Land use intensification in Ann Arbor
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There's a difference between (1) land use intensification; (2) change in land use, what urban sociologists call "the reproduction of space," and (3) gentrification, that is where higher income residents replace-crowd out-displace lower income residents.
Technically all three are forms of reproduction of space, but (1) and (2) aren't gentrification necessarily. And (2) doesn't always have to mean intensification, but in strong real estate markets that's usually what happens.
Land use intensification is the heart of the Growth Machine thesis ("The City as a Growth Machine: Toward a Political Economy of Place," American Journal of Sociology, 1976). Abstract:
A city and, more generally, any locality, is conceived as the areal expression of the interests of some land-based elite. Such an elite is seen to profit through the increasing intensification of the land use of the area in which its members hold a common interest. An elite competes with other land-based elites in an effort to have growth-inducing resources invested within its own area as opposed to that of another. Governmental authority, at the local and nonlocal levels, is utilized to assist in achieving this growth at the expense of competing localities. Conditions of community life are largely a consequence of the social, economic, and political forces embodied in this growth machine. The relevance of growth to the interests of various social groups is examined in this context, particularly with reference to the issue of unemployment. Recent social trends in opposition to growth are described and their potential consequences evaluated.
Reproduction of space. A couple examples of the second category have to do with changing neighborhoods from residential to commercial/multiuse when they abut more intense zones. This does involve displacement, which is not the same thing as gentrification ("More about contested spaces--gentrification,"2004/2005/2008). And it usually involves intensification.
One of the most obvious is the Rosslyn-Ballston corridor in Arlington County, Virginia, where in association with the addition of the Orange Line heavy rail subway constructed under Wilson Boulevard, they changed the zoning from low density commercial and residential to high density mixed use -- multiunit residential and commercial.
When I first came to DC in 1987, I worked with a contractor who still lived in a single family house in the Virginia Square area, but you could tell change was coming as a lot of the property had been assembled for larger scale projects. I never took photos, which is unfortunate. Another good example was the small Vietnamese cluster of businesses in Clarendon. From the Arlington County General Plan:
In the 1970's, the planning focus in Arlington shifted to the future development of the Metrorail transit corridors...
After further public discussion, the County Board adopted major land use changes for the Richmond Metro Corridor (2/9/74) and the Rosslyn-Ballston Metro Corridor (12/7/74). All of the changes adopted between 1966 and 1975 to the legend and the transit corridors were incorporated in the 1975 Plan. The 1979 General Land Use Plan differs from the 1975 Plan in that it reflects amendments in the Rosslyn-Ballston and Richmond Metro Corridors....
Between 1979 and 1983, policy recommendations and land use changes were adopted for all of the Rosslyn-Ballston Corridor Metro Station Areas.
A second is the Fruit Belt neighborhood in Buffalo. It abuts a major medical center, the Buffalo Niagara Medical Campus, with 7 institutions and over 17,000 employees.
Photo by Libby March.Because for the most part, large medical centers are ever expanding, often at the expense of abutting neighborhoods, the Fruit Belt neighborhood is in the way. So that neighborhood is being eradicated as the expands. Photographer Libby March documented some of these changes, but she calls it gentrification.
While residents are being displaced, and they are poorer and people of color, it isn't gentrification.
A longer ago example is how in the 1980s the Poletown neighborhood in Detroit was sacrificed for a new at the time automobile manufacturing plant for General Motors ("In retrospect, GM's Poletown plant was a pretty terrible idea if we're being honest," Spirit of Detroit, photo gallery, Detroit Free Press).
The thing is that Detroit had plenty of empty industrial land elsewhere in the city. They should have directed GM to that land, rather than agree to the eradication of a still existing neighborhood.
First National Bank Building above, University Towers apartment building below.
When I went to school there, starting in the late 1970s, there were a couple of tall buildings on Main Street, primarily an old and beautiful bank building, and I think five taller buildings on or near Central Campus--the University's administration building, a couple urban renewal style apartment buildings on Maynard Street down from the Michigan Union, University Towers on South Forest Avenue where Madonna lived a year or two before I came to Ann Arbor, and the Graduate Ann Arbor hotel (then called Campus Inn) on Huron Street.
Labels: Growth Machine/Urban Regime Theories, intensification of land use, real estate development, urban design/placemaking, urban revitalization
4 Comments:
Proposal for suburban Toronto, in association with a proposed subway extension.
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/art-and-architecture/article-with-doug-fords-development-plans-for-toronto-suburbs-sometimes-big-is/
"With Doug Ford’s development plans for Toronto suburbs, sometimes big is too big"
2/2/2022
Project in Dallas.
The Dallas Morning News: Builder buys aging apartments in Uptown Dallas for new project.
https://www.dallasnews.com/business/real-estate/2022/03/14/apartment-developers-take-prime-uptown-dallas-building-site/
Fountain Valley in Orange County, California. State mandate to increase the amount of housing. Sees adding 5 and 6 story buildings as a challenge to community character
https://www.ocregister.com/2022/04/08/some-locals-hate-it-but-fountain-valley-apartment-complex-is-small-step-to-ease-housing-crunch
"Some locals hate it, but Fountain Valley apartment complex is small step to ease housing crunch
The state wants all cities in O.C. to zone for more dwellings. That requirement could change the character of a lot of cities."
State College, Pennsylvania, home to Penn State University, is less enamored of intensification.
https://www.post-gazette.com/news/education/2022/09/19/student-housing-high-rises-zoning-state-college-density-city-council/stories/202209190014
"An attempt to deter more student high-rises in State College raises larger debate about the future of downtown "
In the past decade, a handful of 12-story luxury student housing high-rises have cropped up in downtown State College, dramatically changing the skyline of the small borough that’s home to Penn State University.
For some residents and university alumni, the buildings are an unwelcome sight, altering the character of downtown and portending more unwanted development. Others appreciate the higher-density housing, saying it supports a more sustainable and livable downtown.
High-rise student apartment buildings have been a subject of contention for some time. While a zoning ordinance amendment to discourage developers from building more of them has been proposed, it has also surfaced a larger issue of how zoning changes should be made — piecemeal or holistically.
And it has forced elected officials and the community to grapple with how what they want downtown to look like might differ from what the market can support.
“We keep losing sight of a vision through these changes, and without a clear understanding, I feel like the flip-flops are catching up with us,” State College Borough Council Member Deanna Behring said at a mid-September council meeting.
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