Reinventing the Central City
as a Place to Live and Work
Abstract
Public policies for urban development have traditionally
emphasized investment in physical infrastructure, the development
of large-scale commercial facilities, the construction of new housing,
and the renewal of existing neighborhoods. Most efforts to revitalize
central cities by building new facilities for visitors have focused
on suburban commuters and tourists. At the same time, many housing
initiatives in central cities have concentrated on low-income communities
because outlying suburban areas have attracted traditional middle-income
households.
This article argues that emerging demographic and cultural
trends - combined with changes in the structure of business organizations
and technological advances - provide new opportunities for cities
to retain and attract middle-class households. Using gay and lesbian
populations as an example, it focuses on the role that nontraditional
households can play in urban redevelopment. In light of the rise of
nontraditional households and the growth of self-employment and small
businesses, cities should adopt policies that make them attractive
places in which to live and work.
Introduction
During the past 50 years, public policies designed to
stimulate urban economic development have evolved dramatically, from
the post-World War II urban renewal programs to the Clinton administration
program establishing empowerment zones and "enterprise communities"
(Berger 1997; Greer 1965; Wilson 1966). Even though state and federal
agencies have taken a variety of approaches to renewing central cities
and stimulating private investment in them, urban economic development
initiatives have relied mainly on "bricks and mortar" to
solve the physical and economic problems of central cities. Even when
urban planners rediscovered the urban neighborhood in the 1970s, they
focused most of their scholarly research on upgrading the housing
stock for middle-class residents and on establishing policies to encourage
reinvestment in old neighborhoods. As Phillip Clay (1980, 13) wrote,
"What is commonly referred to as 'back to the city' is fundamentally
a resettlement in and a renewal of older neighborhoods mainly by middle
class people who are presently residents in the city in other neighborhoods
as renters."
According to Kent Robertson (1995), "cities large
and small tend to rely upon a familiar set of redevelopment strategies,
such as pedestrianization, shopping centers, office buildings, and
'special activity generators' such as convention centers, arenas,
and stadiums." For example, the Urban Development Action Grant
program was established in 1977 to leverage private investment in
cities (Judd and Swanstrom 1994). Federal grants were provided to
support public infrastructure that would attract commercial and residential
development, and federal funds were also used to build aquariums,
retail complexes, hotels, and convention centers. Redevelopment strategies
increasingly use public investment in cultural centers and celebrity
halls of fame, as well as promotional campaigns to foster tourism
and spending in central cities (Robertson 1995). In fact, an industry
consisting of consultants, conferences, books, and glossy brochures
now exists to help public officials "sell or market their city"
(Ashworth and Voogd 1990).
Admittedly, some researchers argue that there is neither
sufficient demand for new office space nor systematic evidence of
positive economic gains to warrant investment in large-scale physical
projects (Nelson 1996). In some cities, projects intended to replicate
the economic development success of other urban areas have failed
because they ignored unique local conditions and overrated the demand
for facilities serving a single market. While there is a regional
market for aquariums, there is also a limit to the number of potential
visitors willing to spend time and money to look at sea life, no matter
how spectacular the setting. Even successful downtown baseball stadiums
do not necessarily contribute to the overall economic and social conditions
of a city. Many municipal governments act as if sports facilities
are critical to urban economic development, but substantial evidence
shows that sports is not an economic engine, that it will not generate
a great number of jobs, and that it will not revitalize a city's economy.
Even in cities that advertise themselves as "entertainment centers,"
sports spending and related spending at hotels and restaurants are
never the largest component of their economy (Rosentraub 1997).
Public policy and urban development
The Clinton administration's empowerment zone program
elaborates and expands on the "enterprise zone" concept
that British geographer Peter Hall proposed in 1977 as a way to salvage
the decaying areas of England's inner cities. British conservatives
designed the enterprise zone hoping to attract private investment
by eliminating government regulations and taxes in the worst areas
of central cities. The Clinton administration program, passed as part
of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, represents a considerable
departure from such a market-driven approach to urban development.
