much better in energy and everything else.
RT @jsanchezcnn: Supercool story by @PoppyHarlowCNNon how great design could help cities w/foreclosures http://cnnmon.ie/znnAvJ
Here we go again - architects attempting to be the deciders on who lives in a cooked up utopian paradise. I agree with Dee - didn't we go through this before - actually several times before - go back to Lutyens and others pre-Victorian UK for other references. This argument is as old as time in architecture circles and frankly something I believe in my bones architects need to stay way far away from.
The problems associated with the current debacle in housing goes way beyond just cooking up alternatives to a model that for decades had worked pretty well until the restraints of the banking system and the policy makers in DEE CEE were unshackled. Thank you Barney Frank, Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, Sarbanes / Oxley, CRA, Derivatives, MBS, CDO's, Wall Street, Glass Steagle (no more), FHA, HMA, Phil Gramm, Rudman, Fannie, Freddie, National Assoc. of Realtors, Mortgage Banking Association, TARP, QE whatever, Helicopter Ben, HARP, HAMP, Obama and the porkulus - the list of imposters posing as statesmen and policy wonks and their attendant fixes goes on and on. To just read this article on the surface and agree would be in my humble opinion horribly misguided and naive.
Wake up architects - putting the design blinders on only will not serve you nor your clients well. A much broader and active view is needed - bone up on economics, finance, politics, local government, proper spheres of authority, the scriptures - you name it. Without a broader and DEEPER view of the market the profession will continue to wallow in the ditch it finds itself in, unable to provide any added value to projects and their sponsoring clients. Clients want value - not just ideas!!! And one final thing......
I LIKE LIVING IN THE SUBURBS!!!
At the same time, however, these projects also suffer from this sense of urgency. They do not, in fact, discuss one key question, which is central to contemporary architectural debate and is concerned with the instruments which are available to architectural practitioners. The open question is this: why should the solution to all problems always be the same one: the building of new architecture? Nobody here has really moved towards other and more radical solutions, which move beyond the very idea of an architectural project.
As Deb Gans made clear in her interview on this website, it's critical that architects in 2012 address both formalism and green issues. It's not enough to be either/or. Either/or is only doing half an architect's job, and that's not enough. Everyone deserves access to progressive contemporary design, rich people, poor people, Americans, Africans, everyone. It's about equality and respect and not patronizing people.
3/23/2012 1:46 PM CDT
Of course it's rubbish and will never get built. I have an American friend who is an architect and he tells me that due to the economic situation unemployment amongst architects is exceptionally high maybe 50%. This is probably just a marketing ploy by the company to get their name in the headlines by being controversial, similar ploys are used by artists to get their names around and create a level of recognition in the so called liberal elite who always know what is best for everyone else.
He said architecture can't fix the foreclosure crisis or solve all the many economic problems facing communities but it can come up with ideas for making those towns less prone to economic calamity.
I say keep trying.
"There's something almost colonialist about this exhibition:" Felix Salmon on MoMA's Foreclosed, http://www.architectmagazine.com/exhibitions/dr …
There’s the publishing world of architecture – propagated by academics and starchitects – and then there’s the people with offices in almost every town doing the best they can. The former develop illustrious careers, building reputations instead of structures. The latter do the best they can, which is rarely enough.
Some architects (including me) want to be artists, and you don’t get into a show at MoMA by proposing moderate, affordable, pragmatic solutions to housing problems. And despite prevailing sterotypes, architects don’t really have that much control over the final outcome. It takes good taste and good money to create good buildings, and since the first two are in short supply these days, so is the third.
I wonder how little this office pays... if at all
I didn't see the exhibit in person like you did, Alex, but I did read about it. The part that really got under my skin was when I read that the participants, to prepare for this exhibition, had spent some time "in residence" at PS 1 in Long Island City.
Would it really have killed them to spend some time in -- gasp -- actual suburbs? I guess that was just a bridge too far.
It confirmed my pre-existing notion, which I think you echo, that architecture, generally speaking, is not a discipline that has much that's meaningful to contribute towards these issues of redefining the American Dream. To critique it and to change it, it's helpful to have even a smidgen of understanding of why it's powerful and widespread among so many people.
shtrum said…
At the risk of playing devil’s advocate, MOMA is only doing what MOMA does. But blaming them for popular culture is like blaming Lady Gaga for bologna sandwiches.
If architects want to know why only 2% of housing is designed by architects, they only need look in a mirror. A $200+/sf mirror.
Did i mention i was playing devil’s advocate? :)
The beauty of architecture and creative problem solving - MoMa's solutions to the Housing Crisis in the USA http://archidose.org/wp/2012/06/11/ …
The disappointment expressed by Mr. Martin, that none of the teams used a public process to inform their entry is legitimate. Based upon lectures at the Alaska Design Forum, it appears that many designers have little interaction with the end users, whether it is housing stock or another product. The most apparently successful designers are those who engage the end users, whether it is residents of Medellin, Colombia, Aboriginal Australians, or buyers at Sacks 5th Avenue.
Mr. Agnotti accurately summarized the problem, that we cannot design ourselves out of a problem, whether it is sprawl, foreclosures, or racial divides. The faith in design to solve problems is similar to the faith in technology to solve our problems. Perhaps it would be useful to step out of the the world view that seems to inhabit these conversations and look for a different one. Take as an example that of social work, where they ideally look for and base their work on the clients' strengths and desires. Lecturing or telling society to change, without asking why it should or what currently drives the actions, will just result in frustration and a smaller and smaller audience.
07.05.12 at 02:52
Appreciate Tom Angotti's remarks in @PlacesJournalroundtable on MoMA's Foreclosed: design is not primary http://bit.ly/NxrSm1
Quality of Life (65)
Arianna - You always write timely, intelligent and articulate posts. Among the most important salient points in your article today is your noting that 'we have a surplus of untapped energy and creativity and talent'. Being a creative professional myself, I do not have the words to describe the devastation myself and my colleagues have suffered during this recession - financially, emotionally and even physically. Brilliant, highly educated and experienced graphic designers, interior designers, architects, painters, artists, musicians, dancers, etc. who have made our country a better place by improving the quality of everything we see, hear, touch, taste and feel have been tossed aside. Many were self-employed and are not able to obtain any unemployment insurance or other types of assistance. Others have been forced to do work where their skills, intellect and ability are demeaned by ridiculously low pay, poor treatment and complete disregard for their talent and the positive aspects it provides. At least during the last depression , the WPA and similar programs existed to tap into these talents and provide recognition, work and intellectual relief to this forgotten segment of our society. Disregarding these talented, creative individuals is proving to be one of the greatest downfalls of our society. It's tragic, sad and truly un-American.
The challenge now is not in our ability to solve problems but in our core values as fellow human beings. The American Dream is gone as we knew it. Homes have become unhealthy physically, spiritually and soulfully. Our families are broken, medications are excessive and stress has filled our lives. Homes used to be our sacred space but today it is the cause of of distress.
How did this happen?
After a career in home design and building I became acutely aware of the pressure to have bigger and bigger homes. At the same time we have lost millions of acres of land to sprawl and the reports are in that sprawl causes heart attack and stroke because people are not moving enough. On top of this, our water is disappearing and our air is heavy because corporate builders are profit driven and have no concern for the health of the homeowner. Joined with unethical bankers, the US homeowner has poorly built expensive homes. 1/4 of homes are under water financially as poorly built ones depreciate faster than people can afford to maintain.
There are a couple of solutions that can recapture our dream. By taking personal responsibility in what we purchase we can regain control. In home design and building, choose smaller, better built homes. Buy on an existing grid and use local builders and materials. Smaller, infill homes will immediately change the quality of life we experience and we recapture the sacred core of our homesteads.
I like this design a lot better than our current Keizer Station layout. I almost dread going to Keizer Station because I always take the long way to get to where I am going. I just can’t figure out the roads. It’s confusing.
A tourist from Georgia once confronted me in the Lowes parking lot and asked me how to get to Target because he had seen it from the freeway. He seemed intelligent enough. I laughed because I told him that I live in Keizer and still can’t figure it out. I gave him the best directions I could and wished him luck. He said “Thank you for the directions and hope I can find my way back to the freeway”. I wished him good luck yet again.
I am dependent on my automobile to go from one store to the next. I love going to Bridgeport Village. Parking is a problem but once you park, it’s a pleasure to walk from store to store. And there is such variety. I can even take in a movie after shopping. It’s just an attractive place to visit. It’s inviting. The footprint of Bridgeport is so small compared to Keizer Station. It’s just a total waste of land. Too bad we can’t just start over.
I just can’t wait for the Mayor’s, Chamber of Commerce’s and the council’s Walmart to be built. Doubt that Walmart was envisioned initially but we have to please Chuck Sides. Hey, doesn’t he owe the city back taxes? Oh, he is immune to paying taxes. Too bad, the city could use the money.
Truth is, the Great Migration destroyed the great cities of Detroit, Cleveland, Chicago (Orly the Daley’s could hold this wondrously toddlin’ town together; Rahm’s clueless), Newark, L.A., Philadelphia and NYC. They aren’t coming back. Neither are places like Orange and Irvington, the former Camptown. Parasites will use our tax dollars in a quixotic attempt to recapture history, while pocketing some easy Money. Then, a thesis can be griten, a PhD for someone’s daughter in Urban Planning? Sure, why not? Then, a fellowship on the tazxpayers’ cuff. The rip-off.
It seems like only yesterday, that I could hop on the bus, for a dime, with friends and go “downtown”, to catch a ballgame, a movie or just mingle with the delightful crowds. Then, around 1958, that became dangerous for kids under 15….then under 20….then EVERYONE. The jostling started. The Huggins, the 5 vs. 2 shakedowns. The stabbings and the shootings and the rapes. A cannonball, they said, could be fired down every “Main Street”, without injuring a soul…because everyone had fled. What a helluva migration, as we look back over what was, and can never be again. Only yesterday.
I think nurturing an arts community is also about creating community. In an increasily mobile society being alienated, or not feeling part of a community is a very real and common thing. The arts help bring back the community!
To respond to the way the blocks are designed, Levittown blocks are a bit of a labyrinth, which makes it difficult for criminals seeking to rob homes to navigate. If any home is robbed, it's usually an inside job. Levittown is surrounded by low-crime neighborhoods demographically, so there's no "spillage" of crime over its borders, and as someone pointed out, has no direct connection to the LIRR, so yes, it's insular, and this is why there is a very low crime rate. This is a reason why I bought in Levittown.
Why else did I buy in Levittown? THE SCHOOL DISTRICT. Levittown's teachers' union had a landmark case in the U.S. Supreme Court, and as a result, their teachers are paid at the top of the Long Island pay scale, on par with districts like Great Neck. In education you get what you pay for!
My daughter, a Levittown graduate, attends Harvard and seminars at MIT. Levittown schools worked with me to groom her and remediate a learning disability she had. So whomever said nobody from Levittown becomes a professional is WRONG. I'm surprised the writer of this article missed mentioning the excellent schools.
As for the Village Greens, it was also missed by the writer and in comments that libraries are often found at the Village Greens. And each family got a pool pass so they could swim FOR FREE all summer long. The Greens still have concerts during the summer, and have little shops. Levittown has some very nice perks.
I left after my family was raised, and after Nassau County re-assessed my property taxes and TRIPLED them over a period of three years. But dollar for dollar, Levittown served its purpose for me. My child got an excellent education in a non-violent, quiet, fairly unspoiled and unpretentious community. Oh, and for the record, the "white trash" element hasn't been able to afford to live in Levittown since the 80s.
December 21, 2011 at 8:51 pm
December 20, 2011 at 5:44 pm
December 20, 2011 at 2:26 pm
December 20, 2011 at 1:15 pm
The suburban dream isn't the same for them, she said.
"It'll never happen again," she said of the suburban boom.
And that's too bad: "It was a much nicer way of living."
Is this Art or propaganda? I left apartment living for the suburbs and have no intention of moving back to high density.
6 Months Ago
2/15/2012 1:56 PM CST
Their design responses always seem to find answers in central planning socialism (or communism) where the lord in charge decrees how the little people shall live. In the context of the greatest economy on earth, these solutions always vary from amusing and trendy to useless. Ironically and predictably, the housing solutions generated by real world socialists and communists are among the worst on the planet!
Two years ago I outlined a grant project to design and build "the next American Home" using an award winning, very expensive, AE design and development team that no market rate home owner could ever afford. My local region's weather, utility rates, standard of living, aesthetic sensibilities and real estate market would all form the basis for this project. Once constructed, it would be leased and its overall performance measured over years – including elements like comfort, pride of ownership and livability in addition to the boring engineering stuff like energy performance.
The goal would be to offer a platform for the next generation of America’s homebuilders to reference when that industry recovers. I will not give away all the beans because I may resurrect it someday but needless to say, even in this economy I became too busy to fuss around with it.
2/13/2012 4:12 PM CST
Sub-urban and suburban are also two very different things. I would argue that sub-urban is not bad. A good example of this is in some parts of Brooklyn, Queens, and Nassau county NY. The density is greater than the typical suburban environment, and there is a small business walkable street scape that flanks a mix of multi and single family housing in many of these neighborhoods. There is also access to public transit in and out of the city. There is a mix of home owners and renters, and the opportunity to own a house and rent out the top floor. There is a sense of community and a feeling of being in a small town within a city. The film "Do the Right Thing" by Spike Lee so clearly expresses this. Another issue is density. More density is not the solution alone. We need to find an appropriate balance of density, production, and economy so that development can be in some sort of sustainable balance. I think that sub-urban form has the greatest potential for a sustainable development because there is enough space to support a mix of agriculture, industry,small business, housing, park space, etc...as well as enough density to support local businesses with regard to employees and consumers. Cities like manhattan will never be able to become hybrid typologies because things like urban agriculture and production will be far too expensive due to crazy high land prices. The only problem with the sub-urban typology is that it sometimes becomes gentrified over time as we see in brooklyn or the opposite happens where it becomes a ghetto due to the home values going down as density goes up like in Jamaica Queens (balance is always a thin line). On the other hand, suburban development lends itself to exploitation by corporate interests as James R. clearly articulates. The American dream of owning a single family home is not going away. It is a part of the American culture that dates back hundreds of years. We need to find a solution to the problem without ignoring the cultural mentality that led to it. This is why ideas like the ones in the MoMA exhibit never work. I believe that we need to study examples that already work like Astoria, and go from there.
What do you think about a bit different neighborhood ? ... http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
MB: […] In the 1990s you had a booming economy, you had a kind ofpush to alter, if not end, the welfare state. By the 2000s, you have a real estate bubble. And today you have a foreclosure crisis. But in all of these situations, there are a couple things that have been consistent. The amount of money people spend on housing and transportation is immense. They can’t afford it. You don’t want to tell people they can’t afford something and say that’s the reason to change. You want to be more positive than that. But there are many, many factors about affordability, about energy consumption, and frankly about the role of design in any of it. The American single-family house is a commodity product that has virtually no research and development, no design. Architects, in a spec house in Houston in the late 1990s—their fee was about twelve dollars per house. These are mass-produced commodities. There is no professional engagement. […] I think most of the people in this exhibition are quite
positive and excited about the suburbs. We know it’s a deeply, deeply important part of the American ethos, if not just everyday life of course. But, they’re not inevitable. And the financial underpinnings of them have really dramatically shifted in the last five, ten, fifteen years—not just the last two.
CH: Talk about that R&D thing. You made a point in the video in the exhibition that blew my mind about the comparison between how much money in R&D goes into your iPhone or anti-lock brakes versus an American home.
MB: I did mention anti-lock brakes. For many commodities, before they hit the market, there are billions of dollars that might precede it, whether it’s Clorox or whether it’s an iPhone or a Honda Civic which is quite an ingenious product. Housing as we know it has kind of ironed all of that
out of it, and it did it a long time ago. […] They are paying Mercedes Benz prices for a twenty-year-old used car. The single-family house market atomizes out all of the financial processes, and you still are spending large sums of money, but you’re not getting the sophisticated product. It’s not that it’s not a nice product or something people love, but it could be much, much better in energy and everything else.
THIS IS THE UGLIEST STUPIDITY I'VE EVER SEEN, BRING IN AN ARTIST TO PAINT YOU CANVAS I THINK A SMALL CHILD WITH CRAYONS COULD HAVE DONE A BETTER JOB. WHAT IS NEEDED IS TO ALLOW THE MASSES TO BE EXPOSED TO BEAUTY THAT THE ELITE CLASS ENJOY TODAY, WHAT YOUR TRYING TO DO IS HELL
People aspire to live in their own homes - not apartment blocks, not condos. They want a house, with a garden for their kids. Stop with the unrealistic idea that you can force people into these sorts of housing projects.
Urban planners will never understand 50%+ of the population DON'T WANT to live in multi-unit dwellings in their beloved cities, but they keep trying anyway. Like Jon from Cheyenne said, many prefer and like our own S-P-A-C-E away from all of the traffic, crime, and supposed "enlightenment" that city life purports to offer. They can have it and LEAVE US ALONE!
One truly impressive effort @ MOMA's #Foreclosed. Studio Gang's design. http://bit.ly/yUcYVp East test: would I live there? Yep.
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/cicero/
The exhibit on Nature City in particular was so good/real my children (honor roll twins headed into 7th grade) asked about the possibility of moving there and I am disappointed to find it was all a dream...what a wonderful reality this would be.
aweful. Close to nature? pffff
We went to check the community out a few days ago. Best way to know how livable a neighborhood is... Ask those who live there. We spoke to three people who have homes there and they enjoy it there. That's what we will look for. We don't care what outsiders say... Lol
3/22/2012 12:33 AM CDT
Somehow the 'nature' in Nature City proposal for "Foreclosed" @momafeels not so relaxing. Nice models, though. pic.twitter.com/QlYmNtqx
Somehow the 'nature' in Nature City proposal for "Foreclosed" @momafeels not so relaxing. Nice models, though. pic.twitter.com/QlYmNtqx
However, the original idea of designing neighborhoods was to escape all of these city life hardships and to live in a quiet, green and neat place with a family. Suburbs have long been the sites of a key component of American dream – personal ownership of a single-family home, an investment that once guaranteed stability and legacy for next generations.
you would be a lot safer if you actually met those neighbors, for many reasons
Some of us don't like living shoulder to shoulder with strangers.
those 55+ housing developments are 20x worse .... nobody even walks the streets or goes outside .....
"Arresting angles and curves" DO NOT equate to usable space! Higher density yes, walkable neighborhoods yes. As a degree in civil engineering, design practical floor plans in various sizes for a diverse market. Forget wasted spaces in weird angles and oddly shaped rooms. You pay a premium for a useless layout with strange angles where you can't live.
What builds community is working together, and families intermarrying. But we don't need to work together, since survival needs are all provided for on the whole, plus we have this American mythos of individual independence. And we move around a lot, that is also a disadvantage. If you go someplace where people do need to work together and have lived there a couple of generations, you will find community.
"We need another housing boom."
We need a "community" boom. Sprawling suburbs don't build community. Neither does living on top of each other (recall what has happened to public housing). Most disappointing is that we do not even seem able to recognize what "community" is or what it might look like.
I don't blame builders; it's a lot bigger than that. Most of us do not want any outsiders sticking their noses into our business. Just look how hard it is to protect children, women, and the elderly. Our cities require pioneers, and most of us are simply not up to that, as heroic as it might sound.
No, there is no easy answer. But can't we at least begin asking the right question? "Why can't we just get along together?" Then let's build whatever that takes.
There are many good ideas and many bad ones. What is important is remain clear that one solution will not work for everyone and in every area. Plus all ideas will have to manage the actual implementation. Making it a reality often takes quite a bit of compromise. I do not like the over populations idea..that has proven to be a failure and a cesspool for disease. Those zoning laws prohibiting it are there for a reason. This is not a solution, but a night mare.
Reference & Comparison (209)
Andrew Zago has achieved a new level of ignorance regarding the New Urbanism. I searched the net for a picture of him and was surprised to find that he does not look quite as slack-jawed stupid as he sounds, even though appearance is apparently how he judges substance.
Now (LORD grant me patience!), “significant” architecture is not really how New Urbanists keep score. We do so in many other ways: how many cars not bought; how many vehicle miles reduced; how much transit supported; how much carbon not spewed into the atmosphere; how many children and old folk walk to their daily needs; how much infrastructure cost saved; how much less expended on the delivery of municipal services; how many HOPE VI houses cherished by their residents; how much real estate value created; how many total acres under design (either as New Urbanist communities or through form-based codes); how many downtowns revitalized; how much choice available regionally to those whom suburbia does not serve well; and so on.
But Architect Zago keeps score by other means — like securing the good opinion of about a half-dozen critics in Los Angeles and New York. Indeed, he operates in a world so marginal that I need to be reminded of its existence, monthly, by Metropolis.
That his statement was thoroughly engaged by Director Martin, rather than being ignored as the antics of a simpleton, shows what kind of emissions pass for discourse in academia these days.
But let’s have a look at it from Architect Zago’s point of view. It turns out that even by the tight little standards of his world, and within just one little project (Seaside), there might be as much “significant” architecture as Architect Zago himself might hope to achieve in a lifetime. Seaside has Steve Holl’s first large building. Machado/Silvetti’s first large building. The first buildings (at least three each, and darn good, too) of Deborah Berke, Alex Gorlin, and Walter Chatham. The only building of Roger Ferri. The first building of Leon Krier. The only American house by Aldo Rossi. A wonderfully melancholic house by Sam Mockbee. Clever and charming pavilions by Michael McDonough, Stuart Cohen and Jersey Devil. A national AIA award-winning and gorgeous church by Scott Merrill. And those are only some of the modernism by the “names,” not all the best buildings.
Architect Zago is doubly ignorant: first of what New Urbanism intends to achieve on its own terms, and then of what it has achieved even on his terms.
Am I to understand that he teaches somewhere?
May 26, 2011, @ 2:49 pm
I have been photographing in and around foreclosed houses across the country for over two years, starting in April 2009, in a project I call “Foreclosed Dreams.” You can see the work and read more about that at: http://www.davidhwells.com/docuForeclosedDreams/index.html#_self
In Foreclosed: Between Crisis and Possibility, a group exhibition and series of public programs curated by Whitney Independent Study Program (ISP) Curatorial Fellows Jennifer Burris, Sofía Olascoaga, Sadia Shirazi and Gaia Tedone, “between” is the operative word. Well, that and “foreclosed.” Using foreclosure mainly as a point of departure, the show and discussions posit multiple approaches to looking at and utilizing the forgotten spaces that embody the aftershocks of a declining economy and ask how artists, architects and planners grapple with a culture of crisis.
“City as Stage,” a conversation between GSAPP Professor Emeritus and planner Peter Marcuse, urban planner/architect/artist Damon Rich, Director and Chief Curator of the Sheila C. Johnson Design Center Radhika Subramaniam and artist Tania Bruguera, moderated by Sadia Shirazi, was held at The Kitchen on June 11th. The afternoon began with a screening of Beau Geste by Yto Barrada. In Beau Geste, Barrada patches a malignant hole in a palm tree in a vacant lot in Tangier, trying to thwart a developer who gouged it in hopes of killing the tree, thus allowing him to build up the lot. This guerilla-style urban intervention set the tone for the ensuing discussion on several levels: the scale was small, the action direct, and its consequence indeterminate.
