Urban
Updates,
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[Some maerial adapted from Wikipedia under GNU
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The term urban
contemporary was coined by the late New York DJ Frankie
Crocker in the early 1980s. Urban contemporary radio
stations feature a playlist made up entirely of hip
hop/rap music, contemporary R&B,
and, on occasion, Caribbean music such as reggae
and reggaeton.
The term "urban contemporary" has become heavily associated with
contemporary R&B, and is often used as a synonym to describe
the genre.
These stations focus
primarily on African-American females
between the ages of 18 and 34 but some are up to 49, and their
playlists are dominated by singles by top-selling hip hop and
R&B performers. Upon occasion, an urban contemporary station
will play classic soul music songs from the 1970s and early 1980s to satisfy the older end of
the format, but their playlists are otherwise focused on music released
within the last five years.
Urban contemporary
stations are the main focus of the airplay statistics for the Billboard magazine Hot
R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks chart, which
calculates the most popular R&B and hip-hop singles in the United States.
List of Urban
Contemporary Stations across the United States
See also
New urbanism is an
urban design movement that became
very popular beginning in the 1980s and early 1990s.
The goal of new urbanists is to
reform all aspects
of real estate development and urban planning. These
include everything from urban retrofits,
to suburban infill.
There are some common elements of new
urbanist
design. New urbanist neighborhoods are walkable, and are designed to
contain a diverse range of housing and jobs. New urbanists
support regional planning for
open space, appropriate architecture and planning,
and the balanced development of jobs and housing. They believe these
strategies are the best way to reduce the time people spend in traffic,
to increase the supply of affordable housing, and to rein in urban sprawl. Many other
issues, such as historic preservation, safe streets, green building,
and the renovation of brownfield land are also
covered in the Charter of the New Urbanism, the
movement's seminal document.
About new urbanism
(Adapted from "The New
Urbanism: An
alternative to modern, automobile-oriented planning and development" by
Robert Steuteville, editor and publisher, New Urban News,
2004.)
Background
Through the first quarter of the 20th
century, the
United States was developed in the form of compact, mixed-use
neighborhoods. The pattern began to change with the emergence of modern
architecture and zoning and ascension of the automobile. After World War II, a new system of
development was implemented nationwide, replacing neighborhoods with a
rigorous separation of uses that has become known as conventional suburban development, or sprawl.
The majority of US citizens now live in suburban communities built in
the last 50 years.
Although conventional suburban
development has
been popular, it carries a significant price. Lacking a town center or
pedestrian scale, conventional suburban development spreads out to
consume large areas of countryside even as population grows relatively
slowly. Automobile use per capita has soared, because a motor vehicle
is required for the great majority of household and commuter trips.
Those who cannot drive are
significantly
restricted in their mobility. The working poor living
in suburbia spend a large portion of their incomes on cars. Meanwhile,
the American landscape where most people live and work is dominated by
strip malls, auto-oriented civic and commercial buildings, and
subdivisions without much individuality or character.
Trends
The new urbanism is a reaction to
sprawl. A
growing movement of architects, planners, and developers, new urbanism
is based on principles of planning and architecture that work together
to create human-scale, walkable communities. New urbanists take a wide
variety of approaches—some work exclusively on infill
projects, others focus on transit-oriented
development, still others are attempting to transform the
suburbs, and many are working in all of these categories. New urbanism
includes traditional architects and those with modernist sensibilities.
All, however, believe in the power and ability of traditional
neighborhoods to restore functional, sustainable communities. Early in
the 1960s, Jane Jacobs authored The
Death and Life of Great American Cities, which set the
precendent for the new urbanist trend by condemning the accepted
planning theories of the time; calling for an increased effort by
planners to reconsider the failing single-use housing projects, large
car-dependent thoroughfares, and segregated commercial centers that had
become the "norm" of civic planning and zoning thought.
Today's popular trend of new urbanism
had its
roots in the work of maverick architects and planners, like Jacobs, who
believed that the conventional planning thought was gradually failing
in one way or another. In the 1970s and 1980s, these new ideas emerged, and
eventually coalesced into a unified group in the 1990s. From modest beginnings, the
trend is beginning to have a substantial impact. More than 600 new
towns, villages, and neighborhoods are planned or under construction in
the U.S., using principles of new urbanism. Additionally, hundreds of
small-scale new urban infill projects are restoring the urban fabric of
cities and towns by reestablishing walkable streets and blocks.
On the regional scale, new urbanism
is having a
growing influence on how and where metropolitan regions choose to grow.
At least 14 large-scale planning initiatives are based on the
principles of linking transportation and land-use policies and using
the neighborhood as the fundamental building block of a region.
In Maryland and several other
states, new urbanist principles are an integral part of smart growth legislation.