The federal government designated six urban empowerment zones that
each receive $100 million in block grants and three rural empowerment
zones that each receive $40 million in block grants. Private firms
investing in these zones are eligible for tax credits and increased
deductions for business expenses when they hire local residents. In
addition to the six urban empowerment zones, "supplemental zones"
were established in six other cities, and 91 communities won designation
as enterprise communities, which brings $3 million in federal funds
to each community, plus greater flexibility in the sale of tax-exempt
bonds. The federal government has allowed each city to formulate its
own approach to using the empowerment zone funds and powers; the outcome
of this initiative is not yet known.
Michael Porter has put forth another approach to revitalizing
cities. He argues that cities should build on their "comparative
advantages," such as location, proximity to regional markets,
and human resources. Government, according to Porter (1995, 67), should
support "the private sector in new economic initiatives"
rather than invest in public programs concerned with ameliorating
social problems. Fainstein and Gray (1996, 1) provide a useful counterpoint
when they state that "Porter's argument starts with an incorrect
premise - that the problems with inner-city revitalization programs
lie in a failure to nurture the private sector." They also note
that federal programs concerned with reinvigorating the inner city,
"commencing with the federal Housing and Urban Development Act
of 1949 and culminating most recently in the establishment of empowerment
zones, have contained one constant elementtheir basis in an unswerving
faith that the private sector holds the key to urban revitalization.
Thus, although the forms of governmental program have changed and
levels of subsidy have gyrated wildly, their purpose has always been
the same - to renew the interest of private investors in places from
which capital has fled" (p. 1). This article challenges the conventional
wisdom that urban development policy should build on private sector
interest in real estate and the power of special attractions to lure
visitors to cities. Several scholars have emphasized the need for
cities to invest in neighborhood-based infrastructure rather than
large-scale projects designed to strengthen the central business districts
of cities. But these scholars share with traditional policy makers
a concern for physical investment and infrastructure (Mier 1995).
This article goes beyond that focus. It emphasizes the social and
technological forces that are shaping the future of cities and points
out the need for public officials to incorporate those trends into
urban development policy.
The fundamental challenge for urban development policy
in the 21st century is to understand the social functions that cities
serve and how the size and density of a city affect its capacity to
support the different subcultures that contribute to the development
of distinct subgroups within the city or region. "Cities provide
the critical mass necessary for a viable subculture and the clashes
that accentuate that subculture. With size comes 'community' - even
if it is a community of thieves, counterculture experimenters, avant-garde
intellectuals, or other unconventional persons" (Fischer 1975,
1328-29). More than 20 years ago, sociologist Claude Fischer set forth
a series of propositions concerning how urban size and density have
independent effects, such as fostering unconventional groups. Fischer
argued that larger or more urban places were more supportive of unconventional
behavior and groups.
Fischer's analysis of cities provides the conceptual
framework for a new approach to urban development that builds on social,
cultural, and technological trends rather than on market forces and
local political priorities. Public officials and private developers
must recognize that emerging demographic and cultural trends - combined
with changes in the structure of business organizations and technological
advances - provide new opportunities for stimulating economic development
by attracting and retaining middle-class households. The principal
characteristics of suburban communities - the physical separation
of work and home, proximity to high-quality local school systems,
and family-centered social networks - were powerful lures for most
Americans in the post-World War II era. Cities were hard pressed to
compete with the suburban lifestyle that catered to traditional middle-class
households. But the rise of nontraditional households and the growth
of self-employment put cities in a stronger position to attract residents
and businesses during the coming decades.
Urban development strategies for the next century must
build on demographic trends, technological forces, and organizational
structures rather than focus on physical projects and real estate
development. Doing so will require new conceptual approaches and empirical
techniques to guide public policy for cities. Fortunately, the availability
of new empirical techniques, such as "geodemography," makes
it possible to identify households with distinct preferences for urban
life. As Robert Lang and his colleagues suggest, "we propose
that cities dedicate themselves to cultivating a unique and marketable
urbanism by identifying those who love cities and catering to their
often nonmainstream needs" (Lang, Hughes, and Danielsen 1997).