At the 2010 Museum Computer Network conference, I presented, “Fostering A Democratic Museum Culture” (http://mcn2010.pbworks.com/w/p.... This lecture defines museums as community centers that inspire citizens work for peace and human rights. Follow this link for the Prezi presentation (http://prezi.com/sy9yptkaskxo/....
My Ignite Smithsonian lecture, “Renewing American Democracy Through Museums & Digital Culture,” (http://www.ustream.tv/recorded... continued to address these themes in dialogue with museum and library leaders who are committed to public service in our digital culture (http://smithsonian-webstrategy....
Museums, libraries and archives are at the very core of a free society. Digital technology, when used democratically, enables cultural institutions to serve the public as they assemble, share, and interpret experiences across time and space.
Arianna - You always write timely, intelligent and articulate posts. Among the most important salient points in your article today is your noting that 'we have a surplus of untapped energy and creativity and talent'. Being a creative professional myself, I do not have the words to describe the devastation myself and my colleagues have suffered during this recession - financially, emotionally and even physically. Brilliant, highly educated and experienced graphic designers, interior designers, architects, painters, artists, musicians, dancers, etc. who have made our country a better place by improving the quality of everything we see, hear, touch, taste and feel have been tossed aside. Many were self-employed and are not able to obtain any unemployment insurance or other types of assistance. Others have been forced to do work where their skills, intellect and ability are demeaned by ridiculously low pay, poor treatment and complete disregard for their talent and the positive aspects it provides. At least during the last depression , the WPA and similar programs existed to tap into these talents and provide recognition, work and intellectual relief to this forgotten segment of our society. Disregarding these talented, creative individuals is proving to be one of the greatest downfalls of our society. It's tragic, sad and truly un-American.
Similarly, the Institute's political allegiances: top personnel maintained called a sentimental relationship to the Soviet Union (the Institute saw its goals as higher than that of Russian foreign policy. Stalin, who was horrified at the undisciplined, "cosmopolitan" operation set up by his predecessors, cut the Institute off in the late 1920's, forcing Lukacs into "self-criticism," briefly jailing him as a German sympathizer during World War II.
Lukacs survived to briefly take up his old post as Minister of Culture during the anti-Stalinist Imre Nagy regime in Hungary. Of the other top Institute figures, Herbert Marcuse are typical. He started as a Communist; became a protégé of philosopher Martin Heidegger even as the latter was joining the Nazi Party; coming to America, he worked for the World War II Office of Strategic Services (OSS), and later became the U.S. State Department's top analyst of Soviet policy during the height of the McCarthy period; in the 1960's, he turned again, to become the most important guru of the New Left; and he ended his days helping to found the environmentalist extremist Green Party in West Germany.
In all this seeming incoherence of shifting positions and contradictory funding, there is no ideological conflict. The invariant is the desire of all parties to answer Lukacs' original question: "Who will save us from Western civilization?"
-------------
Wall St now at the bourse
THE BULLS ARE LOCKED WITH THE OPPOSITE-- WE ARE DOING WELL-- IT IS NEUTRAL
Having served as a disaster relief expert and community economic development specialist for 15 years under 5 previous US Administrations, I believe there has never been a better opportunity to provide expanded resources for individuals, organizations and communities to "claim their ultimate destiny".
The field of Community Economic Development (CED), which includes a focus on Self-help, Empowerment and Capacity Building, is best known for successes in microenterprise development, "community based development" and fostering "multi-sector collaborative partnerships".
Your initiative to recognize individuals who are stepping up and making a difference is similar to the Ultimate Destiny Hall of Fame Awards developed to recognize individuals who are fulfilling their ultimate destiny while helping others manifest their own destiny. That program recently led to a visionary description of "The United State of Americans", pending publication of a free publication on Solving the Ultimate Destiny of the USA and a proposal to help establish thousands of locally initiated non-profit CED Community Resource Centers whose mission is nearly identical with your message in this article.
The CAN DO! CED Resource Centers encompass Bucky Fuller's vision of "betterment for 100% of humanity", Authur Morgan's vision for The Great Community and it transforms Abraham Maslow's description of a fully actualized individual into a strategy for evolving more fully actualizing communities. The vision and mission is similar to several recent initiatives by President Obama and HUD Secretary Donovan such as Choice Neighborhoods, Sustainable Communities and most recently the Great Cities, Great Communities program.
Gosh, urban redevelopment with state financing. When will we ever learn? I guess Two Ton Tony Galento would be skeptical of these plans for his old stomping grounds. Samuel Bush, patriarch of the Bushs, and a colleague of the Rockefellers, would likely be quite pleased. As the only Orangian who became part of the Federal Reserve, Old Sammy Bush would like the idea of the government borrowing money...but only if he got a piece of the action.
Truth is, the Great Migration destroyed the great cities of Detroit, Cleveland, Chicago (Orly the Daley’s could hold this wondrously toddlin’ town together; Rahm’s clueless), Newark, L.A., Philadelphia and NYC. They aren’t coming back. Neither are places like Orange and Irvington, the former Camptown. Parasites will use our tax dollars in a quixotic attempt to recapture history, while pocketing some easy Money. Then, a thesis can be griten, a PhD for someone’s daughter in Urban Planning? Sure, why not? Then, a fellowship on the tazxpayers’ cuff. The rip-off.
It seems like only yesterday, that I could hop on the bus, for a dime, with friends and go “downtown”, to catch a ballgame, a movie or just mingle with the delightful crowds. Then, around 1958, that became dangerous for kids under 15….then under 20….then EVERYONE. The jostling started. The Huggins, the 5 vs. 2 shakedowns. The stabbings and the shootings and the rapes. A cannonball, they said, could be fired down every “Main Street”, without injuring a soul…because everyone had fled. What a helluva migration, as we look back over what was, and can never be again. Only yesterday.
"Change the dream and you change the city." The line could describe their hopes exactly. Instead, it helps introduce five other plans for suburban America, each with a commitment to cities and to dreaming. The Museum of Modern Art calls the show "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream." Yet, the curators are not looking for new architecture to house an older ideal. Rather, they want to change thinking, the kind that brought the tangle of postwar suburban sprawl and, in their minds, the doomed housing bubble.
MoMA has historically used its position of influence to call attention to issues in suburbia and housing. Collaborating with government agencies, as well as with architects, the Museum has framed arguments on new ways of living. In this tradition, Foreclosed, which is co-organized by MoMA and Columbia University’s Temple Hoyne Buell Center for the Study of American Architecture, will present five architectural teams’ re-imaginings of the American suburb.
Major museums andcultural institutions are jumping on the social activism bandwagon as never before, launching urban research projects, participatory art festivals, and engaged urbanist exhibitions that were once the primary engagement of only the most committed nonprofits and independent producers as tools of social action. In organizing these shows, curators are embracing an idea in the vanguard of contemporary art and design, and getting German luxury car companies to foot the bills. What’s going on here, and who’s really the beneficiary?
photo piece of the plight of Detroit along with a possible solution involving GIVING homes and commercial property or free rent to folks outside the city; photos of recipients revamping them and buisinesses starting up to support the new arrivals.
theme; how creativity along with left brain thinking can be used to solve vitsl cultural problems!
or pass on to “New Yorker” magazine for One City’s Museum of TOTAL Creativity Helps Save the Culture of Another
Hi, I hope you’ll consider talking with Dan Immergluck, author of the book FORECLOSED, which chronicles how the subprime and foreclosure crises came happened. I suspect he would have an interesting angle on this, including an opinion on how to change the dream, and then change the funding mechanism.
December 22, 2011 at 11:22 am
December 21, 2011 at 2:43 pm
Perhaps by providing a definition of what they consider a "suburb" the authors of the article can resolve this issue.
As a side note, it would be interesting to see an article that explores the fate and paths of these even earlier locales.
December 21, 2011 at 12:52 pm
December 20, 2011 at 2:00 pm
December 20, 2011 at 2:26 pm
December 20, 2011 at 12:51 pm
So those songs about ticky tacky boxes – well that historical revisionism.
December 20, 2011 at 12:00 pm
Yes it did. The word was in use in the 1890's certainly and possibly earlier. Heck, the Chevy Suburban has been made since the 1930's I think....1935 to be exact.
Bad writer, no cookie!
December 20, 2011 at 11:54 am
December 20, 2011 at 11:25 am
But there were real suburbs long before most people drove cars: streetcar tracks were everywhere in LA and in the East they coordinated with commuter trains. This phenomenon dates back to the 1880's. I live in such a neighborhood and it still works much better than the one I grew up in, Anaheim, California (a typical 50's suburb).
Suburbs would be great if there was a lot of public transportation that linked them efficiently with cities nearby. I love my Boston suburb and it is much simpler to get downtown than it is if you live in LA and have to sit in traffic on the freeway. I keep sampling and comparing the two since my family still lives in LA: Boston wins.
December 20, 2011 at 12:13 pm
First, I really appreciate the commentary from both KB (12/15) and DK (03/07) regarding the rewilding concepts in relation to suburbanization. I would like to respond first to DK’s point of building dense and compact cities and leaving the “hinterland and wilderness as intact as possible” is the ideal and I certainly do not disagree with this position. That said this is not what is taking place on the ground. Urbanization is continuing to spread into the hinterlands here in the US, in China, India, and Brazil and around the globe. The proposal here is to consider the potential for these exurban developments to adopt an ecological mandate.The focus on the MOMA exhibit and analysis is also very specific and thus the proposal needs to be seen in its context. We were specifically tasked with looking at foreclosure housing projects and how as designers and scientists we might bring federal funding to address some of the issues faced. Thus the site was selected for us, and due to its proximity to the San Bernardino National Forest and the ecologically intact conditions of the surrounding context including the Lytle Creek Wash, we saw the notion of creating a neighborhood focused in part on ecological management as an opportunity for collaboration between developers, the federal government and future homeowners.A third factor to consider is climate change and global warming. The earth is changing in part through large-scale anthropogenic causes. These are creating pressures and constraints on the hinterland ecosystems and organisms. Already, there are discussions of how to foster species migration as their ranges shift north. This is an area that scientists are keenly interested in the role they might play. Consider the species introductions, assisted migrations and other efforts scientists are already participating with the goal of enhancing ecosystems. In other words, just leaving the hinterlands out there “undisturbed” by the built environment does not mean they remain undisturbed, and to maintain ecosystems and organisms human interventions will likely be an important component. Consider John Foley’s diagram of the changing landscape conditions – where is the “hinterlands” in his diagram?Finally, Rewilding (and this goes back to KB’s comments) is a radical proposal and one that is debated amongst ecologist. Much of the issue arises from the concern over human – wildlife conflict that would likely ensue if we were to reintroduce large carnivores etc. to the US. At the same time, most ecologists would agree that top down predation would benefit ecosystem health and lead to greater diversity of species. Thus the issue is one of public acceptance. As a result, getting this concept out there through a variety of venues (given that Rewilding is in the “marketing” stage) should mostly benefit the cause. It is a much more radical concept than simply allowing people to manage biological systems at the urban fringe and is intended to create debate and discussion.The MoMA exhibit is pervaded by architectural discourse of the suburb and could use this layer of integration of knowledge into new suburban forms. The architect and their modes of working and analysis were prioritized and sites open to large development were sites for new visions. Still, the rewilding concept is part of the exhibit, which means that tens of thousands of museumgoers visiting the exhibit will have the opportunity to reflect on what role people can play in managing ecosystems in their neighborhoods, and on the potential value of rewilding as a concept to consider for promoting ecosystem function.
For A Regular Guy(Written after reading the story in L.A. Times of a dead man found in a foreclosed home in Westchester, CA on 7/20/2009 by a real estate agent preparing to show the house to a prospect.)
Three bedroom 2 bath
garage backyard lawn
rambling family style
home for kids pets. 1957.
Needs work
refinancing available
forbearance provided
for small fee.
A sunny southern Cal
kind of Monday
in Westchester.
Realty Modern
shows same home
once bestowed
with bank notes
loans interest rates
derivatives
credit-default swaps.
Brokered down by
adjustable rates
pre-payment penalties.
Now liberated by the
free market.
Lien holders
mean holder
sof bankrupt dreams.
FORECLOSED.
Ready to buy
best terms
and cheap!
But oh dear!
What’s a 45-year-old
dead man doing here?
Didn’t we clean this
property up?
Who could
miss the odor
of late payments ?
The gruesome smell
of maxed out credit?
The stench of the
unemployed?
What’s an agent to do?
Come back later.
This regular guy
Laid off. Laid out cold
in the family room.
Second mortgage borrowerr
avaged by pyramid
schemes. No modification
no public offering
for him. No gold man of stocks
no Fed unreserved no inside track
no parachute for this everyday chump.
Lien holdersmean holders
of bankrupt dreams.
FORECLOSED.
— Daniel Hudson Burnham (1846-1912)
As I would expect from MOMA, the designers in this exhibit are more interested in attracting attention to themselves by doing something new and different than in doing something that can work: "Michael Bell would herd newcomers to Temple Terrace, Florida, into a pair of high-tech megastructures lifted above vast urban plazas. Zago turns the classic subdivision into a largely car-free cubist collage...."
Obviously, this sort of thing cannot be done. But when the writer concludes that transforming the suburbs "probably can’t be done" at all, he just shows that he has not looked beyond this museum exhibit at what actually is being done in suburbs across America.
6 Months Ago
I was about to write this piece off, but then I read the absolutely spot-on dose of skepticism at the end, and then I was OK with it.
For starters, couldn't the architects have deigned to live "in residence" in, I dunno, a blue collar suburb like Brentwood, Long Island rather than Long Island City, Queens? Would it really have killed them to go and look at a (GASP) actual suburb and talk to some people who actually live in one?
On a more fundamental level, I question whether architects come from the right profession to address the undeniable problems that suburbs face. Design is the easy part. The hard part has to do with politics, infrastructure, taxes, race, class, regulations, and so forth.
And on a still more fundamental level, I question whether the term "suburb" is even useful at all. Are Claremont and Riverside both "suburbs" of Los Angeles? Well, I guess so. Do they even remotely have anything in common with each other, apart from the fact that they are in the LA region but not part of the City of LA? Not really. In fact, not at all. I think the very framing of this exhibit is outdated, and was put together by people who do not get out of their bougie, 24-hour city enclaves enough to have a whole lot that's interesting to say about the "real America" (the REAL real America, full of racial, ethnic and other kinds of diversity, not Sarah Palin's 1950s-era small town fantasy) and what problems it faces.
6 Months Ago
2/16/2012 6:31 PM CST
2/16/2012 6:05 PM CST
2/16/2012 12:40 PM CST
2/16/2012 12:11 AM CST
2/15/2012 10:05 PM CST
2/15/2012 6:44 PM CST
2/15/2012 4:23 PM CST
Quasi-intellectual architect-driven initiatives have rarely had the same positive result. Almost a century of bombastic architectural "visions' from Corb's plan to level Paris, to Pruitt-Igoe and beyond have repeatedly shown that many architects know less about how people really want to live than do the developers they so easily criticize. So much for the fruits of half-baked liberal thinking rooted in "speculation" rather than informed analysis. Typically, the more theoretically driven the project, the worse were the results. - QED "Foreclosure".
2/15/2012 12:50 PM CST
2/15/2012 6:14 AM CST
Ill give you libeskind, im not a fan of his either, but just because an idea isn't popular doesn't automatically make it incorrect...this is a lesson that has been repeated through the course of history. People are resistant to change, we like the status quo. People hated the eiffel tower, now they love it. The same holds true for the pompidou center. People's like or dislike of things really does not prove whether or not it is inherently wrong or bad design or anything. It just proves that they are unfamiliar with it, nothing more. Give these ideas a chance and they might actually have some worth. And I wouldn't dismiss the education of today and compare it to the ecole. Most of the study of ecole revolved around tirelessly perfecting the Orders, today's education (at certain schools) deals more with complex building systems and the human interaction with the space.
2/14/2012 4:12 PM CST
2/14/2012 3:23 PM CST
2/14/2012 2:42 PM CST
2/14/2012 2:34 PM CST
2/14/2012 2:24 PM CST
2/14/2012 12:58 PM CST
--Jane Jacobs
2/13/2012 6:32 PM CST
There don't seem to be any strong critical concept in re-thinking the suburb, or the "American Dream", in the time of the "American Nightmare". Can't see the attractiveness of WORkac's proposal, one story strips and towers.....? how original.
2/13/2012 4:26 PM CST
Their design responses always seem to find answers in central planning socialism (or communism) where the lord in charge decrees how the little people shall live. In the context of the greatest economy on earth, these solutions always vary from amusing and trendy to useless. Ironically and predictably, the housing solutions generated by real world socialists and communists are among the worst on the planet!
Two years ago I outlined a grant project to design and build "the next American Home" using an award winning, very expensive, AE design and development team that no market rate home owner could ever afford. My local region's weather, utility rates, standard of living, aesthetic sensibilities and real estate market would all form the basis for this project. Once constructed, it would be leased and its overall performance measured over years – including elements like comfort, pride of ownership and livability in addition to the boring engineering stuff like energy performance.
The goal would be to offer a platform for the next generation of America’s homebuilders to reference when that industry recovers. I will not give away all the beans because I may resurrect it someday but needless to say, even in this economy I became too busy to fuss around with it.
2/13/2012 4:12 PM CST
Jim Pettit (I am not anonymous)
2/13/2012 4:08 PM CST
2/13/2012 3:45 PM CST
2/13/2012 2:53 PM CST
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2/25/2012 2:22 PM CST
3/1/2012 8:32 AM CST
What crap. For example, says Jeanne Gang, "Cicero’s code also defines "family" in a way that excludes the large, multigenerational groupings." Too much trouble to look? Here is the definition, from the Cicero Illinois Code of Ordinances, sec 46-466:
"Family means a single individual, doing his own cooking, and living upon the premises as a separate housekeeping unit, or a collective body of persons doing their own cooking and living together upon the premises as a separate housekeeping unit in a domestic relationship based upon birth, marriage, or other domestic bond, as distinguished from a group occupying a boardinghouse, lodginghouse, club, fraternity or hotel."
So, multigenerational, and related by birth? That's a family. Large? Not in the definition. Not related by blood, nor by marriage, but cooking and living together, based on a domestic bond? Family, again.
I have no love for Cicero, but Jeanne Gang can make municipal ordinances look reasonable by comparison.
Let's go on to the very next phrase, "now common across the country." Are we to believe that large multigenerational groupings are now common across the country? If they are common, then these onerous regulations aren't having much effect. If they aren't common, then we have Jeanne Gang reporting what she wishes were true, in place of what is. Tool.
"decoupling the previous notion that ownership is a home and the land beneath it."
It's called a trailer park. It's already been invented.
Urbanism museum combo! "Foreclosed" opens at MoMA, while "Greatest Grid" exhibit is up at MCNY. http://archrecord.construction.com/news/2012/02/F …(via @cristinabe)
Sub-urban and suburban are also two very different things. I would argue that sub-urban is not bad. A good example of this is in some parts of Brooklyn, Queens, and Nassau county NY. The density is greater than the typical suburban environment, and there is a small business walkable street scape that flanks a mix of multi and single family housing in many of these neighborhoods. There is also access to public transit in and out of the city. There is a mix of home owners and renters, and the opportunity to own a house and rent out the top floor. There is a sense of community and a feeling of being in a small town within a city. The film "Do the Right Thing" by Spike Lee so clearly expresses this. Another issue is density. More density is not the solution alone. We need to find an appropriate balance of density, production, and economy so that development can be in some sort of sustainable balance. I think that sub-urban form has the greatest potential for a sustainable development because there is enough space to support a mix of agriculture, industry,small business, housing, park space, etc...as well as enough density to support local businesses with regard to employees and consumers. Cities like manhattan will never be able to become hybrid typologies because things like urban agriculture and production will be far too expensive due to crazy high land prices. The only problem with the sub-urban typology is that it sometimes becomes gentrified over time as we see in brooklyn or the opposite happens where it becomes a ghetto due to the home values going down as density goes up like in Jamaica Queens (balance is always a thin line). On the other hand, suburban development lends itself to exploitation by corporate interests as James R. clearly articulates. The American dream of owning a single family home is not going away. It is a part of the American culture that dates back hundreds of years. We need to find a solution to the problem without ignoring the cultural mentality that led to it. This is why ideas like the ones in the MoMA exhibit never work. I believe that we need to study examples that already work like Astoria, and go from there.
Eichler, yes, I agree Kevin. You know of any contemporary developers that are doing this kind of work with a little more focus on community design and sustainability? I would love to do a little research into this.
Builders, developers and real estate people have been telling people how to live for years....it's obvious now, more than ever, thats how things are done....people don't know what they want...Architects stopped telling people what they want in the 1960's....see what we have now? I think as far as far as something develor driven, the Eichler approach today would be a good start....Developer, hiring good and great Architects, offering something different that makes sense.
Why does innovation from Architects always have to come in the form of telling people how to live their lives?
You hit the nail on the head. This goes back the the FLW broad acre city idea, that we can reinvent society in totality to fit a certain utopian vision. The problem is that every architect wants to invent the big cure not the gradual remedy, because the glory lies in being Jonas Salk not the guy who invented Robatusin. The problem with any utopian model is that it usually works in theory, but is completely unrealisable due to the given societal constraints with regard to culture and economy. I have been arguing on threads here that we need to become developers and offer realistic alternatives to crap suburbia. Once again, architects are thinking of top down solutions to what can only be achieved with bottom up models. We live in a free market society whether we like it or not. We need to create demand by building better stuff. "if you build it they will come" We can't just dictate our solutions and hope for society to demand our service. The suburban model is not going away because it is deeply part of the american culture. Rather than get rid of it, lets start by building more sustainable and enriching suburaban communities that are affordable. Look at the way the auto industry copes with these constraints...Sure a small electric car that weighs 1000 lbs. may be the best solution, but they recognise that society will not change so quick, so they focus on hybrid suv's and 4 door sedans. We need to build the "civic hybrid" equivelent of architecture right now (transitionary projects) not the electric smart car, because unfortunatly many people out there still have steel testicles hanging from the back of their pick-up trucks. If we can't even do that, how the hell are we going to do anything more radical. While I wish society was easy to change and would love to see such grand projects, it just ain't gonna happen yet.
Or to reference a line from Blair Kamin's review of Jeanne Gang studios contribution to the exhibit maybe what is needed is less concept more blueprint?
I would be interested in hearing from any Nectors who have read the book/visited the exhibit/participated in the studios.
Particularly in light of Guy Horton's recent piece of criticism Thoughts on MoMA's Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream wherein he wrote "This is a shame because there are some valuable ideas. Ironically, most of those are contained in the boring data taken from economists and social scientists. Were the architects trying too diligently to spatialize the data?...As unsettling as the damage the financial crisis has wrought on the fabric of dwelling in America, the distance these proposals travel away from what caused these foreclosures is equally unsettling."
Or Justin Davidson who recently in NY Magazine wrote "Some ideas in the show sit on the border between bold and silly...As a whole, though, the show merges daydreams with pragmatism."