Moreover, new urbanism is beginning
to have
widespread impact on conventional development. Mainstream developers
are adopting new urban design elements such as garages in the rear of
houses, neighborhood greens and mixed-use town centers. Projects that
adopt some principles of new urbanism but remain largely conventional
in design are known as hybrids.
Old and new urbanism
The new urbanism trend goes by other
names,
including neotraditional design, transit-oriented development, and
traditional neighborhood development. Borrowing from urban design
concepts throughout history, new urbanism does not merely replicate old
communities. New houses within neighborhoods, for example, must provide
modern living spaces and amenities that consumers demand (and that
competing suburban tract homes offer). Stores and businesses must have
sufficient parking, modern floor plans, and
connections to automobile and pedestrian traffic, and/or transit systems.
With proper design, large office,
light
industrial, and even "big box" retail buildings can be situated in a
walkable new urbanist neighborhood. Parking lots, the most prominent
feature of conventional commercial districts, are accommodated to the
side, the rear or basement of new urban businesses. The size of lots
are reduced through shared parking, on-street parking, and shifts to
other modes of transportation.
Another difference between old and
new urbanism is
the street grid. Most historic
cities and towns in the US employ a grid that is relentlessly regular.
New urbanists often use a "modified" grid, with "T" intersections and
street deflections to calm traffic and increase visual interest.
That blending of old and new is the
basis of the
adjective neotraditional, a term that carries a lot of baggage,
especially with modernists, who see it as an
architectural "style." However, it is more of an urban design approach
that borrows from the past while adapting to the present and future.
The very fact that new urbanists must meet the demands of the
marketplace keeps them grounded in reality. Successful new urbanism
performs a difficult balancing act by maintaining the integrity of a
walkable, human-scale neighborhood while offering modern residential
and commercial "product" to compete with conventional suburban
development. New urbanists who cannot compete with conventional
development or find a niche that is poorly served by the real estate
industry are doomed to failure.
The difficulty of that balancing act
is one reason
why many developers choose to build hybrids, instead of adopting all of
the principles of new urbanism. Some new urbanists think that hybrids
pose a serious threat to the movement, because they usually borrow the
label and language of the new urbanism. Other new urbanists believe
that hybrids represent a positive step forward from conventional
suburban development.
Defining elements
The heart of new urbanism is in the
design of
neighborhoods, which can be defined by 13 elements, according to town
planners Andrés Duany and Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk,
two of the founders of the Congress for the New Urbanism. An authentic
neighborhood contains most of these elements:
- The
neighborhood has a discernible center. This
is often a square or a green and sometimes a busy or memorable street
corner. A transit stop would be located at this center.
- Most of
the dwellings are within a five-minute
walk of the center, an average of roughly 2,000 feet.
- There
are a variety of dwelling
types—usually houses, rowhouses and apartments—so
that younger and older people, singles and
families, the poor and the wealthy may find places to live.
- At the
edge of the neighborhood, there are
shops and offices of sufficiently varied types to supply the weekly
needs of a household.
- A small
ancillary building or garage apartment is
permitted within the backyard of each house. It may be used as a rental
unit or place to work (for example, office or craft workshop).
- An
elementary school is close enough so that
most children can walk from their home.
- There
are small playgrounds accessible to every
dwelling—not more than a tenth of a mile away.
- Streets
within the neighborhood form a
connected network, which disperses traffic by providing a variety of
pedestrian and vehicular routes to any destination.
- The
streets are relatively narrow and shaded by
rows of trees. This slows traffic, creating an environment suitable for
pedestrians and bicycles.
- Buildings
in the neighborhood center are placed
close to the street, creating a well-defined outdoor room.
- Parking
lots and garage doors rarely front the
street. Parking is relegated to the rear of buildings, usually accessed
by alleys.
- Certain
prominent sites at the termination of
street vistas or in the neighborhood center are reserved for civic
buildings. These provide sites for community meetings, education, and
religious or cultural activities.
- The
neighborhood is organized to be
self-governing. A formal association debates and decides matters of
maintenance, security, and physical change. Taxation is the
responsibility of the larger community.
Examples
Seaside, Florida, the
first new urbanist town, began development in 1981 on 80 acres (324,000
m²) of Florida Panhandle
coastline. Seaside appeared on the cover of the Atlantic Monthly in 1988
when only a few streets were completed, and it since became
internationally famous for its architecture and the quality of its
streets and public spaces. Seaside proved that developments that
function like traditional resort towns could be built in the postmodern era. Lots began
selling for $15,000 in the early 1980s and, slightly over a decade
later, lots prices had escalated to about $200,000. Today, some lots
sell for close to a million dollars, and houses sometimes top $3
million. The town is now a tourist mecca.
Seaside’s influence has
less to do with
its economic success than the attractiveness and dynamism related to
its physical form. Many developers have visited Seaside and gone away
determined to build something similar.