Demographic change and urban culture
The long-term flow of America's population from central
cities to suburban areas is the result of numerous forces: racial
and ethnic bias, the construction of high-speed freeways, crime, the
decline of urban public schools, and the cultural appeal of low-density,
single-family housing. According to Frey and Fielding (1995, 33),
these forces and recent demographic trends have reinforced "the
indisputable dominance of the suburbs as the primary focus of activity
for new urban economic development and the growth of the nation's
white middle class."
Cities have not fared well as locations of choice among
American households and businesses despite the impressive work of
community development corporations, the widespread use of tax incentives
for commercial development in cities, and the varied success of festival
marketplaces and other economic development mechanisms. As a recent
study by the U.S. Office of Technology Assessment (1995, 77) states,
"Of the 196 central cities in the United States with more than
100,000 residents in 1990, 65 lost population since 1970.... The share
of the U.S. population living in the largest 25 central cities declined
from approximately 18 percent in 1950 to 13 percent in 1990."
Much of the post-World War II suburban housing boom
was fueled by the rise of the household made up of two-plus children,
a male breadwinner, and a female homemaker. This traditional household
was well suited to the suburban milieu in which one parent commuted
to work and the other performed domestic chores and supervised the
children. But that "Ozzie and Harriet" version of the American
household is hard to find in the 1990s; it certainly no longer dominates
the American landscape. According to American Demographics (1995),
married couples with children constituted the majority of American
households in 1960, but they now make up just one-fourth of all households.
Simply put, the structure of American households is
changing. From 1990 to 1995, nonfamily households, both male and female,
grew by 8.9 percent, while all households grew by 6.0 percent. In
1994, there were 33.2 million elderly in the United States, and the
elderly population is projected to more than double between 1994 and
2050 (U.S. Bureau of the Census 1996). A report by Fannie Mae's Office
of Housing Research points out that "increased household diversification
has characterized household growth during the last several decades.
The share of married couples with minor children has declined substantially
and has been accompanied by a shift toward nontraditional household
types.... Single-person households showed the greatest growth, increasing
their share of total households from 17 percent in 1970 to 25 percent
in 1990" (Megbolugbe and Simmons 1995, 9). The response of state
and local governments to the new demography is still unclear, but
the demographic trends are undeniable.
Culture and cities
Cities provide a milieu that historically has been tolerant
of cultural innovation and deviation from conventional modes of working
and living. Urban planners and sociologists have devoted considerable
time to exploring how different groups, such as artists, criminals,
and bohemians, have settled in cities and organized distinct communities
that support their economic needs and social lifestyles. As Karp and
colleagues have observed, "The city fosters the development of
subcultures that provide social support and a context in which nearly
every imaginable human behavior can be enacted" (Karp, Stone,
and Yoels 1991, 108). Several scholars have analyzed the role of creative
artists in neighborhood revitalization, while others have explored
how marginal groups have flourished in large cities (Kasinitz 1995;
Simpson 1981; Zukin 1995).
This article looks at the concentration and role of
gays and lesbians in cities in an effort to understand how different
subcultures can shape neighborhood renewal and urban development.
Although it is difficult to determine the size and location of gay
and lesbian populations in the United States, gays and lesbians constitute
a significant urban subcultureone that has too often been neglected
in urban policy research. Until quite recently, gays and lesbians
were a relatively vulnerable group politically, and they are still
the target of hostile public policies in some towns and states. While
other population subgroups, such as immigrants and the elderly, may
be larger in absolute numbers, the gay and lesbian population is becoming
increasingly prominent and visible in large American cities. The urban
experience of gays and lesbians demonstrates how cities serve as meccas
for unconventional cultural groups.
Kath Weston (1995, 255) has described the 1970s and
early 1980s as the "Great Gay Migration," which was marked
by "an influx of tens of thousands of lesbians and gay men (as
well as individuals bent on exploring their sexuality) into major
urban areas across the United States." However, the presence
of large gay and lesbian populations has been a reality in large cities
for more than a century. In his classic book, Gay New York, George
Chauncey (1994, 3) argues that the "complexity of the city's
social and spatial organization made it possible for gay men to construct
the multiple public identities necessary for them to participate in
the gay world without losing the privileges of the straight: assuming
one identity at work, another in leisure; one identity before biological
kin, another before gay friends." Others argue that the rise
of industrial society and the growth of cities are closely connected
to the public emergence of "homosexual and lesbian identity."