There he specifically critiqued Mr. Bell's vision as seeking to "herd newcomers to Temple Terrace, Florida, into a pair of high-tech megastructures lifted above vast urban plazas."
Finally, more substantively to me was his feeling that "For all its thoughtfulness and rigor, though, a whiff of colonialism blows through the project, with its corps of city-based experts venturing into suburbia with maps and modern technology and plans for reforming the indigenous culture. The visions they come up with have a familiar urban feel, and the show replaces old conventional wisdom with the only slightly fresher dogma of density". Is it inevitable that this sort of project/process will perhaps come across as disconnected from on the ground socio-politics and communities. I wonder how a more organic approach to the problem could be articulated, perhaps even as simple as something like OccupyourHomes but more architecturally or spatially focused....
Also, this item Housing and the 99 Percent recently posted to News feed seem apropos.
[...] seems to be provoking a lot of strong reactions (see Brian’s previous commentary here). Diana Lind, editor in chief of Next American City, questions both the motives and the [...]
Wednesday, February 22 at 6:05pm
"Sprawl" might be a better word to use than "suburb." Not all suburbs are sprawl --- in fact, some suburbs are already perfect as they are, while some sprawl will unfortunately need to be annihilated. Others will require different approaches. The key is to analyze each place, ideally beginning at the regional level, and identify the needs, opportunities, and measures to be taken. Ellen Dunham-Jones said as much in the article published on this site one day before (http://goo.gl/qK5p9).
The Sprawl Repair Manual (sprawlrepair.com) (http://goo.gl/B5lCW) provides the practical solutions Ms. Lind refers to. They include techniques for analyzing (from the region to the building), planning, zoning, designing, financing, and implementing the repair of sprawl.
4 months ago
Retrofitting the American Dream in a flat world
I hate the over developed suburban wasteland, having grown up in a small town in eastern PA. Shortly after developers cut down the apple orchard at the end of my street to build more houses I escaped to art school. Ironically I grew up in a town that had a lot of history & culture — where American folk artist Edward Hicks painted the Peaceable Kingdom. In that Newtown, which is a very old American town, I learned a few things. If we combine a time for work (the lion), a time for home (the lamb) and a time for culture (the horse) we will rediscover the American Dream. Our Dream just needs a little pruning to flourish.
I agree with Ellen Dunham’s optimistic ideas for retrofitting suburbia. She touches on the idea of people having a third place to go to after the home and the workplace. We need to develop this idea. The only thing I would add to Ellen’s summary is to build equestrian centers on public land through out the American suburban landscape to add culture to the town centers. People need a place to meet and reconnect. We need to get back on the horse and rediscover our culture.
Thank you for your post
By way of a comparison: gay people have been struggling for marriage equality for decades now. Many cultural conservatives are very angry about this, and feel their way of life is under assault. It's a difficult thing to persuade them. Frequently, you'll see footage of some gay pride parade somewhere, which is repeated on a loop for the express purpose of stoking this outrage.
Do gay pride parades make arguing for gay marriage more difficult? Of course. But that's not the fundamental problem.
Same goes for environmentalism: if it weren't for that guy with dreadlocks on that college campus somewhere in the midwest who goes on about Gaia, would folks like George Will have signed on to "cap and trade" by now?
If no one ever said anything mean about suburban cul-de-sacs on GGW, do you think the Randall O'Toole's of the world would cease talking about shadowy urbanists trying to take away your car? Or UN initiatives that threaten our freedom? After all, that's where your average "man on the street" gets such nonsense, not because they read some urbanist gadfly in the comments section of an obscure blog somewhere.
C'mon. Municipalities are trying to retrofit to urbanism because the experts feel they don't have a choice, long-term. But industries (and that includes conservative political parties) that benefit from suburban sprawl will fight with every fiber of their being to prevent that from happening. Do you really think the Rush Limbaughs of the world are going to find TOD religion if the David Alperts of the world start praising ample parking?
Sure there are individuals with essentially zero influence who bad-mouth suburbia, and that may register with the very, very few people who read GGW, but in the larger debate, they're hardly even background noise.
Feb 22, 2012 11:47 am
I think the disconnect between the urbanists and many suburbanites is in the intensity of belief. Plenty of suburbanites think that a transformation to a more urban form would be good but think it's way off-base to say that without such a transformation, the burbs will fail. It would be similar to saying that DC cannot be successful or sustainable without radical change in its public education system. Obviously, it would be great if DC schools got a lot better but I don't see another collapse happening for DC anytime soon, with or without better schools.
It's also like saying that DC can never be successful without better governance. Frankly, some people in DC would find it insulting if you said that DC can never be successful with certain CMs as part of the Council (just like some suburbanites find some things that urbanists say to be condescending). In fact, there are many people who would have been insulted if you said that about Harry Thomas up until the day he was arrested. Once again, clearly DC would benefit from better CMs but there will be no collapse even with continued bumbling along with the current crop of CMs.
Feb 22, 2012 5:53 pm
investment banking. There’s the Wagner-Steagall Act which funded public housing. Steagall was on both.
CH: Interesting.
MB: It’s very interesting.
CH: Now we’ve got huge conglomerate banks and no public housing.
MB: […] In the 1990s you had a booming economy, you had a kind ofpush to alter, if not end, the welfare state. By the 2000s, you have a real estate bubble. And today you have a foreclosure crisis. But in all of these situations, there are a couple things that have been consistent. The amount of money people spend on housing and transportation is immense. They can’t afford it. You don’t want to tell people they can’t afford something and say that’s the reason to change. You want to be more positive than that. But there are many, many factors about affordability, about energy consumption, and frankly about the role of design in any of it. The American single-family house is a commodity product that has virtually no research and development, no design. Architects, in a spec house in Houston in the late 1990s—their fee was about twelve dollars per house. These are mass-produced commodities. There is no professional engagement. […] I think most of the people in this exhibition are quite
positive and excited about the suburbs. We know it’s a deeply, deeply important part of the American ethos, if not just everyday life of course. But, they’re not inevitable. And the financial underpinnings of them have really dramatically shifted in the last five, ten, fifteen years—not just the last two.
CH: Talk about that R&D thing. You made a point in the video in the exhibition that blew my mind about the comparison between how much money in R&D goes into your iPhone or anti-lock brakes versus an American home.
MB: I did mention anti-lock brakes. For many commodities, before they hit the market, there are billions of dollars that might precede it, whether it’s Clorox or whether it’s an iPhone or a Honda Civic which is quite an ingenious product. Housing as we know it has kind of ironed all of that
out of it, and it did it a long time ago. […] They are paying Mercedes Benz prices for a twenty-year-old used car. The single-family house market atomizes out all of the financial processes, and you still are spending large sums of money, but you’re not getting the sophisticated product. It’s not that it’s not a nice product or something people love, but it could be much, much better in energy and everything else.
DREAM HOUSES
Letters
The proposed housing models featured in your Spring 2012 issue (“Dreaming American”) are best described as solutions in search of a problem. In particular, the proposal for the Oranges, in New Jersey — which would fill underused streets between existing buildings with ribbons of new developments — creates problems for which there are no reasonable solutions.
Problem number one is that the new structures, to meet disability-access regulations and building codes, would require elevators and public corridors leading to enclosed exit stairways, neither of which can be accommodated within the proposed configurations. Problem number two is that the structures would interfere with access for emergency vehicles.
But aided by the reclamation of previously private spaces (“The idea is that private space that is now abandoned, foreclosed, or empty would be given back to the public”), a more realistic project could be conceived featuring the following:
• Narrowed and reconfigured roads for use by bicyclists and joggers, and access for emergency vehicles.
• Playgrounds, parks, and open space enabled by the demolition of buildings deemed to be unsuited for adaptive reuse.
• Varied housing types to accommodate residents with a wide range of family structures and financial resources.
• Ground-level spaces for such services as childcare, health care, laundry, and community administration.
• Community-owned shuttle buses to provide access to shops and schools.
I’m sure that Jane Jacobs, if she were alive today, would be pleased to see this concept implemented.
Aaron Cohn ’49GSAPP
Los Angeles, CA
Aaron Cohn, “Dream Houses,” Columbia Magazine, Summer 2012, 3.
Weren't these experiments tried in the late 50's, 60's and 70's post modernist movement? I think they ended up calling them "the projects"! Epic FAIL!
...I guess these are different because they are proposed for the suburbs. Yeah, that's it...that's it.
Here we go again - architects attempting to be the deciders on who lives in a cooked up utopian paradise. I agree with Dee - didn't we go through this before - actually several times before - go back to Lutyens and others pre-Victorian UK for other references. This argument is as old as time in architecture circles and frankly something I believe in my bones architects need to stay way far away from.
The problems associated with the current debacle in housing goes way beyond just cooking up alternatives to a model that for decades had worked pretty well until the restraints of the banking system and the policy makers in DEE CEE were unshackled. Thank you Barney Frank, Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, Sarbanes / Oxley, CRA, Derivatives, MBS, CDO's, Wall Street, Glass Steagle (no more), FHA, HMA, Phil Gramm, Rudman, Fannie, Freddie, National Assoc. of Realtors, Mortgage Banking Association, TARP, QE whatever, Helicopter Ben, HARP, HAMP, Obama and the porkulus - the list of imposters posing as statesmen and policy wonks and their attendant fixes goes on and on. To just read this article on the surface and agree would be in my humble opinion horribly misguided and naive.
Wake up architects - putting the design blinders on only will not serve you nor your clients well. A much broader and active view is needed - bone up on economics, finance, politics, local government, proper spheres of authority, the scriptures - you name it. Without a broader and DEEPER view of the market the profession will continue to wallow in the ditch it finds itself in, unable to provide any added value to projects and their sponsoring clients. Clients want value - not just ideas!!! And one final thing......
I LIKE LIVING IN THE SUBURBS!!!
3/23/2012 1:52 PM CDT
As Deb Gans made clear in her interview on this website, it's critical that architects in 2012 address both formalism and green issues. It's not enough to be either/or. Either/or is only doing half an architect's job, and that's not enough. Everyone deserves access to progressive contemporary design, rich people, poor people, Americans, Africans, everyone. It's about equality and respect and not patronizing people.
3/23/2012 1:46 PM CDT
The use of charged buzzwords words and phrases like “activist” and “socially or environmentally conscious dimension” suggests some serious import where none is evident in the work itself. It is a common liberal ploy to distract from any more intuitive thought processes that would likely conclude that these ill-conceived experiments will almost certainly be the slums of tomorrow.
Dr. D.S. Abrams
New York City
3/23/2012 12:31 PM CDT
"Nature-City" for Keizer, Oregon resembles what Singapore has begun to look like. Ughhh
Disclosure: I live in Singapore (and am obviously not pleased with the changes I see here).
Architects/Urban planners often suffer from the same level of hubris as religious and political zealots. They “believe” they know how humanity should behave and think.
When presenting they will say. “One walls along this avenue, and feels a sense of…” Huh? The world abounds with architectural and urban planning disasters. Look at a park where instead of following some meandering walkway, there is a muddy path straight across the grass.
Le Corbusier was amongst the worst, and subsequent generations not much better. A case of the “Emperor’s Clothes”.
Throw in a little anti-capitalist, anti-car, eco looniness, and you end up with Milton Keynes, or worse, Bracknell where I am spending too much time. I need Sat-Nav to get in and out of town and contribute to muddy paths straight across roundabouts.
Now we have computers, curves and angles thrive, simply because they can be designed, not because they make sense,
Why reinvent the wheel? We have spent thousands of years evolving buildings and spaces that work.
Essential reading. Jane Jacobs : “The Death and Life of Great American Cities”, Peter Collins: “Changing Ideals in Modern Architecture”, John Summerson, “Heavenly Mansions”. All classic texts on modern architecture and urban design. And anything by Colin Davies.
Classic examples of Urban planning disasters caused by hubris? Brasilia along with Chandigarh in India. Loved by the acolytes of modern architecture, a failure by everybody else’s standards.
Architects (some) have always had an over-evolved sense of their own importance. At least Paulo Soleri had style, these guys are recycling stuff we did in the 70's, just not as well. The big design solutions and Urban planning of the past don't work for the future. The next step will be devolution, self sustaining, smaller, less susceptible to economic changes and power failures. I think you call them villages in europe. We don't have that concept in the USA. The curator screwed the pooch on this one, there's lot of interesting alternate work out there.
This stuff looks like the public housing experiments of the 60s given an absolutely fabulous facelift and a couple of pairs of mahnolos. I'm all into walking and dense housing and good public transport, and lived that for 8 years in Cologne, but this stuff gives me the screaming hebijibies.
“Privacy is a sense of realising who is where and what they are doing, and that allows you to be calm.” ? WTF
I agree with you 100%. The problem is that the market is not controlled by people with ideas but by people seeking profit. And building a sustainable and children-friendly environment is not that important. Each building has its own architect, own solutions and etc. But look on the wonderful planning of Brasil (the capital of Brazil), with the coherent architecture and sustainable environment. And it is almost 50 years old right now, but it looks wonderful!
I think that contemporary architecture should reflect the community needs of the current population. The idea of changing the old style of living into more dynamic one is great. Replacing bungalows by the condo style type of living is just a great idea. I can see the European and Canadian influence in the battle against the old English style of living.
From my point of view, creating the new "centers" of life in the suburbs is also very interesting idea. Sometimes it is much better to reconstruct everything from the scratch than to continue with the old structures and ideas. Never ending House Flipping can not sustain the houses forever and sooner or later, the old suburb has to be replaced by a new one.
With new model of suburb, you get more possibilities to evade old mistakes and give people better life conditions and space for their everyday lives.
What do you think MAN MADE UP GLOBAL WARNING was all about??
They only left out the ovens for the peaple who do not comply and the millions of cameras to exploit the U.N. Iron fist rule!!! A CITY PRISON.
U.N.;s Agenda 21 for the new world order sers pure and simple.
Rating 13
'Little Boxes' a hit for Pete Seeger in 1963 (not written by him).
The picture at the top reminds me of the German prisoner of war camps and the rest...........................ghettos within ghettos!
"Blade Runner", anyone?
Ewww, absolutely no character and downright ugly. My ideal home is a Hobbit house,...go Tolkien for inspiration.
Bleak. They look like prison blocks - only condos instead of cells. This certainly looks like part of the NWO/Agenda 21 propaganda, and brings the film "Camp FEMA" to mind. Please watch this documentary on YouTube. They just want to herd us up like cattle...
Looks like PR for Agenda 21 aka Smart Cities, Sustainable Living, Plannedopolis etc, nice pack 'em and stack 'em blocks close to PUBLIC transit, suggest cars and private property a thing of the past, American Dream or NWO nightmare? If you are going to seduce us with slick packaging and sophisticated propaganda, do try to make it slick or half sophisticated, this is embarrassingly see through.
Robert Moses, many many years ago, suggested that we save all the beauty areas of the country for ALL the people. so the rich couldnot take up acreage on the beach in same the Hamptons, etc. HE suggested, smaller homes with huge common gardens, playgrounds....yet we would all have beach access, lake access, etc. I think its a good idea (in theory)..in reality, I don't want to pick up others doggie doo, or garbage. If we were all abiding and pleasant, it would be wonderful. BUT I DO agree that it is not right for the very rich to be able to 'control' a beach area. WHY should they be able to claim part of the Atlantic or Pacific for their very own? makes no sense. ALL beaches should be public, be in Malibu or Quogue.
plus ca change...
It looks like the place where the cartoon charachters "The Jetsons" lived in space! Futuristic and lifeless.
While the The Garden in the Machine project for Cicero, Illinois is interesting to look at, the 'container' living fad that has been played out in design and, now, architecture, for sometime is just that. A fad. I think it's legacy would be that of Brutalist Architecture; vulgar and out-dated 20/30 years in the future. 8 house in Denmark is a lovely example of compound/community living. I'v never been fully convinced on this 1930s/bauhaus notion of suburbia, I think I've read too much Richard Yates.
Mainly, they look like prisons.
Hmm..most of it looks suspiciously like the stuff produced by the Bauhaus movement in 1930's Germany.
my local Socialist council "has this dream" about one of our sea side towns that looks like Beirut on a bad day, ......dream on, dream on!
Rating 50
I remember all the futuristic designs from the 50s - and how many do we have?
Looks kind of like an upper class prisoner of war camp to me......another way to control people by putting them into neat little compartments. Thanks, but no thanks.
Mortgage Refinance
While interest rates have never been more attractive, the number of people taking advantage of the historically low rates and refinancing their mortgages has dropped substantially, most of them dont even aware of the rates, i recommend 123 Refinance for refinance
A modern Eastern Europe apartment complex, Chinese, Russian? The architects would be better off spending their idle time finding ways to rid themselves of our current legislators, economic development leadership and others, and begin to lure businesses into the area that will hire locals in huge quantities, companies that will not depend on government handouts and pay their employees a living wage plus benefits.
Over 20 years ago Angela Brooks was looking at this condition in a proposal in Southern California. The proposal was titled “Post Suburbia” and won a PA Award in 1992. Her proposal looks at how to add density to the tracts of single family homes by allowing new zoning and modest expansion of Single family homes to allow more dwelling units. You can see more of the proposal just posted on the Brooks + Scarpa Facebook page at:
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Brooks-Sc arpa-Architects/131136066935667
I don’t know how you can say that the housing crisis was mostly a suburban thing. In downtown Portland all of the condo projects that were completed between 2007 and 2009 were subsequently turned into apartments or turned over to banks. Unsold units in bank possession were auctioned off or otherwise sold at a 40% discount. This reversed the trend of the prior decade of apartment buildings being converted into condos. Look around and the cranes are building new apartment buildings, not condos.
To the point of suburban architectural solutions to making housing affordable. You know that museum-curated shows are always ‘think big or don’t come’. When was the last time you saw a curated show present pragmatic proposals that could be installed in real life, the next day?
Real life solutions are already being played out in the burbs of Portland, and undoubtedly in hundreds of other burbs in the nation.
Orenco Station is supposed to be a New Urbanism project, although its growth has been driven by the big-box strip mall (a blend between the traditional strip mall and the single lot big box store).
A twist on Jane Jacobs romanticism connected to mass transit rail is discerned from stop after stop along the TriMet MAX, with tracts of townhomes and pocket parks within 1000′ of a MAX stop.
Not two weeks ago, the Portland Home Show unveiled the IKEA House. A collaboration between IKEA and a local company – Ideabox – that designs and builds prefab structures. It turns out, the solution to making housing affordable is to downsize the McMansion and make it practical inside.
In any case, the solution is either to expand suburbia outward or increase density — move out or move up.
In places like Mumbai, where arguably a majority of the city is inhabited---and much of it was literally developed---by squatters in slums and shanties, this commodification of land is very risky. Shutting (poor) squatters out of land is precisely what governments in Mumbai and Beijing are doing now, by bulldozing slums. And this is harmful not just for reasons of justice and equity, but also because the urban poor contribute a great deal of labor and economic activity to the city.
Blocks and grid systems would facilitate that process by specifically defining plots of land and putting a price on them, which would then be an "opportunity cost" of housing the poor.
3/22/2012 12:15 PM
See Denton, TX public library - a former grocery store turned library: http://archrecord.construction.com/projects/bts/archives/libraries/06_Denton/overview.asp
Published right here, in ArchRecord back in May 2006.
3/22/2012 12:15 PM CDT
Have you forgotten the sad lessons of Pruitt - Igoe .
Since then the hard road to "Love thy neighbor as Thy self " in America has been shattered by
Inner city Gangs on one side & Gated WEALTH on the other .
The American dream for the rest of us ( the dying middle class) has become a survival Hell !!!
Now that the GREED & ME first failures have happened ;perhaps we can have SOCIAL change .
TRY this . Housing complexes with Cultural places which are inclusive of ALL classes & cultures .
Howard Roark
3/22/2012 2:57 AM CDT
3/22/2012 12:33 AM CDT
That said, it is high time that a high-profile American cultural institution took on the question of housing and the future of the American Dream, and the exhibit does an admirable job of asking some important questions.
AU: The Museum of Modern Art has a tradition of putting on---
Sandra Smith [blonde]: I was going to say, artists are never political.
SV: It's always the elite telling the rest of us how we should live, isn't it?
AU: No, it's---
SV: Always.
AU: No, in fact, the state of California is enacting zoning policies to make suburbs more dense. You know, and the Wall Street Journal just pointed out last week that they are trying to, instead of having four houses per acre, they're going to have twenty houses per acre.
“You could say parts of Orange look like a third-world country already,” he said. “It’s incredibly tragic what’s going on there, what some people have to do to survive.”
I got to school in Windsor so it's definitely familiar territory. This project is very interesting though.
Um, where is historic preservation in this conversation???? HP must be a part of the conversation for community sustainability.
“You can’t have 6.8 billion cowboys out there and begin to think about bringing the species together in a global economy and a global biosphere.”
The American Dream is not a sustainable intelligent vision. The needs of the many are left out of the utopian backyard. And I have never witnessed, in all my days, a direct correlation between happiness and prosperity.
shtrum said…
At the risk of playing devil’s advocate, MOMA is only doing what MOMA does. But blaming them for popular culture is like blaming Lady Gaga for bologna sandwiches.
If architects want to know why only 2% of housing is designed by architects, they only need look in a mirror. A $200+/sf mirror.
Did i mention i was playing devil’s advocate? :)
I saw this back when it graced Arch Daily at some point. Larger issues aside, the MOS project is unequivocally bad. It reminds me more a gridded version of elevated highways that dissected our cities in the 60′s. This typical created a “good” and “bad” side. Formally, the language of the complexes are imposing and completely unnatural to their contexts.
Otherwise, I’m of complete agreement that MoMA did more harm than good here.
Usually the eye roll comes at a roof garden with mature trees on the 93rd floor, but waterfalls..? Other thoughts would have been; are those Petri dish? are we plebs bacteria colonizing on your culture? I’d like to think i would have come to the same conclusion but I think i would have not made it past the waterfall Voltron skyscraper without cursing enough to be shown the door.
I live in the wrong part of the world to offer first hand critique of Foreclosed, but this criticism seems unqualified. MoMA is an art museum, and will provide inventive solutions based in the arts, surely! That is what i would expect to see at MoMA, and would be disappointed otherwise. I dont think they promised ‘practical’ solutions. Bit like going to a Michelin star restaurant and criticising them because they dont serve Big Macs.
Love that this vision of a future city is basically a remix of classic townhouse design. Lets focus on reuse/repurpose. http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/keizer/
Interesting for me to read that Rodney King apparently lived & died in Rialto, CA. http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …Has anyone picked up on that story?
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/rialto/
So I believe the hybrid approach is the likeliest way to achieve real innovation in housing as well as in real estate development practices. What might be the role of architects in this effort? The South African architect Iain Low has described a building as a manifesto, a declaration of what is possible. (“I work within the possibility of significantly transforming reality, as opposed to reinventing it," he said.) And indeed, the five projects in Foreclosed show us the possibilities of dreaming big.
