A story with colourful characters called Moses and Jacobs, reviewed in
The New Republic by Edward Glaeser.

- Pranesh

/---------/
http://www.tnr.com/article/books-and-arts/what-city-needs

What A City Needs
Edward Glaeser
September 4, 2009 | 12:00 am

*Wrestling with Moses: How Jane Jacobs Took on New York’s Master Builder
and Transformed the American City*

By Anthony Flint

(Random House, 256 pp., $27)


**For urbanists and** others, the battle between Robert Moses and Jane
Jacobs was the great titanic struggle of the twentieth century. Like the
bout between Joe Louis and Max Schmeling, their conflict has magnified
significance, as the two figures have become symbols. Jacobs is the
secular saint of street life, representing a humane approach to urban
planning grounded in the messy interactions of the neighborhood. Moses
is the icon of infrastructure established by power, the physical
reconstruction of cities with great bridges and wide expressways and
tall apartment buildings. The actual projects that fueled their acrimony
may now be curiosities of urban history, but the ideological conflict
embodied by Jacobs and Moses continues to rage in every growing city in
the world. The growth of Shanghai may be described as Moses on steroids,
whereas the land-use restrictions in Mumbai honor a central element of
Jacobs’s legacy.

Anthony Flint’s book is a timely retelling of their battles. The federal
government, under pressure of an economic crisis but also for reasons of
principle, has now renewed its commitment to infrastructure, but it has
done so in a way that preserves existing biases. The transportation
spending in the Obama administration’s recovery program targets
highway-heavy areas, and promises twice as much aid, per capita, to the
ten least-dense states as to the ten most-dense states. And beyond our
borders, nothing less than the economic and environmental future of the
world is tied to urban planning decisions now being made in China and
India. So it is a good time to re-acquaint ourselves with Jacobs and Moses.

While Moses dominated New York’s urban growth for the forty years that
ended in 1968, Jacobs has owned the last four decades. She had a certain
advantage—it is ironic to say so, in the light of her adversary’s
immense political power—in establishing her place in history: she was a
great writer, and we can hear her still through her own words. Another
great writer, Robert Caro, produced the definitive biography of Robert
Moses; and unfortunately for the master builder, *The Power Broker* was
so skillfully done, so painstakingly researched, that history has
generally accepted its depiction of Moses as an unfeeling, power-mad
figure who did much to harm New York. Two years ago, Hilary Ballon and
Kenneth Jackson presented an alternative to Caro, a more sympathetic
depiction of Moses, in an exhibition partly at the Museum of the City of
New York and in an accompanying catalogue. Flint is not a revisionist of
any sort, but his book does provide a somewhat balanced picture of New
York’s answer to Baron Haussmann.



**Robert Moses was born** to prosperous parents in 1888 and grew up in
New Haven and New York. After graduating from Yale, he received a
doctorate in political science from Columbia. Moses’s charging
intelligence and idealism gained him the patronage of Belle Moskowitz, a
progressive reformer and ally of Al Smith, the Good Government governor
from Tammany Hall and the Fulton Fish Market. In the 1920s, parks were
part of the Good Government agenda, and Moses became Al Smith’s parks
guy. After all, Moses lived on Long Island, which made him more sylvan
than most of Smith’s friends.

Parks gave Moses a path to power. By building parkways and popular
beaches, Moses demonstrated his skills as a project manager, a bill
drafter, and a public persuader. In those early days, he displayed an
extraordinary ability to divide and defeat the local opposition to his
projects. Moses’s reputation for probity and competence enabled him to
thrive even during the Roosevelt years, despite the mutual antipathy
between the two men. (Their feud began in the 1920s, when Roosevelt
chaired the Taconic State Park Commission and Moses refused funding for
Hudson Valley Parkway.) Moses managed to get control over much of the
federal spending that was slated for New York, and he used the tolls
from his bridges as a sort of venture-capital fund for public
infrastructure. While we so often wonder what happened to our tax
dollars, the products of Moses’s spending are perfectly plain: they
surround New York. If you travel to midtown Manhattan from LaGuardia
Airport, you will drive on a Moses bridge to a Moses highway and look
from your window at Moses buildings and Moses parks.