As John D'Emilio (1983, II) has written,
During the second half of the nineteenth century, the momentous
shift to industrial capitalism provided the conditions for a homosexual
and lesbian identity to emerge.... In place of the closely knit
villages, the relatively small seaport towns, and the sprawling
plantations of the preindustrial era, huge impersonal cities arose
to attract an ever larger proportion of Americans. The interlocking
processes of urbanization and industrialization created a social
context in which an autonomous personal life could develop.... In
America's cities from the 1870s through the 1930s, there emerged
a class of people who recognized their erotic interest in members
of their own sex, interpreted this interest as a significant characteristic
that distinguished them from the majority, and sought others like
themselves.
Although the size and anonymity of cities have attracted
individuals who benefit from being in proximity to one another and
who might be stigmatized in small, insular communities, the attitude
and policies of municipal governments toward gays and lesbians have
been, with few exceptions, overtly hostile. "A wealth of scholarship
and political debate about the history and relevance of gay and lesbian
experience in the city has revealed, on the one hand, extensive and
systematic practices of oppression and discrimination targeting gays
and lesbians as threats to the urban social order; and, on the other,
a century of resistance to this oppression" (Kenney 1995, 82).
Public officials have used a variety of regulatory devices, such as
exclusionary zoning laws, public accommodation laws, and decency codes,
to restrict activities by gays and lesbians.
Housing policies and land use regulations have often
sought to prevent gay and lesbian occupancy and ownership. As Kenney
(1995, 82) points out, "In some communities, zoning ordinances
restricted the sale or rental of housing to a single nuclear family."
Much has changed since the 1960s; today, the greater public acceptance
of homosexuality in modern society has reached its pinnacle in urban
neighborhoods that explicitly cater to gay and lesbian populations.
Indeed, there are books, such as Great Gay and Lesbian Places to Live,
that describe and evaluate the conditions of gays and lesbians in
towns and cities throughout the United States (Dills and West 1995).
While there are significant numbers of gays in suburban areas, recent
research suggests that suburban gays do not express their gender preferences
and cultural identity in a public way (Brekhus 1994).
Considerable attention has also been paid to lesbian
communities in the United States and Britain. Some observers have
argued that lesbians have been limited in their ability to develop
local institutions and structures similar to those of the gay community
because of "women's lack of access to capital and the fact that
women are more likely to be limited by responsibilities for children"
and because "lesbians share heterosexual women's fear of male
sexual violence" (Valentine 1995). Advances in reproductive technology
and a more tolerant attitude toward parenting have led to the growing
acceptance of lesbian couples raising children. One of the best-known
lesbian communities in the United States is in Northampton, MA, where
there are "numerous thriving social and cultural institutions
in the town that are run by or for lesbians, or which give unusual
attention to lesbians' concerns" (LeVay and Nonas 1995). Northampton,
a town of 35,000, is an exception to the large, urban settings within
which gay and lesbian communities have thrived in recent decades.
Cities are still the focal point for gay and lesbian
life, and this fact has profound implications for urban politics and
development policies. In analyzing the impact of gay and lesbian households
on urban land markets, Knopp (1990) states that "openly gay and
lesbian communities have achieved more of their social, cultural and
political goals in the inner cities of large urban areas than elsewhere."
While the spatial pattern of gay and lesbian concentration has affected
property values, there has been relatively little scholarly literature
on this subject. Knopp goes on to point out that "unlike other
minorities ... openly gay people often possess adequate economic resources
to enter a middle-class housing market.... The issue is therefore
not so much one of overcoming discrimination as it is of overcoming
institutional obstacles to investment in certain parts of the city."
There is no accurate and reliable measure of the gay
and lesbian population in the United States, but according to a survey
of 500,000 gays and lesbians by the marketing firm Overlooked Opinions,
there are 18 "primary gay market areas" in the United States
and approximately 50,000 adult gays and lesbians in each area. More
than half of the gay men and slightly less than half of the lesbians
who participated in the survey resided in cities. Most important,
47.7 percent of the gay men and 43.1 percent of the lesbians were
homeowners. The average household size was 1.7 for gay men and 1.9
for lesbians.