Since Seaside gained recognition,
other new urban
towns and neighborhoods have been designed and are substantially
built—including Haile Village Center in Gainesville, Florida;
Harbor Town in Memphis, Tennessee; Kentlands in Gaithersburg, Maryland;
King
Farm in Rockville, Maryland;
Addison Circle in Addison, Texas; Orenco
Station in Hillsboro, Oregon;
Mashpee Commons in Mashpee, Massachusetts;
The Cotton District in
Starkville, Mississippi;
Celebration and Avalon Park in Orlando,
Florida; Cherry Hill
Village in Canton, Michigan, and the
redevelopment of Stapleton
International Airport in Denver, Colorado.
Designers are also using the
principles of new
urbanism to build major new projects in cities and towns. In the
mid-1990s, the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) adopted the
principles of the new urbanism in its multibillion dollar program to
rebuild public housing projects nationwide. New urbanists have planned
and developed hundreds of projects in infill locations. Most were
driven by the private sector, but many, including HUD projects, used
public money. New urbanist projects built in historic cities and towns
includes Crawford Square in Pittsburgh, City Place in West Palm Beach, Highlands
Garden Village in Denver, Park DuValle in Louisville, and
Beerline B in Milwaukee.
The United States is by no means
alone in the "new
urbanism" shift, (though it is important to note most of the
fundamental ideas stem from European urban design), the river city of
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia is also experimenting with small more
commercialised developments such as Emporium, (a living, shopping,
dining mecca). As well as large scale initiatives such as Kelvin Grove
Urban Village, [1], a
University/College, medium and high resedential living with retail
suiting all age groups and budgets.
Meanwhile, leaders in this design
trend came
together in 1993 to form the Congress for the New Urbanism, based in
Chicago. The founders are Andrés Duany, Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk,
Peter Calthorpe, Daniel
Solomon, Stefanos Polyzoides, and Elizabeth Moule, all practicing
architects and town planners. The Congress for the New Urbanism has
since grown to more than 2,000 members and is now the leading
international organization promoting new urbanist design principles.
Disney builds a town
In June of 1996, Disney unveiled
its 5,000 acre (20 km²) town of Celebration, near Orlando, Florida, and it
has since eclipsed Seaside as the best-known new urbanist community. In
some respects, the new urbanism and Disney have been uncomfortable
bedfellows. While using designers and principles closely associated
with the new urbanism, Disney has shunned the label, preferring to call
Celebration simply a "town." Meanwhile, the movement may have benefited
from all of Celebration’s publicity—but not without
a price. Disney has come under attack for what some perceive as
heavy-handed rules and management. For those who would attack new
urbanism as insipid nostalgia, Disney is a fat target. The fact remains
that Celebration’s urban design is generally of high quality
and by most accounts serves residents very well.
In the 1991 book Edge City,
author Joel Garreau wrote that
Americans have not built "a single old-style downtown from raw dirt in
75 years." Celebration was the first real estate project to break that
trend, opening its downtown in October, 1996 (Seaside's downtown was
still mostly unbuilt at the time). Since then, scores of new urban
projects have followed suit with their own downtowns and mixed-use
districts.
Criticisms
New urbanism is in part a reform
movement and, as
such, has drawn criticism from all quarters of the political spectrum.
Some members of right wing view new urbanism as
a collectivist plot designed to
rob Americans of their civil freedoms, property rights and
free-flowing traffic. Some members of the left wing view new urbanism as
an example of capitalistic excess, aligned
with forces of greed that would purge the underclass from urban areas
for the benefit of the gentrifying elite.
Environmentalists decry new urbanism as nothing more than conventional
sprawl dressed up with superficial stylistic cues, while NIMBY activists routinely argue
against new urbanism as being too dense, with too much mixed use and
around-the-clock activity. A common refrain among all critics is that
new urbanist developments should be good in all respects instantly,
without the decades or centuries of maturation that historical towns
and cities have experienced.
Critics of new urbanism often accuse
it of
elevating aesthetics over practicality, subordinating good city
planning principles to urban design dogma. Another charge is that the
movement is grounded in nostalgia for a period in American history that
may never have existed. A related charge is that the movement
represents nothing truly new, as towns and neighborhoods were built on
similar principles in the U.S. until the 1920s. However, perhaps the most
frequent criticism of the movement is that some of the highest-profile
projects—such as Celebration, Seaside, and The Glen in Glenview, Illinois—represent
a form of sprawl themselves, in that they are built on what was
previously open space. New urbanist developments as a group are
approximately one-half infill and one-half greenfield.
A stream of thought in sustainable development
maintains that sustainabilty is primarily based on the combination of
high density and transit
service. To the extent that new urbanist developments rely on
automobile transport and serve the detached single family housing
market, critics claim they fall short of being truly sustainable.