By the 1950s, Moses’s achievements had made him a public hero. I may
have been one of Manhattan’s most athletically inept children, but even
I have fond memories of swimming in pools and beaches that Moses
created, and of playing blissfully in his parks. If Moses had retired at
the age of sixty-five, he would have left in a blaze of glory, beloved
by his city and his state. But the unextinguishable and obsessed man
kept on building for another fifteen years. He built much during those
later years, including Lincoln Center and the 1964 World’s Fair—but
history’s tides were turning against him. More specifically, Jane Jacobs
was turning against him, as was the new urban sensibility that she
represented.



**While many of** Flint’s readers will have read Caro’s vast masterwork
on Moses, few will have perused Alice Alexiou’s valuable biography of
Jacobs, which appeared in 2006. Flint’s background material on Jacobs
will therefore come as news to many people, and Flint understandably
leads with her story, despite the fact that she was born almost thirty
years after Moses. At the time of the first fight between Jacobs and
Moses in the early 1950s, Jacobs had moved from Scranton to Greenwich
Village, worked as a stenographer, a writer, and an editor, married an
architect and had three children. In 1952, she began writing for
*Architectural Forum* and managed, despite the lack of any formal
training, to become a powerful public voice excoriating what she called
the “anti-city ideals of conventional planning.”

In her battle with Moses, Jacobs was a foot soldier, one of many
neighborhood mothers who fought to save Washington Square Park from
Moses’s four-lane extension of Fifth Avenue that was intended to snake
through the greenery. The mastermind behind the community opposition to
the road was Shirley Hayes, a Broadway performer turned Greenwich
Village mother. Hayes seems to have taught Jacobs something about
organizing opposition to big government projects, which only confirmed
Jacobs’s views about the ability of urban density to spread knowledge
from person to person. Eleanor Roosevelt was the star member of Hayes’s
team. The fight lasted from 1952 to 1958, and Hayes, Roosevelt, and
Jacobs beat Robert Moses.

** **

**The master builder's** defeat was an early warning about the sea
change in public attitudes towards big government projects. As Alan
Altshuler and David Luberoff have ably chronicled in their book
*Mega-Projects*, there were three epochs in postwar public building. In
the 1950s, during Moses’s heyday, governments happily developed roads,
bridges, and stadiums, and ignored the ill-organized local opposition.
In the 1960s and 1970s, activists such as Jacobs learned how to use the
media and political pressures to stop the bulldozers. In the most recent
era, a few mega-projects, such as the Big Dig in Boston, were resumed,
but these had to move mountains and spend billions to avoid angering anyone.

Jacobs’s second fight with Moses concerned her own home. Just as she was
writing her great denunciation of urban renewal, she learned that her
block had been declared “blight” and therefore slated for demolition.
Moses had grown up in the Progressive movement, for which slum clearance
was a significant objective. In 1937 and in 1949, encouraged by real
estate developers, the federal government widened the war against slums
to also include “blight,” an ill-defined term which could mean any place
where properties were less than pristine.

Moses had relinquished his position as Sultan of Slum Clearance in 1960,
but Flint writes that “it was entirely plausible—and, to Jacobs, seemed
likely—that on the way out Moses suggested where the bulldozers should
go next and steered his successors right to Hudson Street.” Moses’s
influence was enormous, so I suspect that Flint is right on this point,
but I am less sure about his allegation that urban renewal in “the West
Village had the whiff of revenge,” a payback for Moses’s “first major
defeat.” Everything we know about Moses’s tastes in urban planning
suggests that he would have liked to rebuild the West Village, whether
or not it happened to house Jane Jacobs.