Gays and lesbians may constitute only a small fraction
of a large city's population, but their concentration in distinct
urban neighborhoods cannot be ignored as an indicator of urban capacity
to support and nourish different subcultures that find city life attractive.
For every gay household, there may be 10 or more nongay households
that accept gay neighbors into their community. These tolerant nongay
households ofbohemians and cosmopolites form a major potential market
for central cities. By studying and understanding the lifestyles of
gay urbanites, cities can gain insight into the much larger nongay
population that shares urban space with gays. Policies that accommodate
gay households will also appeal to a general urban population that,
while not gay, nonetheless seeks out alternative lifestyles. Gays
are the metaphor for the "nonfamily-values" approach to
urban redevelopment. This approach has been understood for many years
but never fully articulated until now. More than a decade ago, John
Kasarda (1985) said that "the competitive edge of major cities
in providing cultural and leisure services offers additional opportunities
for urban economic and demographic revitalization," and he pointed
to the way in which "demographic selection mechanisms based on
consumer tastes and household composition" could influence urban
development.
In cities across the United States, distinct communities
serve the housing and social needs of gay and lesbian individuals
(Adier and Brenner 1992). New York and San Francisco are well known
for their homosexual populations. Capitol Hill in Seattle; the Montrose
area of Houston; Dupont Circle in Washington, DC; South Grand Street
in St. Louis; the Chessman area of Denver; and Liberty Hill and the
Northside area of Cincinnati are all neighborhoods that have a high
concentration of homosexual populations (DeWitt 1994). Gay-oriented
parades and activities are now part of the culture of most American
cities. Oklahoma City, for example, now hosts events sponsored by
the International Gay Bowling League and the International Gay Rodeo
Association. Admittedly, urban acceptance of gay and lesbian cultural
life is not universal, as demonstrated by a controversy surrounding
a gay film festival in Charlotte, NC.
Housing purchases and real estate investments by gays
and lesbians have led to the rejuvenation of neighborhoods and the
creation of new businesses. Nowhere is this trend more apparent than
in the South Beach area of Miami Beach, a community that declined
when its elderly population diminished. Thanks to an increase in its
gay and lesbian population, South Beach has evolved into an "international
hot spot" featuring hotels, housing, nightclubs, shops, modeling
agencies, and industries, such as the Latin American headquarters
for both MTV and Sony (Dunlop 1995). The diminishing number of households
with minor children, the aging of the population, and the growing
public acceptance of nontraditional lifestyles are contributing to
residential renewal in many of our major cities. Cities that were
once unable to compete with suburban communities that catered to traditional
families have proved quite attractive to population subgroups that
prefer the services, milieu, and cultural diversity available there.
Haight-Ashbury, the San Francisco neighborhood that
was the incubator for the hippies and the counterculture in the late
1960s and early 1970s, demonstrates the role of urban subcultures
in building a cultural milieu supportive of tolerance and innovation.
A study of neighborhood succession that documents the gentrification
of Haight-Ashbury points out that "many of the most prominent
beats were homosexual, and the beat and gay subcultures overlapped
in both spatial and cultural terms in North Beach" (Godfrey 1988).
Clearly, cities provide a setting for all types of urban subcultures
to coexist in close proximity.
Gays and lesbians are increasingly regarded as important
sources of human capital and creativity in business. This awareness
has led to significant changes in corporate policies on health care,
pensions, and personnel. Public officials at the federal, state, and
local levels should be aware of the vital role that gays and lesbians
play in renewing central-city neighborhoods. Policies that encourage
making mortgage loans to gay households, that prevent discrimination
based on gender preference, and that explicitly recognize gay lifestyles
and culture should be included in any strategy that seeks to encourage
investment in central-city areas. While not all cities are large enough
to support a strong gay and lesbian community, gay and lesbian communities
are becoming more visible and organized in many cities.