Beyond cursory levels, say critics,
the provision
for cultural and social interchange in new urbanist towns is limited,
and the permanent residential populations of new urbanist resort
communities are comparatively small and culturally homogeneous. Critics
claim that new urbanism is somewhat incomplete: while providing a basic
framework for the improvement of the civic landscape, it does not
entirely provide for the diversity necessary for city success. Critics
call into question whether or not towns and cities are objects that can
be "created," or whether they are, in fact, the results of a process of
cultural, social, political and religious interaction that the new
urbanists seek to accelerate and simulate, in order to make their towns
more palatable to their predominantly affluent (and, some argue,
nostalgic) clientele.
To date, new urbanists have captured
only a few
percent of the residential market. The conventional suburban
development retail model, particularly the strip mall format, presents a
formidable challenge to the new urbanist ideal of walkable town
centers. Critics charge that new urbanist developers must get better at
making their neighborhoods affordable, and prove that their ideas are
superior for both revitalizing and recovering old cities, towns and
building new communities.
See also
References
- Brooke,
Steven (1995). Seaside.
Gretna, La.: Pelican Publishing Company. ISBN 088289997X
- Calthorpe, Peter (1993). The
Next American Metropolis: Ecology, Community, and the American Dream.
New York: Princeton Architectural Press. ISBN 1878271687
- Calthorpe, Peter and
William Fulton (2001). The Regional City: Planning for the
End of Sprawl. Washington, DC: Island Press. ISBN 1559637846
- Congress
for the New Urbanism (1999). Leccese, Michael; and McCormick, Kathleen
(Eds.) Charter of the New Urbanism, McGraw-Hill
Professional. ISBN 0071355537.
- Duany,
Andres; Plater-Zyberk, Elizabeth; & Alminana, Robert (2003). The
New Civic Art: Elements of Town Planning, New York: Rizzoli
Publications. ISBN 0847821862.
- Duany,
Andres; Plater-Zyberk, Elizabeth; & Speck, Jeff (2000). Suburban
Nation: The Rise of Sprawl and the Decline of the American Dream,
North Point Press. ISBN 0865475571.
- Dutton,
John A. (2001). New American
Urbanism : Re-forming the Suburban Metropolis.
Milano: Skira editore. ISBN 8881187418
- El
Nasser, Haya, "Miss.
Wal-Marts may apply 'new urbanism' in rebuilding", USA
Today, November 14, 2005.
- Jacobs, Jane (1992). The
Death and Life of Great American Cities. New York: Vintage
Books. ISBN 067974195X. Originally
published: New York: Random House, (1961).
- Katz,
Peter (1994). The New Urbanism:
Toward an Architecture of Community. New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0070338892
- Kunstler, James Howard
(1994). Geography Of Nowhere: The Rise And Decline of
America's Man-Made Landscape. New York: Simon &
Schuster. ISBN 0671888250
- Talen,
Emily (2005). New Urbanism & American Planning: The
Conflict of Cultures, New York: Routledge. ISBN 0415701333.
External links
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
Urban
Literacy by Robert B. Cooter,Kathy Cooter
The
Justice of Venice : Authorities and Liberties in the Urban Economy,
1550-1700 (British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship Monographs) by James
E. Shaw
The
Fable of the Keiretsu : Urban Legends of the Japanese Economy by
Yoshiro Miwa,J. Mark Ramseyer
American
Ruins : An Archaeology of Urban Modernity, 1830-1920 by Nick Yablon
Urban
Land Use Planning (Dreiser Edition) by Philip R. Berke,David R.
Godschalk,Edward J. Kaiser
Music
in Latin America And the Caribbean: An Encyclopedic History, Urban
Popular by Na
G-Spot
: An urban erotic tale by by Noire
Urban
Ecology (Key Ideas in Geography) by R. F. YOUNG
Urban
Ecology (Key Ideas in Geography) by R. F. YOUNG
The
Urban Design Reader (Routledge Urban Reader S.) by M. LARICE
The
Urban Design Reader (Routledge Urban Reader S.) by M. LARICE
Music
and Urban Geography by Adam Krims
Music
and Urban Geography by Adam Krims
Managing
Urban America by David R. Morgan
Urban
Social Movements and the State by Margit Mayer
Understanding
Urban Policy: A Critical Introduction by Allan Cochrane
Understanding
Urban Policy by Allan Cochrane
Urban
Catholics : The Irish Settlement in Cardiff, 1811-2000 by John Hickey
Intelligent
Town : An Urban History of Swansea (Studies in Welsh History) by Louise
Miskell
Urban
Outcasts by Loic Wacquant
Urban
Outcasts by Loic Wacquant
Modernist
Urban Design by Graham Smith
A
Heart for the City: Effective Ministries to the Urban Community by John
Fuder
A
Heart for the City: Effective Ministries to the Urban Community by John
Fuder
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