It is a sign of the times that this exhortation has proved controversial not because it reminds us of the economic inequity, the structural racism, and the gender violence that has marked every stage of so much welfare-state public housing, from inception to management, even as it challenges the apparent inevitability of such results. It is controversial because it suggests that the state, or the public sector — conceived along with civil society in terms of multiple, overlapping, virtual and actual publics — might play a more active, direct and enlightened role in the provision of housing and, by extension, of education, health care and other infrastructures of daily life in the United States. In other words, it is a direct challenge to the now-dominant paradigm of privatization. That the design teams did not entirely take up this challenge is, in my view, at least as interesting as what they actually did propose, and is perhaps symptomatic of how deeply the politics of privatization has shaped design culture. Simply put, can we no longer imagine architecture without developers?
We need more effective ways to build housing quickly and cheaply, and this requires both a design solution and a policy solution. Even in cities like San Francisco where there is a push by the local government to create housing for people at all income levels, the process works too slowly and leaves too many people out. Housing policy is a failure when there are thousands of people waiting for a home that they can afford.
06.26.12 at 02:51
Amen. Americans need to stop worshipping at the alter of the lawn. Its absolutely insane. Name me another activity where Im expected to nurture something and make it grow just so I can mow it down when it grows too much? I think Elvis had the right idea with Astroturf.
Of course. Most of the huge old Victorian homes were broken up into apartments because no one could afford to heat or maintain them. The same thing will happen with the plague of McMansions that have cropped up in the past 15 years or so.
those 55+ housing developments are 20x worse .... nobody even walks the streets or goes outside .....
Odd you should mention that. There are actually lawmakers in my corner of the world in the rust belt, that are considering whether the health hazards of chickens are large enought to keep an old prohibition against keeping small number of chickens on your property. It seems we're trending towards bringing the chickens back.
see my post on Sprawl Repair Kit ... there are lots of ideas about transforming suburbs
A talk with Galina Tachieva, author of 'The Sprawl Repair Manual'
http://grist.org/article/2010-12-15-a-talk-with-galina-tachieva-author-of-the-sprawl-repair-manual/
Sprawl Repair Manual
http://www.amazon.com/Sprawl-Repair-Manual-Galina-Tachieva/dp/1597267325
During the 1930's depression, 50% of the houses were foreclosed on. So Obama didn't do too badly.
There was no way to keep the housing bubble at that high rate, foreclosures are a result of natural market settle.
BL: What you essentially did in maybe two minutes is cut a broad swath right through just about every problem that we kind of touched upon up here and hopefully to some extent a lot of these projects started to poke at. I would, with all due respect to my colleagues, suggest they didn’t really get into that cut. And, when Barry said this would be a little more nuts and bolts, I didn’t realize we were talking this nuts and bolts, but you’re absolutely right. You point out a whole series of problems starting from the fact that you’ve been displaced, put in a position where you could no longer afford your house because of the taxes on that house. Now you’re being left with very few options. I would hope on a really basic level that your voucher is portable, so that you aren’t stuck just looking for housing in Fort Lee which I know can be somewhat challenging. […] The whole Affordable Housing Trust Fund is a problem because it’s like the old George Bernard Shaw play Major Barbara: It allows these guys to buy their way out of providing affordable housing. […] As long as you continue to take what amounts to developers’ ransom money, you’re going to continue to have segregated neighborhoods. You’re going to continue to have folks like yourself who are stuck, getting forced out of their neighborhood…
It’s refreshing that the team unabashedly suggests that much of these new ribbons of housing would be developed as public housing. But if this is a serious idea, not simply a gesture or metaphor, then one must confront the fact that public housing in the United States, apart from unfortunately being in ideological disrepute, is also grossly underfunded.
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Responsibility (39)
Join us Saturday May 7, 2:00-6:00pm for Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream Symposium http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/events/12430
The American Dream has always been based on the freedom to pursue your dreams and the enabler for the American Dream has always been our Constitution, the rule of law, and economic liberty. Our free enterprise system lifted more people out of poverty than any other system this earth has ever known. Government exists to protect your rights and to prevent other people from interfering with your pursuit of these dreams, free of harm.
The American Dream is different for every person in this country. For some it is to own a home. For some it is to have a successful business. Whatever that Dream is to be achieved through your own personal perseverance, drive, determination and responsibility. It's not anybody else's job to deliver your American Dream to your doorstep, and that includes the government. The American government is in the business of protecting the freedom of its citizens to pursue their dreams.
The challenge now is not in our ability to solve problems but in our core values as fellow human beings. The American Dream is gone as we knew it. Homes have become unhealthy physically, spiritually and soulfully. Our families are broken, medications are excessive and stress has filled our lives. Homes used to be our sacred space but today it is the cause of of distress.
How did this happen?
After a career in home design and building I became acutely aware of the pressure to have bigger and bigger homes. At the same time we have lost millions of acres of land to sprawl and the reports are in that sprawl causes heart attack and stroke because people are not moving enough. On top of this, our water is disappearing and our air is heavy because corporate builders are profit driven and have no concern for the health of the homeowner. Joined with unethical bankers, the US homeowner has poorly built expensive homes. 1/4 of homes are under water financially as poorly built ones depreciate faster than people can afford to maintain.
There are a couple of solutions that can recapture our dream. By taking personal responsibility in what we purchase we can regain control. In home design and building, choose smaller, better built homes. Buy on an existing grid and use local builders and materials. Smaller, infill homes will immediately change the quality of life we experience and we recapture the sacred core of our homesteads.
be rational–the future is gated communities–there is not 'community' or 'society'...just a bunch of f trying to get ahead by either playing the victim card or getting elected to congress or the executive branch.
The equivalent of a bunch of mentally re-tarded third graders run america. So yea, I think thed solution is for everyone to give one big middle finger to everyone that wants to tell other people how to live, and if they keep at it, move–
THERE ARE SEVERAL PLACES AROUND THE PLANET that are looking for professionals, america is not the only happy pie-
they give you too much sh-t, you leave. GIVE ONE BIG MIDDLE FINGER to all the little angry faced third graders as the economy sours. They dont deserve your taxes. The f idiots can't get out of a cardboard box.
December 20, 2011 at 3:47 pm
December 20, 2011 at 3:27 pm
December 20, 2011 at 3:01 pm
December 20, 2011 at 2:36 pm
December 20, 2011 at 1:34 pm
December 20, 2011 at 1:15 pm
December 20, 2011 at 1:06 pm
December 20, 2011 at 11:45 am
Builders, developers and real estate people have been telling people how to live for years....it's obvious now, more than ever, thats how things are done....people don't know what they want...
If you think it's just builders and developers telling people how to live, you're clearly missing a larger picture. Retailers are a huge factor here too. The problem with suburbia is the lack of "real job" creation.
The problem comes from the concept that many retailers sell products that more-or-less require single-unit, single-family housing units— lawnmowers, automobiles, chest freezers, full-sized appliances, furniture et cetera. The code for this word is "durable goods." And anytime you hear the government, planners or business-types talking about the increase in the purchase of durable goods or stimulating the durable goods market... they're clearly talking about suburbia.
And many of the companies that sell the tools of suburbia actively influence policy development by funding various non-profit and non-governmental organizations. We don't know who does what but there are fair examples.
Cato Insitute, a supporter of laissez-faire capitalism, is quite a staunch critic of urban planning is or has been supported by the likes of General Motors, ExxonMobile, Toyota, Visa, Wal-mart, Volkswagon, Honda, FedEx and Time Warner. None of these companies want to see functioning cities.
And we end up the paradox of...
If most of the jobs are low-wage, who's buying goods and services?
And where do the armies of wage workers live if new suburban development is too expensive?
ending the subsidies that drastically lower the true cost of many aspects of the suburban lifestyle would be a very strong incentive for many people to move into apartments and denser neighborhoods. If you want urban-style services and utilities with the luxury of low density you should have to pay a premium for it. otherwise there are ways of living more "off the grid" if you're willing to do your own maintenance and pay a little more up front for these systems.
many people do have the dream of living in a detached single-family home, and I think this should be available to people if they can afford it, but I think until the crash people were pretty delusional about how much this lifestyle actually costs (i.e. taking out loans they couldn't afford), and how much it has been costing our country.
MB: People have looked toward changing or improving the suburbs
for a long time. You can go back to the 1970s, and academics are often
lambasted for not being sensitive about it. But the reason I’m bringing
this up is that what is different at this point in time is everything from
globalization in terms of where is production happening, what are the
jobs. When you talk about housing, you ultimately always—even if you’re
an architect—end up talking about jobs. What will secure that loan in the
future? So, flexibility comes in. But the difference now, I think, is that
what people realize… And the foreclosure crisis is an awful thing, it is
absolutely a crisis, but it does start to create a situation where people
start to imagine that what we have is not inevitable. And, in fact, it was
produced, and it was dreamed. I think, people don’t like change in housing,
and they should worry about change in housing, but what we have is also
not terribly secure. And, so, I think that’s what you’re bringing up, and
Jeanne was bringing that up quite brilliantly.
CH: One of the things I think Detroit forces us to think of is the fact that
the things we think are natural are contingent.
MB: […] One of the big points of the show for anyone who deals with housing issues academically is, yeah, that deduction makes basically a
huge amount of American housing public housing at some level. It’s a far
bigger expenditure on the federal level than, for example, funding for HUD
for homelessness.
TS: It’s about $80 billion or something, right?
MB: It’s about $80 billion. Low-income housing tax credits, I think, are
probably $30 billion. So, the federal government at this point in time really
does not build directly public housing any longer. It incentivizes it through
tax credits.
CH: And it incentivizes for people to purchase their own homes and take
out a lot of debt, the interest of which they can then take off against their
taxes.
How about these in your face truths.
Government forced mandates made it legal for banks to offer mortgages to people that had no capability to pay back the loans.
The number of people artificially allowed into the housing market by these policies triggered crazy bidding wars, that I was a victim of, and artificially drove up real estate values.
Which in turn drove up rental costs which overall drove a spike in the national cost of housing.
Which resulted in a net loss of real income because wages did not keep up.
The loans the banks were legally allowed to sell to people who could not afford them had time bombs in them like adjustable rates and interest only loans that our poorly educated masses were too dumb to realize would financially destroy them.
And the biggest architect of this mess, Congressman Barney Frank of MA, is being allowed to retire and not go to prison for his part in building this mess.
@guest #6: Agree. When you remove the Yours/Mine designation, it devolves to the:"Its yours to maintain, but mine to use" mentality. The resultant building imagery looks like a Tim Burton claymation model--and not in a good way. This is an interesting idea, but the result is more pastiche than real content.
Looking forward to seeing what the teams came up with as their models. And at least at a basic level, I completely agree that creating sustained change in the way we put together cities in a psychological issue; so many conversations I hear that advocate sprawl are full of the word "should," from people who have never fully considered or experienced other arrangements. Take the "should" out of suburbanism and you get a new and very different conversation.
So I believe the hybrid approach is the likeliest way to achieve real innovation in housing as well as in real estate development practices. What might be the role of architects in this effort? The South African architect Iain Low has described a building as a manifesto, a declaration of what is possible. (“I work within the possibility of significantly transforming reality, as opposed to reinventing it," he said.) And indeed, the five projects in Foreclosed show us the possibilities of dreaming big.
(2) Motherhood and childhood are entitled to special care and assistance. All children, whether born in or out of wedlock, shall enjoy the same social protection.
— Article 25, Universal Declaration of Human Rights, United Nations
We need a sea change in American attitudes before anything will change. First, does everyone really need a lawnmower ALL OF THEIR OWN?? Pooled resources would help a great deal. And why do people need so much land? We live in a patio home with a small back yard and very small front yard. It is more environmentally responsible. Then there is the trend to obscenely large houses. Does a couple with no children really NEED a 5K sf house? It is environmentally irresponsible to have such a house. Look at the wasted space and energy.
We must get past the concept of individualism and "what's here for me" and into the concept of sharing in our communities and doing what is best for all of us. The Republicans, of course, don't play well with others and want their individual "rights" regardless of how damaging it is to the community. In the end, it is unlikely that anything will be done that is intelligent until we're falling completely apart. Individualism is the curse of humanity.....and may well be the end of it.
I'm not sure how I see the deflation of an over-inflated housing market brought about by greedy mortgage bankers and speculators has anything whatsoever to do with Obama. If we had kept sensible regulations in place during the Reagan/Bush/Clinton/Bush years, 2008's crash wouldn't have happened, and housing would not have shot through the roof. Obama is picking up the pieces. The previous 4 presidents and previous Congresses caused the problem through being in bed with the criminal international banking cartel.
Americans demanded gleaming houses on individual squares of lawn far removed from urban centers, and the people who finance and construct real estate delivered the goods. This is how we wound up with expanding rings of suburban sprawl orbiting every metropolitan area. This is how we turned ever-larger swaths of open space into grids of look-alike homes, the inventory that came to be tinder for the foreclosure inferno. The developers, bankers, salespeople and their government enablers were merely working to satisfy a public craving.
But the real estate bubble was in fact an orgy of profiteering run by and for the benefit of special interests that stuck the public with the cleanup. Investment banks poured money into housing because mortgages had become raw materials for a lucrative business churning out mortgage-backed securities. Homebuilders carved acreage into subdivisions far in excess of demand because money was free and volume was good for share prices. Money was free because the Federal Reserve kept interest rates low while Fannie and Freddie kept guaranteeing mortgages. Land was accessible because the government expanded highways and subsidized gas prices.
Retrofit or Redesign (40)
This doesn’t mean bulldozing Cicero’s housing stock. Instead, it means using existing, underused properties that might be renovated to provide a better fit. In Cicero’s case, that might mean turning to the scores of abandoned factories around it.
@Cyberoid: It's true that the word "Suburb" includes places that are vastly different from each other - do you really think that makes the word so vague as to be meaningless, though? I don't think MoMA is claiming that the foreclosure crisis is over by any means - in fact, the sites in question were selected in part becuase they have high rates of foreclosure and high rates of non-foreclosed homeowners under water on their mortgages.
@Lecorbusier (I've heard of you, haven't I?) For what it's worth, I do know Ellen Dunham-Jones' excellent work on retrofitting dead malls, etc. What I said probably couldn't be done was revamping the suburbs wholesale "by rewriting laws, rationalizing markets, reforming the construction industry, and changing the culture all at once." Do you know of anywhere where such a sweeping transformation has been carried out? If so, I'd be very interested to know more about it.
6 Months Ago
2/16/2012 10:36 AM CST
This saddens me. I will still probably check out the exhibit, but I'll definitely go in with a healthy dose of skepticism -- though of course I would have most likely gone in like that anyway. You're totally right: band aid solutions aren't going to get us anywhere, and as I've been reading for our sector projects what we really need is a relatively radical reinvention of our previous notions. One thing stressed again and again (and which you mention above) is the concept of 'bioregionalism' where not only local climate and indigenous materials are factored into design but also the idea of connecting people to place and an inherent celebration of local culture and practice. What a shame this exhibit misses the mark!
"Sprawl" might be a better word to use than "suburb." Not all suburbs are sprawl --- in fact, some suburbs are already perfect as they are, while some sprawl will unfortunately need to be annihilated. Others will require different approaches. The key is to analyze each place, ideally beginning at the regional level, and identify the needs, opportunities, and measures to be taken. Ellen Dunham-Jones said as much in the article published on this site one day before (http://goo.gl/qK5p9).
The Sprawl Repair Manual (sprawlrepair.com) (http://goo.gl/B5lCW) provides the practical solutions Ms. Lind refers to. They include techniques for analyzing (from the region to the building), planning, zoning, designing, financing, and implementing the repair of sprawl.
4 months ago
Retrofitting the American Dream in a flat world
I hate the over developed suburban wasteland, having grown up in a small town in eastern PA. Shortly after developers cut down the apple orchard at the end of my street to build more houses I escaped to art school. Ironically I grew up in a town that had a lot of history & culture — where American folk artist Edward Hicks painted the Peaceable Kingdom. In that Newtown, which is a very old American town, I learned a few things. If we combine a time for work (the lion), a time for home (the lamb) and a time for culture (the horse) we will rediscover the American Dream. Our Dream just needs a little pruning to flourish.
I agree with Ellen Dunham’s optimistic ideas for retrofitting suburbia. She touches on the idea of people having a third place to go to after the home and the workplace. We need to develop this idea. The only thing I would add to Ellen’s summary is to build equestrian centers on public land through out the American suburban landscape to add culture to the town centers. People need a place to meet and reconnect. We need to get back on the horse and rediscover our culture.
Thank you for your post
By way of a comparison: gay people have been struggling for marriage equality for decades now. Many cultural conservatives are very angry about this, and feel their way of life is under assault. It's a difficult thing to persuade them. Frequently, you'll see footage of some gay pride parade somewhere, which is repeated on a loop for the express purpose of stoking this outrage.
Do gay pride parades make arguing for gay marriage more difficult? Of course. But that's not the fundamental problem.
Same goes for environmentalism: if it weren't for that guy with dreadlocks on that college campus somewhere in the midwest who goes on about Gaia, would folks like George Will have signed on to "cap and trade" by now?
If no one ever said anything mean about suburban cul-de-sacs on GGW, do you think the Randall O'Toole's of the world would cease talking about shadowy urbanists trying to take away your car? Or UN initiatives that threaten our freedom? After all, that's where your average "man on the street" gets such nonsense, not because they read some urbanist gadfly in the comments section of an obscure blog somewhere.
C'mon. Municipalities are trying to retrofit to urbanism because the experts feel they don't have a choice, long-term. But industries (and that includes conservative political parties) that benefit from suburban sprawl will fight with every fiber of their being to prevent that from happening. Do you really think the Rush Limbaughs of the world are going to find TOD religion if the David Alperts of the world start praising ample parking?
Sure there are individuals with essentially zero influence who bad-mouth suburbia, and that may register with the very, very few people who read GGW, but in the larger debate, they're hardly even background noise.
Feb 22, 2012 11:47 am
Do you mean in terms of the long view on sustainability wrt enegry and health? B/c I think part of the short term motivation for the retro-fit is economic factors; e.g. demand, attracting/retaining people by providing what the "market" indicates people want, etc.
Feb 22, 2012 12:38 pm
I think the disconnect between the urbanists and many suburbanites is in the intensity of belief. Plenty of suburbanites think that a transformation to a more urban form would be good but think it's way off-base to say that without such a transformation, the burbs will fail. It would be similar to saying that DC cannot be successful or sustainable without radical change in its public education system. Obviously, it would be great if DC schools got a lot better but I don't see another collapse happening for DC anytime soon, with or without better schools.
It's also like saying that DC can never be successful without better governance. Frankly, some people in DC would find it insulting if you said that DC can never be successful with certain CMs as part of the Council (just like some suburbanites find some things that urbanists say to be condescending). In fact, there are many people who would have been insulted if you said that about Harry Thomas up until the day he was arrested. Once again, clearly DC would benefit from better CMs but there will be no collapse even with continued bumbling along with the current crop of CMs.
Feb 22, 2012 5:53 pm
“Is it better to annihilate suburbia or perfect it?” bit.ly/xQy57s Check out this fantastic critique of MoMA’s “Foreclosed” exhibit.
Rewriting the rules of urban repair, MOS imagines an unconventional solution: http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
The idea here is that if you work on the types of streets used, the use of space between houses, the typologies involved ... you can then create new forms of space .
@MOMAtoday for Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream...suburban retrofitting after the crisis http://tinyurl.com/8x62xjp pic.twitter.com/MaUTyQ7G
Here, Studio Gang proposes literally deconstructing an existing factory to salvage its materials and build a new mixed-use group of buildings. I liked the image style very much.
3/22/2012 12:15 PM
See Denton, TX public library - a former grocery store turned library: http://archrecord.construction.com/projects/bts/archives/libraries/06_Denton/overview.asp
Published right here, in ArchRecord back in May 2006.
3/22/2012 12:15 PM CDT
Architectural models offer stylized solutions to suburban ills. Suburbs accessible by proposed high-speed rail corridors are retrofitted with high-density developments, which in some cases are stripped of streets. Instead of oversized single-family suburban houses narrowly tailored for the nuclear family, the show provides a variety of housing models for people in different groupings, such as empty nesters and extended families.
Love that this vision of a future city is basically a remix of classic townhouse design. Lets focus on reuse/repurpose. http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/keizer/
Role of the Museum (61)
RT @metropolismag: MoMA kicks off Foreclosed, bringing the #architect, curator, and historian together. http://bit.ly/kCEJcY #architecture
And thanks, too, Bahij for commenting. It’s always great to hear from people in the field. I’m a little saddened by your “museum environments can often be colder and more sterile than some of their community counterparts” comment. I think that’s true in many cases, but I also think that it’s more of an indication of museums doing something wrong. It would seem to me that museums full of human creativity should be the complete opposite of cold and sterile, at least if the content is presented correctly.
Also, as you say, “community centers, art spaces and concert halls” should also offer forums for discourse, but in our non-ideal world and American society right now, those centers, spaces, and halls are struggling to survive even more so than museums. In my native Philadelphia, community centers close frequently and the local orchestra is filing for bankruptcy, while the museums continue to plug along.
Thanks, everyone, for commenting on this post about, well, commenting!
—Bob
At the 2010 Museum Computer Network conference, I presented, “Fostering A Democratic Museum Culture” (http://mcn2010.pbworks.com/w/p.... This lecture defines museums as community centers that inspire citizens work for peace and human rights. Follow this link for the Prezi presentation (http://prezi.com/sy9yptkaskxo/....
My Ignite Smithsonian lecture, “Renewing American Democracy Through Museums & Digital Culture,” (http://www.ustream.tv/recorded... continued to address these themes in dialogue with museum and library leaders who are committed to public service in our digital culture (http://smithsonian-webstrategy....
Museums, libraries and archives are at the very core of a free society. Digital technology, when used democratically, enables cultural institutions to serve the public as they assemble, share, and interpret experiences across time and space.
This conversation, in so many words, has been occurring simultaneously at several New York museums, where experts from outside the art world are converging to collaborate on projects that extend far beyond the galleries—and beyond conventional definitions of art.
While these projects might seem far afield from museums’ traditional mission—to preserve, study, and show their collections—directors say they reflect a logical evolution of their founders’ intentions.
MoMA has historically used its position of influence to call attention to issues in suburbia and housing. Collaborating with government agencies, as well as with architects, the Museum has framed arguments on new ways of living. In this tradition, Foreclosed, which is co-organized by MoMA and Columbia University’s Temple Hoyne Buell Center for the Study of American Architecture, will present five architectural teams’ re-imaginings of the American suburb.
The only way to fight this would be to have mainstream media to spread article and discussion like this piece, so people would actually paid more attention and begin to question things.
November 21, 2011 at 9:58pm
November 14, 2011 at 10:52pm
Major museums andcultural institutions are jumping on the social activism bandwagon as never before, launching urban research projects, participatory art festivals, and engaged urbanist exhibitions that were once the primary engagement of only the most committed nonprofits and independent producers as tools of social action. In organizing these shows, curators are embracing an idea in the vanguard of contemporary art and design, and getting German luxury car companies to foot the bills. What’s going on here, and who’s really the beneficiary?
@Cyberoid: It's true that the word "Suburb" includes places that are vastly different from each other - do you really think that makes the word so vague as to be meaningless, though? I don't think MoMA is claiming that the foreclosure crisis is over by any means - in fact, the sites in question were selected in part becuase they have high rates of foreclosure and high rates of non-foreclosed homeowners under water on their mortgages.