Changes in organizations and employment
Besides recognizing how demographic shifts and lifestyle
trends are influencing urban development, cities must understand how
technological change and new patterns of organizational structure
are influencing job creation and business formation. Although business
consolidations and corporate decisions to downsize often result in
the loss of jobs and the departure of "corporate citizens"
from central cities, new opportunities also arise from such decisions.
The private sector's growing reliance on outsourcing offers a strategic
opportunity for cities. Corporate job reductions stemming from recent
mergers of banks and law firms have weakened the office market in
many cities and suburbs - but they have also led to a rise in self-employment
and the creation of firms that provide services, such as printing,
mailing, and marketing, that were once done in house.
The large corporation is no longer considered a secure
source of employment (New York Times 1996). Self-employment
and part-time or "contingency" work are becoming the norm
for many households. Self-employment as a percentage of nonagricultural
employment rose nationally from 5.7 percent in 1969 to 7.7 percent
in 1994. During the past quarter century, self-employment has increased
by 70 percent nationwide. New business formation has also been on
the rise. The U.S. Department of Commerce's Index of Net New Business
Formation increased from 115.2 in 1992 to 128 in 1995. "The birth
and expansion of new firms [have] been accelerating since 1992. This
has more than offset the widely publicized corporate layoffs, explaining
the increase in office occupancy" (Landauer Real Estate Counselors
1996,14).
Advances in computing and telecommunications have contributed
to the importance of small and medium-sized firms. Acquiring and housing
mainframe computers were once feasible only for the largest organizations.
But the reduced cost of personal computers and mobile telephones has
eased the process of starting new businesses and pursuing self-employment.
New technologies make it possible to operate a start-up business from
the home, the hotel room - and even the automobile. As James Katz
(1996,107) states:
Wireless communication can help small and medium-sized businesses,
and especially the one-person shop. In part, this is because a caller
cannot readily determine a firm's size, in contrast to a visitor....
It is easy to see why wireless communication might yield advantages
to the small fry. With the aid of voice mail and a mobile phone
to provide "receptionist" functions, a mobile business
can be established without the expense of a receptionist.
Unlike many technological innovations that were initially
used by large firms and then gradually adopted by medium and small
firms, mobile telephony has been most widely used by the self-employed
and by small businesses. Katz points out that in 1992, a majority
of British Telecom's "Cellnet users were self-employed and 25
percent were in firms with less than 100 employees" (p. 107).
An executive of Bell South suggests that "cellular phones have
not penetrated large businesses to a significant extent because offactors
such as assigning responsibility for use, avoiding personal subordination
of the technology, and even the overhead necessary to regulate and
control the highly variable technology in a far-flung bureaucracy"
(Katz 1996, 107).
Small business formation is increasing. Sharp reductions
in the cost of computers, the ease of getting access to sophisticated
databases through the Internet, and the diffusion of business service
centers such as Kinko's have worked to the advantage of small businesses,
no matter where they are located. The question is, will city leaders
understand the potential role of small business in their future and
formulate strategies to foster the growth of new entrepreneurial enclaves?
Telecommunications and urban development
Most experts have viewed cities as victims of technological
advances. The interstate highway replaced the downtown railroad terminal,
and the regional airport replaced the urban seaport. Similarly, computer-based
communications and "telework" have allowed individuals and
firms to move away from central business districts to "edge cities,"
small towns, or even offshore locations (Graham and Marvin 1996).
A recent report by the U.S. Office of Technology Assessment (1995,
113) claims that "information technology and telecommunications
are making the location decisions of an increasing share of the economy
less dependent on face-to-face contact and close proximity with customers,
suppliers, and competitors. In large part, this reduced dependence
and concomitant rise in a company's ability to be 'footloose' with
respect to location invite speculation about the radical decentralization
of jobs out of metropolitan areas."
However, communications technology can have positive
impacts on cities as well. New telecommunications technologies, in
conjunction with the internationalization of services and finance,
are strengthening a handful of cities such as New York, London, Tokyo,
Los Angeles, and Hong Kong. These cities used to be centers for the
manufacture of goods, but they are now centers for the production
of information that is distributed electronically around the globe
(Moss 1987). Technological change - when linked to dramatic shifts
in household composition, increased rates of self-employment, and
new business formation - can strengthen the economic base of central
cities. Once they are redesigned, 19th-century industrial buildings
that were ill suited for mass-assembly manufacturing become remarkably
well suited for residential and commercial uses; they are especially
attractive to small businesses that provide advanced services or produce
customized products. The resurgence of the Boston waterfront and the
conversion of industrial structures near downtown Chicago highlight
how underused industrial space can be recycled. In the River North
neighborhood of Chicago, more than 300 residential loft condominiums
have been built in old factories, and another 600 are planned (Chanen
1996).
The ability to use technology to renew vacant industrial
space, the breakdown of the traditional household, and the rise of
small businesses provide a new basis for urban development policies.
Cities must reconfigure their downtown areas as places to live and
work; often the same structures can be used for both purposes. For
cities to flourish, it will be necessary to change zoning rules that
were established for an industrial society that had to separate polluting
industries from residential areas for public health purposes. Local
governments should formulate new land use policies that reflect the
convergence of work and home and the blurring of the distinction between
manufacturing and services. Many high-rise office buildings - designed
for corporations that wanted all their staff in one place - are already
obsolete because so many firms have downsized and turned to outside
contractors to handle once-critical corporate functions (Tapscott
1996).
The revitalization of lower Manhattan
Nowhere is the opportunity to implement new urban development
strategies more apparent than in lower Manhattan. The area between
the Hudson and East Rivers below Chambers Street occupies less than
I percent of New York City's land area but accounts for approximately
8 percent of the city's assessed value. Once the hub of the city's
legal and financial community, lower Manhattan has suffered as banks
and brokerage firms have merged and as many back-office functions
have been relocated to New Jersey, Delaware, Florida, and downtown
Brooklyn. During the 1970s, many investment banks and law firms moved
from lower Manhattan to midtown Manhattan to be closer to their corporate
clients and suburban rail stations. Today, more than 22.8 million
square feet of office space in lower Manhattan are vacant, a vacancy
rate that exceeds 20 percent (Cushman & Wakefield 1996).
The city government has established new financial incentives
to encourage firms to locate in lower Manhattan. A new business improvement
district, the Alliance for Downtown New York, has been created to
promote the area, improve public services, and generate new cultural
and retail activity (Williams 1996). Lower Manhattan is still an international
financial center. It houses the New York and American Stock Exchanges,
the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the World Trade Center, and
the World Financial Center, which is located in Battery Park City
- a 90-acre landfill development on the Hudson River waterfront that
combines housing and commercial space that is leased to tenants such
as American Express, Merrill Lynch, and Dow Jones. Lower Manhattan
remains the nation's third largest office center (O'Neill 1993). But
its future will be different from its past. Several studies have proposed
ways to improve the area's transportation infrastructure, tourist
services and facilities, and waterfront and public spaces to stimulate
activity (City of New York 1993; O'Neill 1993). One academic team
proposed that lower Manhattan be designated a historic district and
identified 603 buildings that make up "a large historic district
which includes 181 significant structures and 49 interiors worthy
of individual designation" (Columbia University 1995).
Unlike SoHo or TriBeCa, two nearby areas that have been
converted from low-rise industrial lofts into residential and commercial
uses, lower Manhattan's building stock contains a mix of skyscrapers
and maritime warehouses as well as the city's premier waterfront complex,
Battery Park City, which was launched by Nelson Rockefeller when he
was governor of New York. Lower Manhattan includes architectural gems
built during the early 20th century to serve as the headquarters for
companies such as AT&T, Woolworth, and J. P. Morgan Guaranty Trust
Company. The area also has high-rise office towers built during the
1960s to accommodate banks and brokerage firms that have been acquired
by competitors, leaving many lower Manhattan buildings - new and old
- vacant.
The former headquarters of Drexel Burnham, a 400,000-square-
foot office building at 55 Broad Street, stood empty for five years.
But Rudin Management, the owner, completely renovated the building,
equipped it with advanced telecommunications systems, and named it
the New York Information Technology Center. The center has its own
site on the World Wide Web (www.55broadst.corn). The city of New York
has established a policy that encourages the owners of old office
buildings in lower Manhattan to invest in new telecommunications infrastructure
to attract small, high-technology firms. Fundamental changes in technology
and in the organization of work have created the potential for reinventing
downtown office districts such as lower Manhattan.