@Lecorbusier (I've heard of you, haven't I?) For what it's worth, I do know Ellen Dunham-Jones' excellent work on retrofitting dead malls, etc. What I said probably couldn't be done was revamping the suburbs wholesale "by rewriting laws, rationalizing markets, reforming the construction industry, and changing the culture all at once." Do you know of anywhere where such a sweeping transformation has been carried out? If so, I'd be very interested to know more about it.
6 Months Ago
We are not in a wake following a concluded foreclosure crisis -- we are in a foreclosure crisis! For MOMA to pass this off as the creative residue of a situation now resolved is not only stupidly Pollyanna, it is disingenuous and spreads false hope that the worst is behind us. No, the worst is ahead of us. More, many more homeowners are underwater or nearly so and as the economy continues basically moribund, the situation will only get worse. That is, if no one does anything dramatic to help homeowners as much as the bankers. Two Administrations of supposedly different ideologies have conspired to let the banks off the hook and throw the deadbeats -- the newly poor -- out of their homes.
MOMA's characterization of the exhibition as post facto is blatantly ignorant of the situation as it is. MOMA should be made to address the realities of home loss, not its own fantasy of what may have occurred.
BTW, the ridiculous solutions to the suburban crisis proposed in the exhibition are not clever, they are insulting to the people who made it possible: the foreclosed. Really in poor taste.
6 Months Ago
At MoMA, curators and architects seek a way out of the cul-de-sac http://ow.ly/926hW #architecture
2/13/2012 3:45 PM CST
2/22/2012 1:02 PM CST
The new #MoMA#architectureexhibition #Foreclosedcontinues the museum's exploration of issues in contemporary living http://bit.ly/A5NXF6
The new #MoMA#architectureexhibition #Foreclosedcontinues the museum's exploration of issues.. http://bit.ly/A5NXF6 @DomusWeb▄▀ví @cihru
For architecture to reach its full potential the public must be involved, inviting designers to be a part of their conversations and solutions in addressing social needs. But before this happens, the public must first understand the newly-emerging role of design. And it is here that this show wastes so much possibility and a timely opportunity.
Here's a great case in point. The Museum of Modern Art recently opened a new and ambitious exhibit, "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream." Last summer, MoMA invited some of the best architects, urban planners, ecologists, engineers and landscape designers to be in residence at MoMA P.S. 1. Their task? To reimagine housing and transportation infrastructures, particularly in the suburbs and areas plagued by foreclosure. The exhibit, which features models and animations, is also accompanied by a strong line up of events and a public blog. MoMA has made itself a center of dialogue on an important subject for a set period of time.
Isn't the museum of Modern Art a place for Art?
I don't know if i'm missing something, but any art gallery/museum i've been too rarely lets reality to get in the way of weird and wonderfula rt (especailly if it's of the 'modern' genre).
Was this exhibition meant to showcase real options for architectural redesign of these places or was it's objective to do art?
I'm confused...
"Foreclosed" (at MOMA): Art museums can do serious political/economic/technology shows - why can't history museums?? http://j.mp/A8afgQ
I say keep trying.
"There's something almost colonialist about this exhibition:" Felix Salmon on MoMA's Foreclosed, http://www.architectmagazine.com/exhibitions/dr …
I don’t know how you can say that the housing crisis was mostly a suburban thing. In downtown Portland all of the condo projects that were completed between 2007 and 2009 were subsequently turned into apartments or turned over to banks. Unsold units in bank possession were auctioned off or otherwise sold at a 40% discount. This reversed the trend of the prior decade of apartment buildings being converted into condos. Look around and the cranes are building new apartment buildings, not condos.
To the point of suburban architectural solutions to making housing affordable. You know that museum-curated shows are always ‘think big or don’t come’. When was the last time you saw a curated show present pragmatic proposals that could be installed in real life, the next day?
Real life solutions are already being played out in the burbs of Portland, and undoubtedly in hundreds of other burbs in the nation.
Orenco Station is supposed to be a New Urbanism project, although its growth has been driven by the big-box strip mall (a blend between the traditional strip mall and the single lot big box store).
A twist on Jane Jacobs romanticism connected to mass transit rail is discerned from stop after stop along the TriMet MAX, with tracts of townhomes and pocket parks within 1000′ of a MAX stop.
Not two weeks ago, the Portland Home Show unveiled the IKEA House. A collaboration between IKEA and a local company – Ideabox – that designs and builds prefab structures. It turns out, the solution to making housing affordable is to downsize the McMansion and make it practical inside.
In any case, the solution is either to expand suburbia outward or increase density — move out or move up.
AU: They probably don't pay taxes because it's a nonprofit institution.
SV: That's a form of subsidy, isn't it?
AU: The Museum of Modern Art has a tradition of putting on---
Sandra Smith [blonde]: I was going to say, artists are never political.
SV: It's always the elite telling the rest of us how we should live, isn't it?
AU: No, it's---
SV: Always.
AU: No, in fact, the state of California is enacting zoning policies to make suburbs more dense. You know, and the Wall Street Journal just pointed out last week that they are trying to, instead of having four houses per acre, they're going to have twenty houses per acre.
@metropolismagon MoMA: Foreclosed "struck me as yet another poster child for The MoMA Problem" http://bit.ly/L4Ikby #REITs
Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream, in which I ramble on about MoMa and architecture: http://theoncominghope.blogspot.com/2012/05/art-as …#architecture#moma
shtrum said…
At the risk of playing devil’s advocate, MOMA is only doing what MOMA does. But blaming them for popular culture is like blaming Lady Gaga for bologna sandwiches.
If architects want to know why only 2% of housing is designed by architects, they only need look in a mirror. A $200+/sf mirror.
Did i mention i was playing devil’s advocate? :)
I live in the wrong part of the world to offer first hand critique of Foreclosed, but this criticism seems unqualified. MoMA is an art museum, and will provide inventive solutions based in the arts, surely! That is what i would expect to see at MoMA, and would be disappointed otherwise. I dont think they promised ‘practical’ solutions. Bit like going to a Michelin star restaurant and criticising them because they dont serve Big Macs.
Scale (53)
Artist
Torrance, CA
Sounds like a worthy project, and
local. I like it. Mr. Zago, if the MoMA blog you're going to maintain has an RSS feed, you can load it into your profile and post the news to USA.org automatically.
In Foreclosed: Between Crisis and Possibility, a group exhibition and series of public programs curated by Whitney Independent Study Program (ISP) Curatorial Fellows Jennifer Burris, Sofía Olascoaga, Sadia Shirazi and Gaia Tedone, “between” is the operative word. Well, that and “foreclosed.” Using foreclosure mainly as a point of departure, the show and discussions posit multiple approaches to looking at and utilizing the forgotten spaces that embody the aftershocks of a declining economy and ask how artists, architects and planners grapple with a culture of crisis.
“City as Stage,” a conversation between GSAPP Professor Emeritus and planner Peter Marcuse, urban planner/architect/artist Damon Rich, Director and Chief Curator of the Sheila C. Johnson Design Center Radhika Subramaniam and artist Tania Bruguera, moderated by Sadia Shirazi, was held at The Kitchen on June 11th. The afternoon began with a screening of Beau Geste by Yto Barrada. In Beau Geste, Barrada patches a malignant hole in a palm tree in a vacant lot in Tangier, trying to thwart a developer who gouged it in hopes of killing the tree, thus allowing him to build up the lot. This guerilla-style urban intervention set the tone for the ensuing discussion on several levels: the scale was small, the action direct, and its consequence indeterminate.
The challenge now is not in our ability to solve problems but in our core values as fellow human beings. The American Dream is gone as we knew it. Homes have become unhealthy physically, spiritually and soulfully. Our families are broken, medications are excessive and stress has filled our lives. Homes used to be our sacred space but today it is the cause of of distress.
How did this happen?
After a career in home design and building I became acutely aware of the pressure to have bigger and bigger homes. At the same time we have lost millions of acres of land to sprawl and the reports are in that sprawl causes heart attack and stroke because people are not moving enough. On top of this, our water is disappearing and our air is heavy because corporate builders are profit driven and have no concern for the health of the homeowner. Joined with unethical bankers, the US homeowner has poorly built expensive homes. 1/4 of homes are under water financially as poorly built ones depreciate faster than people can afford to maintain.
There are a couple of solutions that can recapture our dream. By taking personal responsibility in what we purchase we can regain control. In home design and building, choose smaller, better built homes. Buy on an existing grid and use local builders and materials. Smaller, infill homes will immediately change the quality of life we experience and we recapture the sacred core of our homesteads.
Counting down to PST.... One of the most intriguing large-scale exhibs... http://bit.ly/puo6uq
“Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream,” an ongoing series of workshops that will culminate in an exhibition at MoMA in February, aims to do nothing less than provide new models for how metropolitan areas-specifically large suburbs in five areas around the country-might be improved. “The projects are not meant to provide solutions to immediate site,” says Barry Bergdoll, MoMA’s chief curator of architecture and design. “They are meant to provide ideas for fundamental change.”
All five teams have responded to this directive to some degree by proposing social and infrastructural systems that attempt, on a large scale, to align with the new cultural desires and economic realities of American suburban living. Amale Andraos and Dan Wood of WORK Architecture Company, working on SalemKeizer, Oregon, propose a contemporary update on the notion of a garden city, addressing a range of ecological issues. Hilary Sample and Michael Meredith of MOS, analyzing the Oranges, New Jersey, explore the potential of suburban streets to offer a new kind of civic space in a less car-dependent future. Jeanne Gang of Studio Gang, focusing on Cicero, Illinois, seeks a new flexibility in housing that will accommodate the rapidly shifting immigrant populations in the suburbs outside Chicago. Andrew Zago of Zago Architecture, studying Rialto, California, subverts the strict hierarchies of property boundaries that have traditionally structured suburban space. And Michael Bell of Visible Weather, examining Temple Terrace, Florida, considers the relationship between relatively homogenous Florida suburbs and the more diverse and less prosperous neighboring urban communities.
First, I really appreciate the commentary from both KB (12/15) and DK (03/07) regarding the rewilding concepts in relation to suburbanization. I would like to respond first to DK’s point of building dense and compact cities and leaving the “hinterland and wilderness as intact as possible” is the ideal and I certainly do not disagree with this position. That said this is not what is taking place on the ground. Urbanization is continuing to spread into the hinterlands here in the US, in China, India, and Brazil and around the globe. The proposal here is to consider the potential for these exurban developments to adopt an ecological mandate.The focus on the MOMA exhibit and analysis is also very specific and thus the proposal needs to be seen in its context. We were specifically tasked with looking at foreclosure housing projects and how as designers and scientists we might bring federal funding to address some of the issues faced. Thus the site was selected for us, and due to its proximity to the San Bernardino National Forest and the ecologically intact conditions of the surrounding context including the Lytle Creek Wash, we saw the notion of creating a neighborhood focused in part on ecological management as an opportunity for collaboration between developers, the federal government and future homeowners.A third factor to consider is climate change and global warming. The earth is changing in part through large-scale anthropogenic causes. These are creating pressures and constraints on the hinterland ecosystems and organisms. Already, there are discussions of how to foster species migration as their ranges shift north. This is an area that scientists are keenly interested in the role they might play. Consider the species introductions, assisted migrations and other efforts scientists are already participating with the goal of enhancing ecosystems. In other words, just leaving the hinterlands out there “undisturbed” by the built environment does not mean they remain undisturbed, and to maintain ecosystems and organisms human interventions will likely be an important component. Consider John Foley’s diagram of the changing landscape conditions – where is the “hinterlands” in his diagram?Finally, Rewilding (and this goes back to KB’s comments) is a radical proposal and one that is debated amongst ecologist. Much of the issue arises from the concern over human – wildlife conflict that would likely ensue if we were to reintroduce large carnivores etc. to the US. At the same time, most ecologists would agree that top down predation would benefit ecosystem health and lead to greater diversity of species. Thus the issue is one of public acceptance. As a result, getting this concept out there through a variety of venues (given that Rewilding is in the “marketing” stage) should mostly benefit the cause. It is a much more radical concept than simply allowing people to manage biological systems at the urban fringe and is intended to create debate and discussion.The MoMA exhibit is pervaded by architectural discourse of the suburb and could use this layer of integration of knowledge into new suburban forms. The architect and their modes of working and analysis were prioritized and sites open to large development were sites for new visions. Still, the rewilding concept is part of the exhibit, which means that tens of thousands of museumgoers visiting the exhibit will have the opportunity to reflect on what role people can play in managing ecosystems in their neighborhoods, and on the potential value of rewilding as a concept to consider for promoting ecosystem function.
"Make no little plans; they have no magic to stir men's blood and probably themselves will not be realized. Ma... http://bit.ly/wQrDCr
2/21/2012 3:38 PM CST
Sub-urban and suburban are also two very different things. I would argue that sub-urban is not bad. A good example of this is in some parts of Brooklyn, Queens, and Nassau county NY. The density is greater than the typical suburban environment, and there is a small business walkable street scape that flanks a mix of multi and single family housing in many of these neighborhoods. There is also access to public transit in and out of the city. There is a mix of home owners and renters, and the opportunity to own a house and rent out the top floor. There is a sense of community and a feeling of being in a small town within a city. The film "Do the Right Thing" by Spike Lee so clearly expresses this. Another issue is density. More density is not the solution alone. We need to find an appropriate balance of density, production, and economy so that development can be in some sort of sustainable balance. I think that sub-urban form has the greatest potential for a sustainable development because there is enough space to support a mix of agriculture, industry,small business, housing, park space, etc...as well as enough density to support local businesses with regard to employees and consumers. Cities like manhattan will never be able to become hybrid typologies because things like urban agriculture and production will be far too expensive due to crazy high land prices. The only problem with the sub-urban typology is that it sometimes becomes gentrified over time as we see in brooklyn or the opposite happens where it becomes a ghetto due to the home values going down as density goes up like in Jamaica Queens (balance is always a thin line). On the other hand, suburban development lends itself to exploitation by corporate interests as James R. clearly articulates. The American dream of owning a single family home is not going away. It is a part of the American culture that dates back hundreds of years. We need to find a solution to the problem without ignoring the cultural mentality that led to it. This is why ideas like the ones in the MoMA exhibit never work. I believe that we need to study examples that already work like Astoria, and go from there.
Why does innovation from Architects always have to come in the form of telling people how to live their lives?
You hit the nail on the head. This goes back the the FLW broad acre city idea, that we can reinvent society in totality to fit a certain utopian vision. The problem is that every architect wants to invent the big cure not the gradual remedy, because the glory lies in being Jonas Salk not the guy who invented Robatusin. The problem with any utopian model is that it usually works in theory, but is completely unrealisable due to the given societal constraints with regard to culture and economy. I have been arguing on threads here that we need to become developers and offer realistic alternatives to crap suburbia. Once again, architects are thinking of top down solutions to what can only be achieved with bottom up models. We live in a free market society whether we like it or not. We need to create demand by building better stuff. "if you build it they will come" We can't just dictate our solutions and hope for society to demand our service. The suburban model is not going away because it is deeply part of the american culture. Rather than get rid of it, lets start by building more sustainable and enriching suburaban communities that are affordable. Look at the way the auto industry copes with these constraints...Sure a small electric car that weighs 1000 lbs. may be the best solution, but they recognise that society will not change so quick, so they focus on hybrid suv's and 4 door sedans. We need to build the "civic hybrid" equivelent of architecture right now (transitionary projects) not the electric smart car, because unfortunatly many people out there still have steel testicles hanging from the back of their pick-up trucks. If we can't even do that, how the hell are we going to do anything more radical. While I wish society was easy to change and would love to see such grand projects, it just ain't gonna happen yet.
February 22, 2012, @ 12:50 p.m.
Ricky Burdett (RB): You just have to look at what’s happened to cities, and unfortunately that’s exactly what’s happening. Most cities are suffering from middle-aged spread. They become really wide, and their footprint is becoming larger and larger. And as was said by many of the speakers in this piece, it’s because the car is there and everyone aspires to it. It’s fantastic that the MoMA, this august institution, instead of doing Deconstructivism or “Edible Minimalism” or whatever, is dealing with this stuff. But you can’t talk about this issue of cities and foreclosure and all that unless you link jobs and housing.
June 15, 2012, @ 12:11 p.m.
Interesting to see that you are raising bioregionalism here. And I am glad to see Stefanie addressing the issue of connectedness. I wonder if we can see this more effectively in a class full of Interiors people, than we would see in Architecture. This is an area that has been addressed for decades by ID though I would like to see it crossing the scale spectrum. Bioregionalism addresses connectedness. Interiors (sometimes) addresses it. Shaun will be discussing it in tomorrow's class at the planning scale. Is Architecture out of the picture?
I think the disconnect between the urbanists and many suburbanites is in the intensity of belief. Plenty of suburbanites think that a transformation to a more urban form would be good but think it's way off-base to say that without such a transformation, the burbs will fail. It would be similar to saying that DC cannot be successful or sustainable without radical change in its public education system. Obviously, it would be great if DC schools got a lot better but I don't see another collapse happening for DC anytime soon, with or without better schools.
It's also like saying that DC can never be successful without better governance. Frankly, some people in DC would find it insulting if you said that DC can never be successful with certain CMs as part of the Council (just like some suburbanites find some things that urbanists say to be condescending). In fact, there are many people who would have been insulted if you said that about Harry Thomas up until the day he was arrested. Once again, clearly DC would benefit from better CMs but there will be no collapse even with continued bumbling along with the current crop of CMs.
Feb 22, 2012 5:53 pm
MB: I personally think that the people that invest in housing will be fearful of investing in the old versions of housing and they’re going to look for a new product to invest in.
CH: Increased density?
MB: All five projects in the show deal with density, and they also deal with trying to find housing that is probably more financially and size-wise appropriate to its user, but also that would use dramatically less energy to basically dramatically lower carrying costs. But I think many of the people, including ourselves, we were looking at ways to take underutilized property, publicly held or publicly controlled, and increase density around infrastructure because the public has already paid for all of that infrastructure and isn’t using it.
Architects (some) have always had an over-evolved sense of their own importance. At least Paulo Soleri had style, these guys are recycling stuff we did in the 70's, just not as well. The big design solutions and Urban planning of the past don't work for the future. The next step will be devolution, self sustaining, smaller, less susceptible to economic changes and power failures. I think you call them villages in europe. We don't have that concept in the USA. The curator screwed the pooch on this one, there's lot of interesting alternate work out there.
More grandiose plans....which will entail the usual results.....after the motivators have been paid.
And just where would all the WalMart junkies store their junk?
While it's easy to get caught up in mega-arterials and mega-buildings for the mega-cities of the future, we have to remember what we're designing for: a person that's approximately 2 feet wide and 6 feet tall. The urbanism of Manhattan, the "goldilocks" of urbanism, is simultaneously grand and intricate. Its cohesiveness exists because it was designed at all scales big and small.
Architectural models offer stylized solutions to suburban ills. Suburbs accessible by proposed high-speed rail corridors are retrofitted with high-density developments, which in some cases are stripped of streets. Instead of oversized single-family suburban houses narrowly tailored for the nuclear family, the show provides a variety of housing models for people in different groupings, such as empty nesters and extended families.
I saw this back when it graced Arch Daily at some point. Larger issues aside, the MOS project is unequivocally bad. It reminds me more a gridded version of elevated highways that dissected our cities in the 60′s. This typical created a “good” and “bad” side. Formally, the language of the complexes are imposing and completely unnatural to their contexts.
Otherwise, I’m of complete agreement that MoMA did more harm than good here.
We need a sea change in American attitudes before anything will change. First, does everyone really need a lawnmower ALL OF THEIR OWN?? Pooled resources would help a great deal. And why do people need so much land? We live in a patio home with a small back yard and very small front yard. It is more environmentally responsible. Then there is the trend to obscenely large houses. Does a couple with no children really NEED a 5K sf house? It is environmentally irresponsible to have such a house. Look at the wasted space and energy.
We must get past the concept of individualism and "what's here for me" and into the concept of sharing in our communities and doing what is best for all of us. The Republicans, of course, don't play well with others and want their individual "rights" regardless of how damaging it is to the community. In the end, it is unlikely that anything will be done that is intelligent until we're falling completely apart. Individualism is the curse of humanity.....and may well be the end of it.
Silliness & Seriousness (54)
We are not in a wake following a concluded foreclosure crisis -- we are in a foreclosure crisis! For MOMA to pass this off as the creative residue of a situation now resolved is not only stupidly Pollyanna, it is disingenuous and spreads false hope that the worst is behind us. No, the worst is ahead of us. More, many more homeowners are underwater or nearly so and as the economy continues basically moribund, the situation will only get worse. That is, if no one does anything dramatic to help homeowners as much as the bankers. Two Administrations of supposedly different ideologies have conspired to let the banks off the hook and throw the deadbeats -- the newly poor -- out of their homes.
MOMA's characterization of the exhibition as post facto is blatantly ignorant of the situation as it is. MOMA should be made to address the realities of home loss, not its own fantasy of what may have occurred.
BTW, the ridiculous solutions to the suburban crisis proposed in the exhibition are not clever, they are insulting to the people who made it possible: the foreclosed. Really in poor taste.
6 Months Ago
2/16/2012 6:31 PM CST
2/16/2012 11:43 AM CST
2/15/2012 4:48 PM CST
2/15/2012 3:18 PM CST
2/15/2012 1:56 PM CST
2/15/2012 6:14 AM CST
2/14/2012 12:27 PM CST
2/14/2012 12:21 PM CST
Their design responses always seem to find answers in central planning socialism (or communism) where the lord in charge decrees how the little people shall live. In the context of the greatest economy on earth, these solutions always vary from amusing and trendy to useless. Ironically and predictably, the housing solutions generated by real world socialists and communists are among the worst on the planet!
Two years ago I outlined a grant project to design and build "the next American Home" using an award winning, very expensive, AE design and development team that no market rate home owner could ever afford. My local region's weather, utility rates, standard of living, aesthetic sensibilities and real estate market would all form the basis for this project. Once constructed, it would be leased and its overall performance measured over years – including elements like comfort, pride of ownership and livability in addition to the boring engineering stuff like energy performance.
The goal would be to offer a platform for the next generation of America’s homebuilders to reference when that industry recovers. I will not give away all the beans because I may resurrect it someday but needless to say, even in this economy I became too busy to fuss around with it.
2/13/2012 4:12 PM CST
2/18/2012 7:30 AM CST
2/21/2012 3:38 PM CST
2/22/2012 1:02 PM CST
2/22/2012 3:25 PM CST
2/23/2012 6:01 PM CST
2/29/2012 9:03 AM CST
3/2/2012 10:18 AM CST
On-target @dianalindindexreview of the suburban annihilation in MoMA's "less visionary than ignorant" Foreclosed show. http://americancity.org/buzz/entry/337 …
That’s the idea, good patrons. Free markets don’t just mean liberty. They also mean progress. They mean development that turns unseen worlds out of science fiction into reality.
But there’s the rub: If you try to get 10,000 people to live together in a single development, you’re cutting against the very impulses that drive people out of the city and into the suburbs in the first place.