The heightened role of small businesses, the intense
demand for housing in Manhattan, and increased interest in living
and working in the same geographic area have already changed lower
Manhattan. More than 20 office buildings in the area are being converted
to residential uses capable of serving the growing work-at-home population
(Trachtenberg 1996). Approximately 7,000 housing units are to be converted
from old commercial space over the next decade, and much of this housing
will be designed to accommodate self-employed people who live and
work in the same space (Williams 1996). The lesson of lower Manhattan
is that urban revitalization need not be based on large-scale physical
development projects; new zoning techniques that encourage residential
uses in commercial areas and bold strategies to attract residents
to areas that were once reserved for businesses can work. A similar
trend of converting industrial space to housing in Chicago highlights
the potential role for a strategic approach to urban revitalization
(Chanen 1996).
Conclusion
The example of lower Manhattan points to the need for
new approaches to renew the downtown areas of large cities. The comparative
advantage of central-city locations will not ultimately be based solely
on their role as centers for work, but on their appeal as hubs that
can accommodate both work and residential functions. Making cities
attractive places to reside may well be the most effective way to
attract new forms of business activity in the next century. This goal
represents a bold departure from policies that emphasized the development
of facilities to attract visitors, the construction of mass transit
systems to lure commuters to downtown sites, and the creation of tax
incentives to encourage the building of offices.
The challenge for city leaders and real estate developers
is to recognize the profound changes that have occurred in the structure
of households, the organization of work, and the character of self-employment.
Central-city renewal need not depend on large-scale physical development
projects. Instead, public officials should recognize the new opportunities
presented by profound shifts in demographic patterns and lifestyles,
especially the growth of gay and lesbian households. Taking advantage
of these opportunities will require changes in land use policies,
creation of new policies that actively encourage investment by gay
and lesbian households, and aggressive enforcement of antidiscrimination
laws.
If cities are to have a future, they must be attractive
places to live and work, not just places to visit. This article has
argued that emerging demographic and cultural patterns must be taken
into account in building cities and designing public policies for
them. The capacity of cities to absorb and accommodate diverse lifestyles
may well turn out to be a locational advantage that few suburban and
rural settings can match.
This article has argued for a new approach to urban
development, one that is explicitly not based on attracting private
investment through public investment in large-scale infrastructure
or subsidizing large-scale development designed to attract commuters
and tourists. As Claude Fischer (1975) has observed, the density and
size of cities affect their capacity to attract and support "unconventional"
activities and behaviors, an important asset given the increasing
diversity of American households and the breakdown of traditional
family structures. Simply put, the social milieu of a city can create
the conditions for economic development. Rather than focusing on increasing
the value of urban land, policy makers would be wise to formulate
strategies to market cities to groups who favor high-density urban
centers and proximity to diverse lifestyles.
Advances in telecommunications should also be considered
as instruments to encourage economic development in cities. Rather
than viewing technological change as a threat to central business
districts, it is essential to recognize that new technologies have
altered the organization of work and led to opportunities for creating
small businesses and new spatial arrangements that combine work and
home. Just as planners and public officials need to understand the
cultural and demographic shifts taking place in the United States,
so they must understand the implications of telecommunications for
urban development.
The evidence presented in this article highlights the
need for more research on the role of gays and lesbians in urban communities
and for systematic attention to policies that can make cities attractive
to diverse population groups. Urban America's future will increasingly
be shaped by social and technological trends, and the capacity of
large cities to absorb and support unconventional and diverse lifestyles
is a comparative advantage that warrants further study and analysis.
Author
Mitchell L. Moss is the Paulette Goddard Professor of
Urban Planning and Director of the Taub Urban Research Center at New
York University's Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service.
The author wishes to thank Karen Danielsenand Robert
Lang for the useful comments and suggestions they made in helping
to develop this article. Michelle Guanca and Stephanie Creature assisted
in the research and production of this article.
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Originally published in Housing
Policy Debate, Vol. 8, Issue 2
The Fannie Mae Foundation, New York, 1997