At the same time, however, these projects also suffer from this sense of urgency. They do not, in fact, discuss one key question, which is central to contemporary architectural debate and is concerned with the instruments which are available to architectural practitioners. The open question is this: why should the solution to all problems always be the same one: the building of new architecture? Nobody here has really moved towards other and more radical solutions, which move beyond the very idea of an architectural project.
3/23/2012 1:52 PM CDT
The suburbs may be in need of change, but surely not the changes proposed here.
The exhibition is disappointing largely because its premise is so fascinating. Barry Bergdoll, MoMA's chief curator of architecture and design, and Reinhold Martin, director of Columbia University's Buell Centre, set out to explore five struggling suburbs. These pockets of the American landscape are in the midst of a transformation. Yes, they were ravaged by the housing crisis, but they were changing even before the recession. Suburban poverty rose by 53% from 2000 to 2010, compared with a 26% jump in cities. In many suburbs, white, nuclear families have been replaced by multigenerational Hispanic ones. The old car culture has become unsustainable, as petrol guzzles a greater share of families' budgets and the need for exercise becomes ever more apparent. All this begs for new types of transport and housing. MoMA wisely seized the chance to imagine a new future for the suburbs. The result, unfortunately, is absurd.
It looks like the place where the cartoon charachters "The Jetsons" lived in space! Futuristic and lifeless.
Instead of spending all this ridiculous time and money on space-age housing concepts, why not solve the REAL problem, and put the American workforce, BACK TO WORK !!
Like the forum we co-sponsored on MoMA's Foreclosed exhibit, Bloomberg's James Russell http://bloom.bg/xojIY2 likes the whimsy/provocation
Felix:
Please see my post in Architect Mag online. Being an architect I am just amazed there were no practical solutions to the myasmatic real estate industry of today. This is a multivariate problem with NO utopian solutions. And I remain saddened that my bretheren in architecture would publish such utter non-sense. Sheesh!!!
(Another GSAPP-related firm) I didn't look at the text for this one as thoroughly as I should have, but I blame this on the craziness of the visual material. I'm not totally sure what's going on, but it seems pretty cool. The ensemble of weird shapes makes me think of Koolhaas, specifically of “City of the Captive Globe,” while the main site model really begged for having a model train going around it. I can't say that the project made sense, but it was fun to look at.
@guest #6: This is either the work of a naif or a genius. I'm afraid I don't have the architectural sophistication myself to determine which.
@guest #3: From what I can tell a gyspsy curse was put on Pomona a long time ago. That city just can't get it togther. Ontario an Rancho are more likely the job centers.
is this what exurbia looks like an meth?
3/21/2012 5:00 PM CDT
3/21/2012 1:02 PM CDT
Usually the eye roll comes at a roof garden with mature trees on the 93rd floor, but waterfalls..? Other thoughts would have been; are those Petri dish? are we plebs bacteria colonizing on your culture? I’d like to think i would have come to the same conclusion but I think i would have not made it past the waterfall Voltron skyscraper without cursing enough to be shown the door.
Sustainability (94)
Andrew Zago has achieved a new level of ignorance regarding the New Urbanism. I searched the net for a picture of him and was surprised to find that he does not look quite as slack-jawed stupid as he sounds, even though appearance is apparently how he judges substance.
Now (LORD grant me patience!), “significant” architecture is not really how New Urbanists keep score. We do so in many other ways: how many cars not bought; how many vehicle miles reduced; how much transit supported; how much carbon not spewed into the atmosphere; how many children and old folk walk to their daily needs; how much infrastructure cost saved; how much less expended on the delivery of municipal services; how many HOPE VI houses cherished by their residents; how much real estate value created; how many total acres under design (either as New Urbanist communities or through form-based codes); how many downtowns revitalized; how much choice available regionally to those whom suburbia does not serve well; and so on.
But Architect Zago keeps score by other means — like securing the good opinion of about a half-dozen critics in Los Angeles and New York. Indeed, he operates in a world so marginal that I need to be reminded of its existence, monthly, by Metropolis.
That his statement was thoroughly engaged by Director Martin, rather than being ignored as the antics of a simpleton, shows what kind of emissions pass for discourse in academia these days.
But let’s have a look at it from Architect Zago’s point of view. It turns out that even by the tight little standards of his world, and within just one little project (Seaside), there might be as much “significant” architecture as Architect Zago himself might hope to achieve in a lifetime. Seaside has Steve Holl’s first large building. Machado/Silvetti’s first large building. The first buildings (at least three each, and darn good, too) of Deborah Berke, Alex Gorlin, and Walter Chatham. The only building of Roger Ferri. The first building of Leon Krier. The only American house by Aldo Rossi. A wonderfully melancholic house by Sam Mockbee. Clever and charming pavilions by Michael McDonough, Stuart Cohen and Jersey Devil. A national AIA award-winning and gorgeous church by Scott Merrill. And those are only some of the modernism by the “names,” not all the best buildings.
Architect Zago is doubly ignorant: first of what New Urbanism intends to achieve on its own terms, and then of what it has achieved even on his terms.
Am I to understand that he teaches somewhere?
May 26, 2011, @ 2:49 pm
Unfortunately, it was a house of cards that could not be sustained because the country wasn’t paying close enough attention. We were building up debt with no R&D for our future. We got involved in expensive wars, and put off stem cell research and genetic engineering. We just sell the world fast food and entertainment now.I actually saw the crash coming, and managed to take advantage of the greed and chaos to find myself as the dust settles in very comfortable digs. I was 15 feet away from John Paulson at a gala last summer and was tempted to speak to him and mention that he and I were the only 2 that I know of that came out ahead from the whole mess. I decided to wait….
There is much made of the American Dream, can someone define what this American Dream is, or was, and reassure us all that it is not based on infinite consumption of finite resources? There seems to be no other way of realising that ‘dream’. We must pump more oil, find more gas, rip our planet apart to find the stuff we must have in order to perpetuate some kind of illusion into an infinity that is constantly receding. Politicians scream :’vote for me, and you can have it all when I get elected’ so the gullible masses decide which candidate offers the best sounding lies. Then find that they still can’t have what they want, because the previous incumbent ‘left such a mess’ that getting the economy straight puts back the good times for another few years. So the myth of the American Dream goes on, always that illusive future awaiting everyone that was, I fear, the creation of postwar admen: that if you always bought the newest car and bigger house further out, you would always have the means to drag 2 tons of steel 20 miles to buy your groceries, or propel yourself at 500mph to sit on beach 2000 miles away for 2 weeks. Unfortunately the ‘means’ isn’t there anymore, The dream was built on an infinity of cheap oil and the dream is turning into a nightmare because oil is now too expensive to use for dream making. http://www.yourmedievalfuture.com/
The challenge now is not in our ability to solve problems but in our core values as fellow human beings. The American Dream is gone as we knew it. Homes have become unhealthy physically, spiritually and soulfully. Our families are broken, medications are excessive and stress has filled our lives. Homes used to be our sacred space but today it is the cause of of distress.
How did this happen?
After a career in home design and building I became acutely aware of the pressure to have bigger and bigger homes. At the same time we have lost millions of acres of land to sprawl and the reports are in that sprawl causes heart attack and stroke because people are not moving enough. On top of this, our water is disappearing and our air is heavy because corporate builders are profit driven and have no concern for the health of the homeowner. Joined with unethical bankers, the US homeowner has poorly built expensive homes. 1/4 of homes are under water financially as poorly built ones depreciate faster than people can afford to maintain.
There are a couple of solutions that can recapture our dream. By taking personal responsibility in what we purchase we can regain control. In home design and building, choose smaller, better built homes. Buy on an existing grid and use local builders and materials. Smaller, infill homes will immediately change the quality of life we experience and we recapture the sacred core of our homesteads.
I am afraid design has lost touch with the sacred. Solutions that do not revere our connection and dependence on nature are Band-Aids. Foreclosure is the result of a capitalist business model on two fronts. First, homes are built on inexpensive land that require infrastructure. Less expensive than infill, the market is sold a bigger is better value, demeaning the essence of design itself. Inexpensive, huge homes have destroyed millions of acres of farmland and aquifers and are ready to do so again after the recession is over regardless of what you do at MoMA. These homes are expensive and are deteriorating rapidly. Second, a failed industry at the core is not in a position to repair itself without a new revolutionary system approach only slightly identified in LEED and the Green Building initiative.
There must be a return to the building practices from the past that had one core leader in the design and delivery process. Trained as an engineer, these master builders were schooled in a natural, sacred geometric methodology that was philosophical and practical. The difference between this and our existing 3 tiered architect, engineer and builder approach is innate conflict.
A building is a sacred thing, manifest from nature and in accordance with her underlying principles. Until we regain this relationship, any attempts to solve our nightmare of expensive, cheap, environmentally dysfunctional buildings will be superficial. A much deeper view of the problem is the challenge and the work is philosophical,spiritual,professional and health related.
In 2007, the overlapping worlds of architecture and design, much like the worlds of politics and finance and thus of building and spatial development more generally, were very much persuaded that the old laws of cycles and periods had definitively yielded to new models of uninterrupted growth and limitless possibilities — and perhaps even the transcendence of the cyclical and sometimes violent swings of economic growth and building demand. That mood now seems hard to recapture. The neologism "starchitect" has lost much of its luster; indeed, it seems increasingly clear that the term did little service even to the handful of design talents whose works were thus lauded according to some superficial criteria of relevance largely to affluent citizens of the G20 countries. In any case, it is no longer a viable role model for future designers, given that the subprime mortgage crisis and economic crash have been accompanied by an equally impressive crash of new commissions for expensive private houses and showy museum additions, the building types that sustained the starchitect portfolio.
This is important work but keep the focus on energy demand reduction. Affordable Housing that is inexpensive to build but costs too much to operate is a cruel joke on the residents. Encourage Mass Wall enclosure technology (using light weight Autoclaved Aerated Concrete is the best starting point), then ERV (Energy Recovery Ventilation), and then alternative energies (solar HW and Geo-Thermal)make economic sense because you don’t need to produce that much.
All five teams have responded to this directive to some degree by proposing social and infrastructural systems that attempt, on a large scale, to align with the new cultural desires and economic realities of American suburban living. Amale Andraos and Dan Wood of WORK Architecture Company, working on SalemKeizer, Oregon, propose a contemporary update on the notion of a garden city, addressing a range of ecological issues. Hilary Sample and Michael Meredith of MOS, analyzing the Oranges, New Jersey, explore the potential of suburban streets to offer a new kind of civic space in a less car-dependent future. Jeanne Gang of Studio Gang, focusing on Cicero, Illinois, seeks a new flexibility in housing that will accommodate the rapidly shifting immigrant populations in the suburbs outside Chicago. Andrew Zago of Zago Architecture, studying Rialto, California, subverts the strict hierarchies of property boundaries that have traditionally structured suburban space. And Michael Bell of Visible Weather, examining Temple Terrace, Florida, considers the relationship between relatively homogenous Florida suburbs and the more diverse and less prosperous neighboring urban communities.
November 14, 2011 at 9:27am
This seems an ill-considered proposal.. it is a “griddy” proposal of redundant elements that fail to communicate formally or conceptually. A tower with artificial waterfall generating power
is neutralised by the need for electricity to pump water into the tower.[which does not have enough volume to feed any substantial amount of water back to the development}. The park looks like a urban wasteland waiting to happen no program feeds into the park, it is just another discontinuous element of “green space”. It is fine to propose these sustainable ideas but where are the numbers and technology to support it.
2nd year Architectural project…at best
December 20, 2011 at 6:35 pm
December 20, 2011 at 5:17 pm
It affected gender roles and pollution sky-rocketed because they through these homes up with NO regard to solar orientation and etc. It increased dependency on the car and was a nightmare for the family that had one car... which was almost everyone...
Not only that it also decreased the amount of diversity in a given area which has added to more social problems in our communities
December 20, 2011 at 1:18 pm
"It's just irresponsible to have a model that encourages moving out onto green fields and leaving behind decaying rings of an ever-fattening tree," he said. "I'm interested in not just letting the path of least resistance exist. It's cheaper for a developer to build on virgin territory, but it's not cheaper for people to live on it or get to it."
Following up on KB’s Dec. 15 comment and the article:Ecological principles may not be mutually exclusive with human habitat, but that is not the key issue.The most sustainable approach is to make the human built environment as dense, livable and compact, while leaving the hinterland and wilderness as intact as possible – not the agonizing compromise of low density settlements on the periphery of cities. This suburbanized nature, even with rewilding, is neither feasible or sustainable for the 7 B people on the planet – or any number close to that.
Let’s build good, tight cities and leave as much untouched habitat as possible for other plant and animal species. Introducing green design into the urban environment is fine, but not the crux of the ecological benefits of urbanism.
I sense the MOMA exhibit missed the point to a large extent.
First, I really appreciate the commentary from both KB (12/15) and DK (03/07) regarding the rewilding concepts in relation to suburbanization. I would like to respond first to DK’s point of building dense and compact cities and leaving the “hinterland and wilderness as intact as possible” is the ideal and I certainly do not disagree with this position. That said this is not what is taking place on the ground. Urbanization is continuing to spread into the hinterlands here in the US, in China, India, and Brazil and around the globe. The proposal here is to consider the potential for these exurban developments to adopt an ecological mandate.The focus on the MOMA exhibit and analysis is also very specific and thus the proposal needs to be seen in its context. We were specifically tasked with looking at foreclosure housing projects and how as designers and scientists we might bring federal funding to address some of the issues faced. Thus the site was selected for us, and due to its proximity to the San Bernardino National Forest and the ecologically intact conditions of the surrounding context including the Lytle Creek Wash, we saw the notion of creating a neighborhood focused in part on ecological management as an opportunity for collaboration between developers, the federal government and future homeowners.A third factor to consider is climate change and global warming. The earth is changing in part through large-scale anthropogenic causes. These are creating pressures and constraints on the hinterland ecosystems and organisms. Already, there are discussions of how to foster species migration as their ranges shift north. This is an area that scientists are keenly interested in the role they might play. Consider the species introductions, assisted migrations and other efforts scientists are already participating with the goal of enhancing ecosystems. In other words, just leaving the hinterlands out there “undisturbed” by the built environment does not mean they remain undisturbed, and to maintain ecosystems and organisms human interventions will likely be an important component. Consider John Foley’s diagram of the changing landscape conditions – where is the “hinterlands” in his diagram?Finally, Rewilding (and this goes back to KB’s comments) is a radical proposal and one that is debated amongst ecologist. Much of the issue arises from the concern over human – wildlife conflict that would likely ensue if we were to reintroduce large carnivores etc. to the US. At the same time, most ecologists would agree that top down predation would benefit ecosystem health and lead to greater diversity of species. Thus the issue is one of public acceptance. As a result, getting this concept out there through a variety of venues (given that Rewilding is in the “marketing” stage) should mostly benefit the cause. It is a much more radical concept than simply allowing people to manage biological systems at the urban fringe and is intended to create debate and discussion.The MoMA exhibit is pervaded by architectural discourse of the suburb and could use this layer of integration of knowledge into new suburban forms. The architect and their modes of working and analysis were prioritized and sites open to large development were sites for new visions. Still, the rewilding concept is part of the exhibit, which means that tens of thousands of museumgoers visiting the exhibit will have the opportunity to reflect on what role people can play in managing ecosystems in their neighborhoods, and on the potential value of rewilding as a concept to consider for promoting ecosystem function.
What is most interesting, and hauntingly familiar, is the ecologist’s critique of the final proposal:
“However, in the course of the translation of these strategies into a design aesthetic, a sustained process for facilitating input from the ecologist was never fully developed or attempted, with mixed results in the extent to which the architect was able to effectively capture the ecological concepts. Consequently, while the final proposal of misregistration provides a compelling aesthetic, its actual ecological functionality remains open to question.”
We see this time and again, where some sort of abstract design aesthetic is forced onto the landscape, marginalizing or worse yet, ignoring the basic tenants of ecology, and then championed in the name of ‘sustainability’. Once again, it goes to show that many architects (and landscape architects) talk a good talk about ecological issues but rarely understand the science and almost certainly don’t know how to fully integrate sound ecological principles into their work. The two are not mutually exclusive.
In addition, the team also discovered the importance of organic brownfield remediation in Cicero, even if it meant the land would remain underdeveloped. Through commonplace planting, the toxic industrial sites scattered across the residential fabric would change into safer cleaner zones for future community use. Finally, within certain regions of each parcel, the once zoned industrial land could be converted into a dense collection of affordable modular beds, baths, and public space by using the existing industrial structures and materials on each site such as truss frames and brick partition walls. The new clusters would become and important blend of adaptive reuse and new construction that utilized a sizable amount of Cicero's historical past while creating a new 21st century anchor that can accommodate thousands immediately adjacent to one of Chicago's commuter rail corridors.
“Anti Socialists”, “healthy cities” – hilarious! “Eggheady liberal architects”!? LOL Oh how you flatter yourselves! Inexperienced, academic, myopic, global warming eco hustlers who don’t understand the environment, fossil fuels/energy economy, national defense, US economy, our history or American Exceptionalism means that you are incapable of comprehending our future, which robs you of any basis for design. …so as a result we get vanity nonsense like this. ..and wishes for socialism as Athens burns in the wake of spastic entitlement class withdrawal.
Americans were not “given” anything; planning is not a socialist activity in the United States; and the diversity of planning across the country varies from tragic to excellent – something some writing here are obviously unaware of, living in a generation of under-educated, arrogant skepticism of forces you don’t understand.
Market forces drive change, a natural process arrogant socialists have no patience for. You are confused and angry because of the lies you tell yourselves and the turmoil that results. For example: there is no place for over-priced boutique wind/solar power (creates a job killing prosperity tax); oil is cheap and plentiful for hundreds of years; electric cars have already been rejected by the market; human controlled global weather is nonsense (global warming); landfills are a business like any other; recycling is, with few exceptions, just more manufacturing; and you have been betrayed by those who have taught you much of your lives. No matter what eco fantasy world you want to inhabit, everything I’ve written is dead on and there’s not a thing your hatful confusion can do about it.
Take some comfort in knowing that, for better or worse, you are not wise enough to begin to understand our future.
2/14/2012 11:29 AM CST
Sub-urban and suburban are also two very different things. I would argue that sub-urban is not bad. A good example of this is in some parts of Brooklyn, Queens, and Nassau county NY. The density is greater than the typical suburban environment, and there is a small business walkable street scape that flanks a mix of multi and single family housing in many of these neighborhoods. There is also access to public transit in and out of the city. There is a mix of home owners and renters, and the opportunity to own a house and rent out the top floor. There is a sense of community and a feeling of being in a small town within a city. The film "Do the Right Thing" by Spike Lee so clearly expresses this. Another issue is density. More density is not the solution alone. We need to find an appropriate balance of density, production, and economy so that development can be in some sort of sustainable balance. I think that sub-urban form has the greatest potential for a sustainable development because there is enough space to support a mix of agriculture, industry,small business, housing, park space, etc...as well as enough density to support local businesses with regard to employees and consumers. Cities like manhattan will never be able to become hybrid typologies because things like urban agriculture and production will be far too expensive due to crazy high land prices. The only problem with the sub-urban typology is that it sometimes becomes gentrified over time as we see in brooklyn or the opposite happens where it becomes a ghetto due to the home values going down as density goes up like in Jamaica Queens (balance is always a thin line). On the other hand, suburban development lends itself to exploitation by corporate interests as James R. clearly articulates. The American dream of owning a single family home is not going away. It is a part of the American culture that dates back hundreds of years. We need to find a solution to the problem without ignoring the cultural mentality that led to it. This is why ideas like the ones in the MoMA exhibit never work. I believe that we need to study examples that already work like Astoria, and go from there.
Eichler, yes, I agree Kevin. You know of any contemporary developers that are doing this kind of work with a little more focus on community design and sustainability? I would love to do a little research into this.
Why does innovation from Architects always have to come in the form of telling people how to live their lives?
You hit the nail on the head. This goes back the the FLW broad acre city idea, that we can reinvent society in totality to fit a certain utopian vision. The problem is that every architect wants to invent the big cure not the gradual remedy, because the glory lies in being Jonas Salk not the guy who invented Robatusin. The problem with any utopian model is that it usually works in theory, but is completely unrealisable due to the given societal constraints with regard to culture and economy. I have been arguing on threads here that we need to become developers and offer realistic alternatives to crap suburbia. Once again, architects are thinking of top down solutions to what can only be achieved with bottom up models. We live in a free market society whether we like it or not. We need to create demand by building better stuff. "if you build it they will come" We can't just dictate our solutions and hope for society to demand our service. The suburban model is not going away because it is deeply part of the american culture. Rather than get rid of it, lets start by building more sustainable and enriching suburaban communities that are affordable. Look at the way the auto industry copes with these constraints...Sure a small electric car that weighs 1000 lbs. may be the best solution, but they recognise that society will not change so quick, so they focus on hybrid suv's and 4 door sedans. We need to build the "civic hybrid" equivelent of architecture right now (transitionary projects) not the electric smart car, because unfortunatly many people out there still have steel testicles hanging from the back of their pick-up trucks. If we can't even do that, how the hell are we going to do anything more radical. While I wish society was easy to change and would love to see such grand projects, it just ain't gonna happen yet.
it would be a hard sell to convince people to abandon the traditional stand alone owner occupied home to become apartment dwellers.
it really is not that hard to build a very efficient or even a net zero home these days
Ricky Burdett (RB): You just have to look at what’s happened to cities, and unfortunately that’s exactly what’s happening. Most cities are suffering from middle-aged spread. They become really wide, and their footprint is becoming larger and larger. And as was said by many of the speakers in this piece, it’s because the car is there and everyone aspires to it. It’s fantastic that the MoMA, this august institution, instead of doing Deconstructivism or “Edible Minimalism” or whatever, is dealing with this stuff. But you can’t talk about this issue of cities and foreclosure and all that unless you link jobs and housing.
5 months ago
Do you mean in terms of the long view on sustainability wrt enegry and health? B/c I think part of the short term motivation for the retro-fit is economic factors; e.g. demand, attracting/retaining people by providing what the "market" indicates people want, etc.
Feb 22, 2012 12:38 pm
hey @WiedenKennedydon't worry that you're taking money from polluters like chevrolet as long as you do hipster art http://bit.ly/zVOynk
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
MB: I personally think that the people that invest in housing will be fearful of investing in the old versions of housing and they’re going to look for a new product to invest in.
MB: People have looked toward changing or improving the suburbs
for a long time. You can go back to the 1970s, and academics are often
lambasted for not being sensitive about it. But the reason I’m bringing
this up is that what is different at this point in time is everything from
globalization in terms of where is production happening, what are the
jobs. When you talk about housing, you ultimately always—even if you’re
an architect—end up talking about jobs. What will secure that loan in the
future? So, flexibility comes in. But the difference now, I think, is that
what people realize… And the foreclosure crisis is an awful thing, it is
absolutely a crisis, but it does start to create a situation where people
start to imagine that what we have is not inevitable. And, in fact, it was
produced, and it was dreamed. I think, people don’t like change in housing,
and they should worry about change in housing, but what we have is also
not terribly secure. And, so, I think that’s what you’re bringing up, and
Jeanne was bringing that up quite brilliantly.
CH: One of the things I think Detroit forces us to think of is the fact that
the things we think are natural are contingent.
MB: […] In the 1990s you had a booming economy, you had a kind ofpush to alter, if not end, the welfare state. By the 2000s, you have a real estate bubble. And today you have a foreclosure crisis. But in all of these situations, there are a couple things that have been consistent. The amount of money people spend on housing and transportation is immense. They can’t afford it. You don’t want to tell people they can’t afford something and say that’s the reason to change. You want to be more positive than that. But there are many, many factors about affordability, about energy consumption, and frankly about the role of design in any of it. The American single-family house is a commodity product that has virtually no research and development, no design. Architects, in a spec house in Houston in the late 1990s—their fee was about twelve dollars per house. These are mass-produced commodities. There is no professional engagement. […] I think most of the people in this exhibition are quite
positive and excited about the suburbs. We know it’s a deeply, deeply important part of the American ethos, if not just everyday life of course. But, they’re not inevitable. And the financial underpinnings of them have really dramatically shifted in the last five, ten, fifteen years—not just the last two.
CH: Talk about that R&D thing. You made a point in the video in the exhibition that blew my mind about the comparison between how much money in R&D goes into your iPhone or anti-lock brakes versus an American home.
MB: I did mention anti-lock brakes. For many commodities, before they hit the market, there are billions of dollars that might precede it, whether it’s Clorox or whether it’s an iPhone or a Honda Civic which is quite an ingenious product. Housing as we know it has kind of ironed all of that
out of it, and it did it a long time ago. […] They are paying Mercedes Benz prices for a twenty-year-old used car. The single-family house market atomizes out all of the financial processes, and you still are spending large sums of money, but you’re not getting the sophisticated product. It’s not that it’s not a nice product or something people love, but it could be much, much better in energy and everything else.
Michael Bell (MB): We were asked by the Museum to work on a site called Temple Terrace, Florida. It’s the northeast corner of Tampa, and a little town. It’s 22,000 people. It was an incorporated city in 1926. It preceded the growth of Tampa. Tampa eventually came to meet Temple Terrace, in a kind of typical American situation where something that was very rural became urban, “quasi-urban” one could say. Temple Terrace actually had a relatively low foreclosure rate: 168 foreclosures in a town of 10,000 households. So, in looking at all of this, it actually became much more of a scenario of looking at “How did Temple Terrace operate historically? Financially? What was its density?” Etc., etc. It became much more of a project about trying to produce a future that would be more secure against those kinds of problems, rather than being immediately reactive to the problem now. And I think that’s true for the whole exhibition.
were each assigned a suburban community with a higher foreclosure rate than the national average and asked to imagine in the design a vision for what sustainable, vibrant, post-crisis communities could be if we rethink our most fundamental beliefs about the American house.
http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …Watch the video to understand the concept. #yestermorrow
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Architects (some) have always had an over-evolved sense of their own importance. At least Paulo Soleri had style, these guys are recycling stuff we did in the 70's, just not as well. The big design solutions and Urban planning of the past don't work for the future. The next step will be devolution, self sustaining, smaller, less susceptible to economic changes and power failures. I think you call them villages in europe. We don't have that concept in the USA. The curator screwed the pooch on this one, there's lot of interesting alternate work out there.
I saw the show two days ago with my husband and kids (9 and 11). It's been the topic of conversation since then. I hate to think about what sort of world we are leaving our children, not only are our cities and infrastructure falling apart but more importantly there seems to be nobody proposing an alternative to our current state of decay. Although they look very well considered, I'm not sure all the proposals are reasonable, but it's wonderful to have people seriously proposing an alternative to our sinking status quo. I wish there was more of exhibitions like this forcing us to think how we are all responsible for the construction of our world, our cities and suburbs. And more importantly that urban development and infrastructure are our legacy we leave our children.
I think that contemporary architecture should reflect the community needs of the current population. The idea of changing the old style of living into more dynamic one is great. Replacing bungalows by the condo style type of living is just a great idea. I can see the European and Canadian influence in the battle against the old English style of living.
From my point of view, creating the new "centers" of life in the suburbs is also very interesting idea. Sometimes it is much better to reconstruct everything from the scratch than to continue with the old structures and ideas. Never ending House Flipping can not sustain the houses forever and sooner or later, the old suburb has to be replaced by a new one.
With new model of suburb, you get more possibilities to evade old mistakes and give people better life conditions and space for their everyday lives.
The exhibition is disappointing largely because its premise is so fascinating. Barry Bergdoll, MoMA's chief curator of architecture and design, and Reinhold Martin, director of Columbia University's Buell Centre, set out to explore five struggling suburbs. These pockets of the American landscape are in the midst of a transformation. Yes, they were ravaged by the housing crisis, but they were changing even before the recession. Suburban poverty rose by 53% from 2000 to 2010, compared with a 26% jump in cities. In many suburbs, white, nuclear families have been replaced by multigenerational Hispanic ones. The old car culture has become unsustainable, as petrol guzzles a greater share of families' budgets and the need for exercise becomes ever more apparent. All this begs for new types of transport and housing. MoMA wisely seized the chance to imagine a new future for the suburbs. The result, unfortunately, is absurd.
@Tony Of course we all aspire to live in our own homes, but that does not mean it's possible for everyone. These projects seek a solution to the problems of urban sprawl, foreclosures, and environmental pollution. For those who cannot afford a single home, who cities are too densely populated for single homes, and for those who want to change our impact on the environment, these projects could be an amazing solution. Personally, I'm not that fond of the architecture, but ecologically and in terms of the amount of green space, they're a pretty good solution to a LOT of needs.
He said architecture can't fix the foreclosure crisis or solve all the many economic problems facing communities but it can come up with ideas for making those towns less prone to economic calamity.
Nature-City: Suburban housing for agrarians at heart: Essentially, it's the kind of set-up where bot... http://bitly.com/xDINZl #composting
3/22/2012 12:33 AM CDT
Nature buildings?? http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Architectural models offer stylized solutions to suburban ills. Suburbs accessible by proposed high-speed rail corridors are retrofitted with high-density developments, which in some cases are stripped of streets. Instead of oversized single-family suburban houses narrowly tailored for the nuclear family, the show provides a variety of housing models for people in different groupings, such as empty nesters and extended families.
SV: Yes.
AU: --- that are completely financially unsustainable?
SV: Who says they're completely financially unsustainable? Who says this?
AU: Well, why is poverty increasing at double the rate in suburbs as it is in cities?
SV: Because maybe poor people have moved out of the city and gotten a place in suburbs.
AU: Well that's the only place they can afford to buy houses.
Alex Ulam (AU): No, it's not the elite. It's the way our tax...It's the way our housing policy has been oriented for the last twenty or thirty years. It's unsustainable---
SV: We should not be organizing ourselves and where to live. Now the elites are telling us how we should be doing it.
AU: They are making some suggestions, but -- listen -- it's unsustainable for people to live in suburbs.
SV: Who says?
AU: Well most Americans actually spend more money on transportation than they do on medical care or on taxes. The average family of four that makes $50,000 spends somewhere between $7,900 and---
It gets complicated because the point of the exhibit Caroline is reporting on is basically that home-ownership like that — unrestricted and wholly self-fulfilling — WAS the American Dream, but is no longer. We don't have the space, or the money, or the resources, or the financial institutions to support that sort of everyone-gets-exactly-what-they-want lifestyle. The communities we built in that image are sprawling and unsustainable, and the designers and artists participating in the exhibit were tasked with imagining how society could take existing infrastructure and reimagine it in more effective, community-focused ways.
innovative approaches to re-designing suburbs sustainably - exhibition at MOMA http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …@MGCY_UNCSD#sustainability
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
“You can’t have 6.8 billion cowboys out there and begin to think about bringing the species together in a global economy and a global biosphere.”
The American Dream is not a sustainable intelligent vision. The needs of the many are left out of the utopian backyard. And I have never witnessed, in all my days, a direct correlation between happiness and prosperity.
Looking forward to seeing what the teams came up with as their models. And at least at a basic level, I completely agree that creating sustained change in the way we put together cities in a psychological issue; so many conversations I hear that advocate sprawl are full of the word "should," from people who have never fully considered or experienced other arrangements. Take the "should" out of suburbanism and you get a new and very different conversation.
Thoughts on MoMA`s Foreclosed:... http://tinyurl.com/6u6ypzx #adaptablere-use #affordable#architecture#design#green#sustainable
My favorite was Garden City. public pool is warmed by the heat radiated from the methane composting site underneath it! http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/keizer/
MoMa's blog on ‘Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream’. Sustainable urbanism http://www.moma.org/explore/inside …
Amale Andraos and Dan Wood of WORKac asked, "What if we could live sustainably and close to nature?">>> Nature-City. http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/keizer/
MrCotain: Thoughts on MoMA`s Foreclosed:... http://tinyurl.com/6u6ypzx #adaptablere-use #affordable#architecture#design#green#sustainableI...
We need a sea change in American attitudes before anything will change. First, does everyone really need a lawnmower ALL OF THEIR OWN?? Pooled resources would help a great deal. And why do people need so much land? We live in a patio home with a small back yard and very small front yard. It is more environmentally responsible. Then there is the trend to obscenely large houses. Does a couple with no children really NEED a 5K sf house? It is environmentally irresponsible to have such a house. Look at the wasted space and energy.
We must get past the concept of individualism and "what's here for me" and into the concept of sharing in our communities and doing what is best for all of us. The Republicans, of course, don't play well with others and want their individual "rights" regardless of how damaging it is to the community. In the end, it is unlikely that anything will be done that is intelligent until we're falling completely apart. Individualism is the curse of humanity.....and may well be the end of it.
Only scanned it, but have long thought US doesnt just have the legacy of a bubble, it also has a lot of unsustainable housing that should never have been built & is worthless
Its happening now. forget peak oil. Min wage workers cant afford to drive but they have no choice~
After all this, you now have to rebuild your cities. what a waste.
I'm not sure how I see the deflation of an over-inflated housing market brought about by greedy mortgage bankers and speculators has anything whatsoever to do with Obama. If we had kept sensible regulations in place during the Reagan/Bush/Clinton/Bush years, 2008's crash wouldn't have happened, and housing would not have shot through the roof. Obama is picking up the pieces. The previous 4 presidents and previous Congresses caused the problem through being in bed with the criminal international banking cartel.
You seem to be of two minds.
First you say American attitudes need to change, which I agree they must, and they will eventually when they realize how very unsustainable our sprawl pattern of development is.
Then you seem to blame one political group. That doesn't make much sense. Suburbia is filled with people of all political persuasions ... who all will have to come to the realization each one on their own that it is not a sustainable way to live.
Top-Down & Bottom-Up (35)
Having served as a disaster relief expert and community economic development specialist for 15 years under 5 previous US Administrations, I believe there has never been a better opportunity to provide expanded resources for individuals, organizations and communities to "claim their ultimate destiny".
The field of Community Economic Development (CED), which includes a focus on Self-help, Empowerment and Capacity Building, is best known for successes in microenterprise development, "community based development" and fostering "multi-sector collaborative partnerships".
Your initiative to recognize individuals who are stepping up and making a difference is similar to the Ultimate Destiny Hall of Fame Awards developed to recognize individuals who are fulfilling their ultimate destiny while helping others manifest their own destiny. That program recently led to a visionary description of "The United State of Americans", pending publication of a free publication on Solving the Ultimate Destiny of the USA and a proposal to help establish thousands of locally initiated non-profit CED Community Resource Centers whose mission is nearly identical with your message in this article.
The CAN DO! CED Resource Centers encompass Bucky Fuller's vision of "betterment for 100% of humanity", Authur Morgan's vision for The Great Community and it transforms Abraham Maslow's description of a fully actualized individual into a strategy for evolving more fully actualizing communities. The vision and mission is similar to several recent initiatives by President Obama and HUD Secretary Donovan such as Choice Neighborhoods, Sustainable Communities and most recently the Great Cities, Great Communities program.
This sounds like a lot of over paid elitists trying to decide how everyone else should live. My suggestion is that all members of this elite team be required to move their families to this new development and reside there for at least five years as part of their contract. The most troubling is, as Fairfield Fox points out, the use of taxpayer dollars to fund this boodoggle. Who are they to declare that suburban living is dead? Then the usual outlandish lie: " many long-standing critics of the American suburb — who see it as environmentally toxic, energy wasteful and just too expensive (especially because it’s paid for by taxing the cities) " All evidence points to the suburban taxpayer as supporting the urban ghettos so your analysis is an ouit right lie. Abbot schools and other urban renewal activities are primarily supported by taxpayers from the suburbs.
be rational–the future is gated communities–there is not 'community' or 'society'...just a bunch of f trying to get ahead by either playing the victim card or getting elected to congress or the executive branch.
The equivalent of a bunch of mentally re-tarded third graders run america. So yea, I think thed solution is for everyone to give one big middle finger to everyone that wants to tell other people how to live, and if they keep at it, move–
THERE ARE SEVERAL PLACES AROUND THE PLANET that are looking for professionals, america is not the only happy pie-
they give you too much sh-t, you leave. GIVE ONE BIG MIDDLE FINGER to all the little angry faced third graders as the economy sours. They dont deserve your taxes. The f idiots can't get out of a cardboard box.
December 20, 2011 at 3:47 pm
One of the beauties of the American Dream is that people can aspire to living in a large home, or a cave if they so prefer. The unilateral imposition of small standardized homes on the masses is an idea best left to the few countries that still embrace the mistaken ideology that was Communism. If these rather naive architects are so committed to that concepts they endorse for others, then I suggest they emmigrate to a former Soviet Bloc country where they will feel more fulfilled. They should take their hypocrisy with them. It has no place in the US.
2/14/2012 6:41 PM CST
Their design responses always seem to find answers in central planning socialism (or communism) where the lord in charge decrees how the little people shall live. In the context of the greatest economy on earth, these solutions always vary from amusing and trendy to useless. Ironically and predictably, the housing solutions generated by real world socialists and communists are among the worst on the planet!
Two years ago I outlined a grant project to design and build "the next American Home" using an award winning, very expensive, AE design and development team that no market rate home owner could ever afford. My local region's weather, utility rates, standard of living, aesthetic sensibilities and real estate market would all form the basis for this project. Once constructed, it would be leased and its overall performance measured over years – including elements like comfort, pride of ownership and livability in addition to the boring engineering stuff like energy performance.
The goal would be to offer a platform for the next generation of America’s homebuilders to reference when that industry recovers. I will not give away all the beans because I may resurrect it someday but needless to say, even in this economy I became too busy to fuss around with it.
2/13/2012 4:12 PM CST
2/13/2012 2:27 PM CST
Why does innovation from Architects always have to come in the form of telling people how to live their lives?
You hit the nail on the head. This goes back the the FLW broad acre city idea, that we can reinvent society in totality to fit a certain utopian vision. The problem is that every architect wants to invent the big cure not the gradual remedy, because the glory lies in being Jonas Salk not the guy who invented Robatusin. The problem with any utopian model is that it usually works in theory, but is completely unrealisable due to the given societal constraints with regard to culture and economy. I have been arguing on threads here that we need to become developers and offer realistic alternatives to crap suburbia. Once again, architects are thinking of top down solutions to what can only be achieved with bottom up models. We live in a free market society whether we like it or not. We need to create demand by building better stuff. "if you build it they will come" We can't just dictate our solutions and hope for society to demand our service. The suburban model is not going away because it is deeply part of the american culture. Rather than get rid of it, lets start by building more sustainable and enriching suburaban communities that are affordable. Look at the way the auto industry copes with these constraints...Sure a small electric car that weighs 1000 lbs. may be the best solution, but they recognise that society will not change so quick, so they focus on hybrid suv's and 4 door sedans. We need to build the "civic hybrid" equivelent of architecture right now (transitionary projects) not the electric smart car, because unfortunatly many people out there still have steel testicles hanging from the back of their pick-up trucks. If we can't even do that, how the hell are we going to do anything more radical. While I wish society was easy to change and would love to see such grand projects, it just ain't gonna happen yet.
Wednesday, February 22 at 6:05pm
One think that might be interesting is to set up one of these big internet games to virtually re-develop one of these places.
What would folks do if they had their choice? The urbanist ideas make a lot of sense to me. What might happen if you set up things like transport and development guidelines in terms of population density and small and large retail for a small satellite city and then let a whole bunch of people just wiki it out?
I agree with you 100%. The problem is that the market is not controlled by people with ideas but by people seeking profit. And building a sustainable and children-friendly environment is not that important. Each building has its own architect, own solutions and etc. But look on the wonderful planning of Brasil (the capital of Brazil), with the coherent architecture and sustainable environment. And it is almost 50 years old right now, but it looks wonderful!
What do you think MAN MADE UP GLOBAL WARNING was all about??
I would not want my kids to grow up in that cold lifeless compound looking mess. I bet those designers do not have kids. Who paid for this really. I bet they have a evil plans for total control. This makes me sick to my core. All on Earth should be put on notice of this future evil plan.
They only left out the ovens for the peaple who do not comply and the millions of cameras to exploit the U.N. Iron fist rule!!! A CITY PRISON.
People aspire to live in their own homes - not apartment blocks, not condos. They want a house, with a garden for their kids. Stop with the unrealistic idea that you can force people into these sorts of housing projects.
Urban planners will never understand 50%+ of the population DON'T WANT to live in multi-unit dwellings in their beloved cities, but they keep trying anyway. Like Jon from Cheyenne said, many prefer and like our own S-P-A-C-E away from all of the traffic, crime, and supposed "enlightenment" that city life purports to offer. They can have it and LEAVE US ALONE!
Looks kind of like an upper class prisoner of war camp to me......another way to control people by putting them into neat little compartments. Thanks, but no thanks.
“Shifting Suburbia” brings visionary thinking down to earth. Not top-down, give people the design tools they need. http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
AU: You care about where your tax dollars go, don't you?
SV: Yes, and I'll vote to make sure they go in the right place.
AU: Yes, well maybe right now too many tax dollars have been going to the suburbs, and maybe it's time to have the tax payer dollars to go to cities and making certain suburbs more sustainable and more like cities.
AU: The Museum of Modern Art has a tradition of putting on---
Sandra Smith [blonde]: I was going to say, artists are never political.
SV: It's always the elite telling the rest of us how we should live, isn't it?
AU: No, it's---
SV: Always.
AU: No, in fact, the state of California is enacting zoning policies to make suburbs more dense. You know, and the Wall Street Journal just pointed out last week that they are trying to, instead of having four houses per acre, they're going to have twenty houses per acre.
SV: But don't you think we can decide for ourselves...?
Shibani Joshi [brunette]: But this is what artists are doing. This is what they do. They inspire thoughts. They inspire discussion. What's wrong with it?
Alex Ulam (AU): No, it's not the elite. It's the way our tax...It's the way our housing policy has been oriented for the last twenty or thirty years. It's unsustainable---
SV: We should not be organizing ourselves and where to live. Now the elites are telling us how we should be doing it.
AU: They are making some suggestions, but -- listen -- it's unsustainable for people to live in suburbs.
SV: Who says?
AU: Well most Americans actually spend more money on transportation than they do on medical care or on taxes. The average family of four that makes $50,000 spends somewhere between $7,900 and---
If we can change the dream we can, possibly, change reality.
Usually the eye roll comes at a roof garden with mature trees on the 93rd floor, but waterfalls..? Other thoughts would have been; are those Petri dish? are we plebs bacteria colonizing on your culture? I’d like to think i would have come to the same conclusion but I think i would have not made it past the waterfall Voltron skyscraper without cursing enough to be shown the door.
(2) Motherhood and childhood are entitled to special care and assistance. All children, whether born in or out of wedlock, shall enjoy the same social protection.
— Article 25, Universal Declaration of Human Rights, United Nations
(Un)Realistic Proposals (95)
This seems an ill-considered proposal.. it is a “griddy” proposal of redundant elements that fail to communicate formally or conceptually. A tower with artificial waterfall generating power
is neutralised by the need for electricity to pump water into the tower.[which does not have enough volume to feed any substantial amount of water back to the development}. The park looks like a urban wasteland waiting to happen no program feeds into the park, it is just another discontinuous element of “green space”. It is fine to propose these sustainable ideas but where are the numbers and technology to support it.
2nd year Architectural project…at best
First, I really appreciate the commentary from both KB (12/15) and DK (03/07) regarding the rewilding concepts in relation to suburbanization. I would like to respond first to DK’s point of building dense and compact cities and leaving the “hinterland and wilderness as intact as possible” is the ideal and I certainly do not disagree with this position. That said this is not what is taking place on the ground. Urbanization is continuing to spread into the hinterlands here in the US, in China, India, and Brazil and around the globe. The proposal here is to consider the potential for these exurban developments to adopt an ecological mandate.The focus on the MOMA exhibit and analysis is also very specific and thus the proposal needs to be seen in its context. We were specifically tasked with looking at foreclosure housing projects and how as designers and scientists we might bring federal funding to address some of the issues faced. Thus the site was selected for us, and due to its proximity to the San Bernardino National Forest and the ecologically intact conditions of the surrounding context including the Lytle Creek Wash, we saw the notion of creating a neighborhood focused in part on ecological management as an opportunity for collaboration between developers, the federal government and future homeowners.A third factor to consider is climate change and global warming. The earth is changing in part through large-scale anthropogenic causes. These are creating pressures and constraints on the hinterland ecosystems and organisms. Already, there are discussions of how to foster species migration as their ranges shift north. This is an area that scientists are keenly interested in the role they might play. Consider the species introductions, assisted migrations and other efforts scientists are already participating with the goal of enhancing ecosystems. In other words, just leaving the hinterlands out there “undisturbed” by the built environment does not mean they remain undisturbed, and to maintain ecosystems and organisms human interventions will likely be an important component. Consider John Foley’s diagram of the changing landscape conditions – where is the “hinterlands” in his diagram?Finally, Rewilding (and this goes back to KB’s comments) is a radical proposal and one that is debated amongst ecologist. Much of the issue arises from the concern over human – wildlife conflict that would likely ensue if we were to reintroduce large carnivores etc. to the US. At the same time, most ecologists would agree that top down predation would benefit ecosystem health and lead to greater diversity of species. Thus the issue is one of public acceptance. As a result, getting this concept out there through a variety of venues (given that Rewilding is in the “marketing” stage) should mostly benefit the cause. It is a much more radical concept than simply allowing people to manage biological systems at the urban fringe and is intended to create debate and discussion.The MoMA exhibit is pervaded by architectural discourse of the suburb and could use this layer of integration of knowledge into new suburban forms. The architect and their modes of working and analysis were prioritized and sites open to large development were sites for new visions. Still, the rewilding concept is part of the exhibit, which means that tens of thousands of museumgoers visiting the exhibit will have the opportunity to reflect on what role people can play in managing ecosystems in their neighborhoods, and on the potential value of rewilding as a concept to consider for promoting ecosystem function.
What is most interesting, and hauntingly familiar, is the ecologist’s critique of the final proposal:
“However, in the course of the translation of these strategies into a design aesthetic, a sustained process for facilitating input from the ecologist was never fully developed or attempted, with mixed results in the extent to which the architect was able to effectively capture the ecological concepts. Consequently, while the final proposal of misregistration provides a compelling aesthetic, its actual ecological functionality remains open to question.”
We see this time and again, where some sort of abstract design aesthetic is forced onto the landscape, marginalizing or worse yet, ignoring the basic tenants of ecology, and then championed in the name of ‘sustainability’. Once again, it goes to show that many architects (and landscape architects) talk a good talk about ecological issues but rarely understand the science and almost certainly don’t know how to fully integrate sound ecological principles into their work. The two are not mutually exclusive.
"Make no little plans; they have no magic to stir men's blood and probably themselves will not be realized. Ma... http://bit.ly/wQrDCr
As I would expect from MOMA, the designers in this exhibit are more interested in attracting attention to themselves by doing something new and different than in doing something that can work: "Michael Bell would herd newcomers to Temple Terrace, Florida, into a pair of high-tech megastructures lifted above vast urban plazas. Zago turns the classic subdivision into a largely car-free cubist collage...."
Obviously, this sort of thing cannot be done. But when the writer concludes that transforming the suburbs "probably can’t be done" at all, he just shows that he has not looked beyond this museum exhibit at what actually is being done in suburbs across America.
6 Months Ago
2/16/2012 6:23 PM CST
2/16/2012 6:05 PM CST
2/16/2012 12:40 PM CST
2/16/2012 10:36 AM CST
2/15/2012 5:45 PM CST
2/15/2012 4:48 PM CST
2/15/2012 3:18 PM CST
2/14/2012 2:42 PM CST
2/14/2012 12:58 PM CST
Jim Pettit (I am not anonymous)
2/13/2012 4:08 PM CST
2/13/2012 3:45 PM CST
2/29/2012 9:03 AM CST
Recently saw that ICON took the same general critical tone regarding the exhibition.
"This sort of vague, non-ideological collectivism hangs over the entire show. Designs by Visible Weather and, in particular, Zago Architecture, stress the blurring of the usual lines between public and private, renting and owning, residential and commercial sites. Such imprecise boundaries give these projects a Ballardian air: what use is changing the dream if you replace it with a nightmare?"
More http://www.iconeye.com/news/news/foreclosed-rehousing-the-american-dream
Sub-urban and suburban are also two very different things. I would argue that sub-urban is not bad. A good example of this is in some parts of Brooklyn, Queens, and Nassau county NY. The density is greater than the typical suburban environment, and there is a small business walkable street scape that flanks a mix of multi and single family housing in many of these neighborhoods. There is also access to public transit in and out of the city. There is a mix of home owners and renters, and the opportunity to own a house and rent out the top floor. There is a sense of community and a feeling of being in a small town within a city. The film "Do the Right Thing" by Spike Lee so clearly expresses this. Another issue is density. More density is not the solution alone. We need to find an appropriate balance of density, production, and economy so that development can be in some sort of sustainable balance. I think that sub-urban form has the greatest potential for a sustainable development because there is enough space to support a mix of agriculture, industry,small business, housing, park space, etc...as well as enough density to support local businesses with regard to employees and consumers. Cities like manhattan will never be able to become hybrid typologies because things like urban agriculture and production will be far too expensive due to crazy high land prices. The only problem with the sub-urban typology is that it sometimes becomes gentrified over time as we see in brooklyn or the opposite happens where it becomes a ghetto due to the home values going down as density goes up like in Jamaica Queens (balance is always a thin line). On the other hand, suburban development lends itself to exploitation by corporate interests as James R. clearly articulates. The American dream of owning a single family home is not going away. It is a part of the American culture that dates back hundreds of years. We need to find a solution to the problem without ignoring the cultural mentality that led to it. This is why ideas like the ones in the MoMA exhibit never work. I believe that we need to study examples that already work like Astoria, and go from there.
Why does innovation from Architects always have to come in the form of telling people how to live their lives?
You hit the nail on the head. This goes back the the FLW broad acre city idea, that we can reinvent society in totality to fit a certain utopian vision. The problem is that every architect wants to invent the big cure not the gradual remedy, because the glory lies in being Jonas Salk not the guy who invented Robatusin. The problem with any utopian model is that it usually works in theory, but is completely unrealisable due to the given societal constraints with regard to culture and economy. I have been arguing on threads here that we need to become developers and offer realistic alternatives to crap suburbia. Once again, architects are thinking of top down solutions to what can only be achieved with bottom up models. We live in a free market society whether we like it or not. We need to create demand by building better stuff. "if you build it they will come" We can't just dictate our solutions and hope for society to demand our service. The suburban model is not going away because it is deeply part of the american culture. Rather than get rid of it, lets start by building more sustainable and enriching suburaban communities that are affordable. Look at the way the auto industry copes with these constraints...Sure a small electric car that weighs 1000 lbs. may be the best solution, but they recognise that society will not change so quick, so they focus on hybrid suv's and 4 door sedans. We need to build the "civic hybrid" equivelent of architecture right now (transitionary projects) not the electric smart car, because unfortunatly many people out there still have steel testicles hanging from the back of their pick-up trucks. If we can't even do that, how the hell are we going to do anything more radical. While I wish society was easy to change and would love to see such grand projects, it just ain't gonna happen yet.
Or to reference a line from Blair Kamin's review of Jeanne Gang studios contribution to the exhibit maybe what is needed is less concept more blueprint?
I thought I would post this interesting interview w/ Michael Bell. It seems we are always discussing ways to put architects back in the driver's seat of the building process. I thought he posed some interesting solutions to immediate, real problems.
I really liked his holistic approach of re-casting the financing business model and working with members of that community to create a new paradigm.
http://www.reuters.com/video/2012/02/14/reuters-tv-a-radical-approach-to-homeownership-feli?videoId=230166482&videoChannel=117757
I am hoping the show runs through June so I can see it in NY.
I really liked his holistic approach of re-casting the financing business model and working with members of that community to create a new paradigm.
February 22, 2012, @ 12:50 p.m.
Jeanne Gang (JG): I think we can’t afford not to realize something. We have so many issues especially in the inner ring suburbs where we were looking at, like Cicero, where developers kind of hop-skip over them and sprawl out into further and further-out suburbs, which just increases our dependence on the car.
MT @johncaryDesign Corps' Bryan Bell claims the new "Foreclosed" exhibition at the MoMA sets design back 10 years http://bit.ly/wNi18W
Rather Utopian approaches to reconfiguring US suburbs. http://www.moma.org/interactives/e …Not sure people would actually want to live in these...
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
[...] reviewing the “Foreclosed” exhibit at MoMA, Felix Salmon raises an interesting question: who is going to pay for these projects to be built? [...]
[to Mayor Hawkins (EH)]: Could it help solve the crisis?
EH: I think it’s a novel idea. I think it might be a little bit more futuristic, something down the road, but the theme in and of itself is not that strange or different than what we’re trying to establish here.
Woman on Street: [looking at images] I really like it.
Man on Street: [looking at images] Fantastic.
Woman 2 on Street: [looking at images] Sounds like something from the Jetsons.
DREAM HOUSES
Letters
The proposed housing models featured in your Spring 2012 issue (“Dreaming American”) are best described as solutions in search of a problem. In particular, the proposal for the Oranges, in New Jersey — which would fill underused streets between existing buildings with ribbons of new developments — creates problems for which there are no reasonable solutions.
Problem number one is that the new structures, to meet disability-access regulations and building codes, would require elevators and public corridors leading to enclosed exit stairways, neither of which can be accommodated within the proposed configurations. Problem number two is that the structures would interfere with access for emergency vehicles.
But aided by the reclamation of previously private spaces (“The idea is that private space that is now abandoned, foreclosed, or empty would be given back to the public”), a more realistic project could be conceived featuring the following:
• Narrowed and reconfigured roads for use by bicyclists and joggers, and access for emergency vehicles.
• Playgrounds, parks, and open space enabled by the demolition of buildings deemed to be unsuited for adaptive reuse.
• Varied housing types to accommodate residents with a wide range of family structures and financial resources.
• Ground-level spaces for such services as childcare, health care, laundry, and community administration.
• Community-owned shuttle buses to provide access to shops and schools.
I’m sure that Jane Jacobs, if she were alive today, would be pleased to see this concept implemented.
Aaron Cohn ’49GSAPP
Los Angeles, CA
Aaron Cohn, “Dream Houses,” Columbia Magazine, Summer 2012, 3.
The provocations lived up to their name. The show was widely praised in the media for its ambition, vision, and social and environmental engagement, but there has also been some dust raising on the architectural blogs. Dissenters called the proposals out of touch, self-indulgent, elitist, esoteric. Some saw a cabal of ivory-tower types imposing their social-engineering fantasies upon a constituency they don’t know or understand. Others confused a theoretical exercise meant to incite discussion with a shovel-ready project.
But there’s the rub: If you try to get 10,000 people to live together in a single development, you’re cutting against the very impulses that drive people out of the city and into the suburbs in the first place.
At the same time, however, these projects also suffer from this sense of urgency. They do not, in fact, discuss one key question, which is central to contemporary architectural debate and is concerned with the instruments which are available to architectural practitioners. The open question is this: why should the solution to all problems always be the same one: the building of new architecture? Nobody here has really moved towards other and more radical solutions, which move beyond the very idea of an architectural project.
Isn't the museum of Modern Art a place for Art?
I don't know if i'm missing something, but any art gallery/museum i've been too rarely lets reality to get in the way of weird and wonderfula rt (especailly if it's of the 'modern' genre).
Was this exhibition meant to showcase real options for architectural redesign of these places or was it's objective to do art?
I'm confused...
crazy imagination must depend on real need and life.
The suburbs may be in need of change, but surely not the changes proposed here.
It's never going to happen, there's not a chance in hell that America will EVER look like this. It would be fabulous if it did happen but I just don't ever see it coming to fruition.
This won't fly...
Felix:
Please see my post in Architect Mag online. Being an architect I am just amazed there were no practical solutions to the myasmatic real estate industry of today. This is a multivariate problem with NO utopian solutions. And I remain saddened that my bretheren in architecture would publish such utter non-sense. Sheesh!!!
I don’t know how you can say that the housing crisis was mostly a suburban thing. In downtown Portland all of the condo projects that were completed between 2007 and 2009 were subsequently turned into apartments or turned over to banks. Unsold units in bank possession were auctioned off or otherwise sold at a 40% discount. This reversed the trend of the prior decade of apartment buildings being converted into condos. Look around and the cranes are building new apartment buildings, not condos.
To the point of suburban architectural solutions to making housing affordable. You know that museum-curated shows are always ‘think big or don’t come’. When was the last time you saw a curated show present pragmatic proposals that could be installed in real life, the next day?
Real life solutions are already being played out in the burbs of Portland, and undoubtedly in hundreds of other burbs in the nation.
Orenco Station is supposed to be a New Urbanism project, although its growth has been driven by the big-box strip mall (a blend between the traditional strip mall and the single lot big box store).
A twist on Jane Jacobs romanticism connected to mass transit rail is discerned from stop after stop along the TriMet MAX, with tracts of townhomes and pocket parks within 1000′ of a MAX stop.
Not two weeks ago, the Portland Home Show unveiled the IKEA House. A collaboration between IKEA and a local company – Ideabox – that designs and builds prefab structures. It turns out, the solution to making housing affordable is to downsize the McMansion and make it practical inside.
In any case, the solution is either to expand suburbia outward or increase density — move out or move up.
The ideas in the exhibit prompted much commentary about how realistic they were, from James Russell, Blair Kamin, Diana Lind, Bryan Bell and my colleague Sarah Goodyear. Members of the team that re-imagined a factory site in Cicero, Illinois, Jeanne Gang and Greg Lindsay, penned a New York Times op-ed calling for a fresh design and policy approach to housing for the 21st century. Curator Barry Bergdoll said the proposals were meant to be "provocations."
Reflecting on the new suburban utopia at 'Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream' @momapsi: http://bit.ly/wqFcxE #urbanism.
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
This is another project that left me feeling unconvinced. The talk about “misregistration” and flexible boundaries etc. didn't seem to do much to change the overall standard suburban layout of the proposed subdivision. The models were amazing, although Seussical in their color choices and shapes.
Michael Bell is another critic at GSAPP, but not one I've had before. Although his group's proposal was filled with slick renderings, I was not at all convinced, because it didn't look like anyone on the team had really thought about or looked at Florida's climate. There was text saying that the project would do this or that regarding climate, but one look at the images was enough to show that it would be ridiculous in Temple Terrace. All that glass would need to be washed continuously! Besides that, where is the vegetation in the renderings? Nothing in Florida looks like the images below - stark white and reflective - because it would blind you, and vegetation takes over whenever it gets a chance. Maybe it's just the style of the images, but it looks to me like no one on the design team had been to Florida.
Since Hilary is a GSAPP professor and I've seen this project before (she presented it during the housing studio), I'll pass over it. Suffice to say that it is more on the radical/speculative end of the spectrum of proposals.
@guest #6: Agree. When you remove the Yours/Mine designation, it devolves to the:"Its yours to maintain, but mine to use" mentality. The resultant building imagery looks like a Tim Burton claymation model--and not in a good way. This is an interesting idea, but the result is more pastiche than real content.
3/21/2012 1:02 PM CDT
Moma's #Foreclosedexhibitors fail to ground proposals in reality or pragmatism. http://nyti.ms/HMyoX5
There are many good ideas and many bad ones. What is important is remain clear that one solution will not work for everyone and in every area. Plus all ideas will have to manage the actual implementation. Making it a reality often takes quite a bit of compromise. I do not like the over populations idea..that has proven to be a failure and a cesspool for disease. Those zoning laws prohibiting it are there for a reason. This is not a solution, but a night mare.
It’s refreshing that the team unabashedly suggests that much of these new ribbons of housing would be developed as public housing. But if this is a serious idea, not simply a gesture or metaphor, then one must confront the fact that public housing in the United States, apart from unfortunately being in ideological disrepute, is also grossly underfunded.
The Workshop (87)
MoMA- Foreclosed “will enlist five interdisciplinary teams of architects to envision a rethinking of housing,” http://bit.ly/hgTBQz
Join us Saturday May 7, 2:00-6:00pm for Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream Symposium http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar/events/12430
RT @KatieandWalter MoMA- "Foreclosed " uses 5 interdisciplinary architect teams to envision rethinking of housing http://tinyurl.com/3hbt3ml
@studiogang, MOS, @Workac—what a group! RT @MoMAPS1: Meet the five interdisciplinary teams at MoMA PS1's "Foreclosed." http://bit.ly/ijH31m
Meet the teams of "Foreclosed" at @MoMAPS1. Learn about the project & interact with the architects on Sat, 6/18 4-6:30pm.http://t.co/wIZTrNh
MoMA | Foreclosed Open Studios Meet the five interdisciplinary teams at the first opportunity for the public to... http://fb.me/ZWqhEcew
Saturday is the first public viewing of architect-in-residence studios @MoMAPS1for the MoMA Foreclosed project. moma.org/visit/calendar
MoMA: "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream"; Learn about project, view progress + interact with architects: http://bit.ly/mwBanL
“@MuseumModernArt: 5 teams rethinking the rules to design and produce housing in the US. http://bit.ly/kARHd9 ” My kinda fun #architecture
MT @brainpicker: 5 teams rethinking rules for housing design, production, availability http://bit.ly/kARHd9 (via @MuseumModernArt)
RT @brainpicker: 5 teams rethnkng rules re how housing have 2 b designed produced made available http://bit.ly/kARHd9 (via @MuseumModernArt)
Cool #MOMAcompetition on affordable-housing design/production, esp in developing world: http://bit.ly/kARHd9. #NYUWagnerMUPs, go get 'em!
RT @brainpicker5 teams rethink rules by which housing is designed, produced and made available http://bit.ly/kARHd9 (via @MuseumModernArt)
Foreclosed : Narratives, Typologies, and Property: The five multidisciplinary teams working on projects for the ... http://bit.ly/qJ1qlp
Foreclosed : Narratives, Typologies, and Property: The five multidisciplinary teams working on projects for the ... http://bit.ly/qJ1qlp
Foreclosed: Title and Model Scenarios: The five multidisciplinary teams working on projects for the exhibition F... http://bit.ly/p7wMC5
MoMA | Foreclosed: Title and Model Scenarios http://fb.me/AHd10aVK
Interesting study of changing populations & housing needs RT @MuseumModernArtForeclosed: Rehousing the American Dream http://bit.ly/q2AodR
Foreclosed: The Halfway Mark: The five multidisciplinary teams working on projects for the exhibition Foreclosed... http://bit.ly/nKqgZ5
Halfway done w/ the workshop phase of @MuseumModernArt's Foreclosed exhibition! Find out what we've been up to: http://bit.ly/rbRMEI
Foreclosed: Constructing an Exhibition Narrative: The five multidisciplinary teams working on projects for the e... http://bit.ly/nbJr5q
MoMA: "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" teams begin conceptualizing/constructing their exhibition displays: http://bit.ly/mXFByg
Foreclosed: Visualizing the Invisible: The five multidisciplinary teams working on projects for the exhibition F... http://bit.ly/rlJwMh
Foreclosed: Five Weeks to Go: The multidisciplinary teams working on projects for the exhibition Foreclosed: Reh... http://bit.ly/pwrqBW
Check out Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream at MoMA http://bit.ly/kKqGDJ
This conversation, in so many words, has been occurring simultaneously at several New York museums, where experts from outside the art world are converging to collaborate on projects that extend far beyond the galleries—and beyond conventional definitions of art.
My MoMA "Foreclosed" teammate. RT @ccoletta@Ra_Joy: Fire Hose Art Brings Fame to Hot Urban Recycler Theaster Gates http://t.co/ur0
Foreclosed: Prioritizing Project Elements: The multidisciplinary teams working on projects for the exhibition Fo... http://bit.ly/oKPjN3
MoMA: The five teams behind "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" close in on their final proposals: http://bit.ly/mRF4eV
Foreclosed: Prioritizing Project Elements: The multidisciplinary teams working on projects for the exhibition Fo... http://bit.ly/oQrj6s
I want to see it “@MuseumModernArt: "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" close in on their final proposals: http://bit.ly/o8AENj ”
Sat 9/17 Foreclosed Open Studios by Barry Bergdoll and MoMA includes keynote by HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan @HUDNews. http://bit.ly/qcPjIv
U.S. Sec. of Housing Shaun Donovan speaks at the last “Foreclosed” open house, Sat. @MoMAPS1. Info & livestream: http://bit.ly/n7sbwh
Sat 9/17 Foreclosed Open Studios by Barry Bergdoll and MoMA includes keynote by HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan @HUDNews. http://bit.ly/qcPjIv Sat 9/17 Foreclosed Open Studios by Barry Bergdoll and MoMA includes keynote by HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan @HUDNews. http://bit.ly/qcPjIv
U.S. Sec. of Housing Shaun Donovan speaks at the last “Foreclosed” open house, Sat. @MoMAPS1. Info & livestream: http://bit.ly/n7sbwh
Shaun Donovan's #foreclosedkeynote address live at: http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar …. 4pm at @MoMAPS1#Buell
Secretário da Hab. e Desenvolvimento Urbano dos EUA no MoMA: os desafios da arquitetura americana em era dos foreclosed http://ow.ly/6xit5
I am enjoying this @museummodernartlivestream of FORECLOSED keynote address: http://www.moma.org/visit/calendar …
US Sec HUD Shaun Donovan highilghts #ArtPlacein keynote at MoMA's Foreclosed event. http://bit.ly/n58jye
“Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream,” an ongoing series of workshops that will culminate in an exhibition at MoMA in February, aims to do nothing less than provide new models for how metropolitan areas-specifically large suburbs in five areas around the country-might be improved. “The projects are not meant to provide solutions to immediate site,” says Barry Bergdoll, MoMA’s chief curator of architecture and design. “They are meant to provide ideas for fundamental change.”
U.S. Secretary of HUD Shaun Donovan delivers the "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream" keynote address at MoMA PS1 http://bit.ly/pRir83
Foreclosed: Close of the Workshop Phase: U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Shaun Donovan delivers ... http://bit.ly/nCyddG
At the #CIWArchtalk, Jeanne Gang talked about her Studio's contribution to MoMA's Foreclosed exhibit - http://bit.ly/resqu7 #ciw11#cicero
To Jeanne Gang's Cicero project in that she envisions the buildings as multi-use "kits" that can be used in anywhere http://bit.ly/resqu7
Foreclosed Open House: Studio Gang at http://MoMA.org http://bit.ly/ksDYQU #sckr
Theaster Gates, Jr., shares his thoughts on MoMA's "Foreclosed" project vis-à-vis Cicero, Illinois. http://bit.ly/t6vakf
RT @MargaretNYC: ...#MoMAenlisting arch. teams to find solutions in 5 U.S. regions. http://bit.ly/oez2hm
Heartbreaking story on foreclosed homes on #60Minutes. #MoMAenlisting arch. teams to find solutions in 5 U.S. regions. http://bit.ly/oez2hm
Heartbreaking story on foreclosed homes on #60Minutes. #MoMAenlisting arch. teams to find solutions in 5 U.S. regions. http://bit.ly/oez2hm
RT @MargaretNYC: ...#MoMAenlisting arch. teams to find solutions in 5 U.S. regions. http://bit.ly/oez2hm
Structural engineer Zak Kostura discusses his contribution to "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream." http://bit.ly/wt5ecc
RT @museummodernart: Structural engineer Zak Kostura discusses his part in "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream." http://bit.ly/wt5ecc
February 22, 2012, @ 12:50 p.m.
Here's a great case in point. The Museum of Modern Art recently opened a new and ambitious exhibit, "Foreclosed: Rehousing the American Dream." Last summer, MoMA invited some of the best architects, urban planners, ecologists, engineers and landscape designers to be in residence at MoMA P.S. 1. Their task? To reimagine housing and transportation infrastructures, particularly in the suburbs and areas plagued by foreclosure. The exhibit, which features models and animations, is also accompanied by a strong line up of events and a public blog. MoMA has made itself a center of dialogue on an important subject for a set period of time.
I didn't see the exhibit in person like you did, Alex, but I did read about it. The part that really got under my skin was when I read that the participants, to prepare for this exhibition, had spent some time "in residence" at PS 1 in Long Island City.
Would it really have killed them to spend some time in -- gasp -- actual suburbs? I guess that was just a bridge too far.
It confirmed my pre-existing notion, which I think you echo, that architecture, generally speaking, is not a discipline that has much that's meaningful to contribute towards these issues of redefining the American Dream. To critique it and to change it, it's helpful to have even a smidgen of understanding of why it's powerful and widespread among so many people.
"In the summer of 2011, New York's Museum of Modern Art invited five teams of architects, planners, ecologists,... http://fb.me/24gFxCald
http://www.moma.org/interactives/exhibitions/2012/foreclosed/
Each team engaged in a cross-disciplinary conversation, analyzing and eventually imagining the redesign of their specific sites, from older East Coast suburbs with rail connections to newer subdivisions accessible only by highway. As a result, the proposals developed for the five sites provide radically different visions of a rethought suburbia.
Board Prez Michael Sorkin will participate in the symposium #Foreclosed: Re-housing the #AmericanDreamat MoMA this Sat.: http://ht.ly/4N5GN