Jacobs now took on Shirley Hayes’s leadership role and served as
co-chair of the Committee to Save the West Village. She mobilized
hundreds of voters to confront and to harass the urban renewal project
at every turn. As Jacobs told *The New York Times*, “We had been ladies
and gentlemen and only got pushed around. So yesterday we protested
loudly.” Smart politicians latched onto Jacobs’s coattails and became
advocates for her community. One assemblyman angrily told the city
planners that “you have sent the urban renewal program of this city,
state and federal government back to the dark ages of Robert Moses, and
his arbitrary and inhuman procedures.” Moses was no longer a champion of
good government, but a symbol of dictatorial power.

**Jacobs had more** than her army of activists. She had also an
intellectual ballista pointed right at the heart of urban renewal. In
1961, in the midst of the West Village controversy, Random House
published *The Death and Life of Great American Cities*, Jacobs’s attack
on all that was wrong in postwar urban planning. Against a sterile
engineering approach to cities that emphasized square footage and
traffic flows, Jacobs offered an anthropological analysis of how
neighborhoods actually work. She argued for the benefits of foot traffic
made easier by small blocks, and noted that “a well-used street is apt
to be a safe street.” She advocated low buildings, where apartments were
connected with the streets. She lauded the mixed-use development that
was being banned by the city’s new zoning code. She saw nothing good in
the Corbusier-inspired vision of vast high-rises and big boulevards, and
nothing wrong in her run-down but well-functioning neighborhood in the
Village. She wanted to house people “in concentrations both dense enough
*and* diverse enough to offer them a decent chance of developing city life.”

Elite architects and urban planners may not have liked Jacobs’s book,
but the public certainly did. After all, high-rise public housing was a
fiasco, and Moses did indeed destroy well-functioning but poorer
neighborhoods, such as Tremont in the Bronx. Jacobs was a sympathetic
figure both to the New Left, who liked her willingness to fight the
establishment, and to the New Right, which had little fondness for large
public schemes to better mankind. *The Death and Life of Great American
Cities* may still be the most indispensible volume in any urbanist’s
library. I do not quite recall where I put my Mumford or my Corbu, but
my Jacobs is always close at hand.

The book’s great strength lies in Jacobs’s ability to analyze the
interplay between structure and society at the block level. She walked
and looked and used her acute intellect to understand her city. Her lack
of academic training was probably a strength, since few preconceived
ideas or methods distorted her understanding of the street. Jacobs also
displayed an utterly ferocious courage in taking on the established
wisdom of the world’s urban planners. But that was not new for her: in
1952, at the height of McCarthyism, she had told the Loyalty Security
Board to take a walk.

The biggest and most famous fracas between Moses and Jacobs concerned
the Lower Manhattan Expressway, or Lomex. Moses’s idea was simple: an
elevated highway cutting across lower Manhattan that would connect the
Holland Tunnel with the Williamsburg and Manhattan Bridges. From an
engineering and planning perspective, it made perfect sense.
Unfortunately, there was the small matter of the two thousand or so
families that would need to be relocated, and the streets that would
thereafter remain in the shadow of the great road.

Jacobs, of course, wanted none of it, and she was back in force leading
the opposition. By the 1960s, Moses was beginning to look like the
underdog. In 1962, Jacobs managed to get Lomex killed, but Moses brought
it back the next year. In 1965, John Lindsay, New York’s new mayor,
hoisted Jacobs’s banner, but still Moses kept fighting. In 1966, a
building on the proposed path of the Lomex was changed from being urban
blight to a designated and protected landmark. In 1968, Jacobs managed
to get herself arrested protesting against the lack of democracy in
urban planning, and Moses was finally through. Nelson Rockefeller, the
state’s governor, took away the old man’s commissions, and for the first
time in forty years Robert Moses was no longer the infrastructure king
of New York state.

** **

**The inclinations of history** continued to favor Jacobs. The Vietnam
War and Watergate further discredited the high-handed tactics of leaders
such as Moses; America embraced grassroots activists such as Jacobs. In
1974, Caro published his biography of Moses, which suggested that the
master builder played a not inconsiderable role in “the fall of New
York.” As the automobile became an environmental and social villain,
Moses’s highways looked worse and worse. Jacobs left the United States
for Canada in 1968, to protest the Vietnam War and protect her sons from
the draft. She lived in Toronto until her death in 2006, a cherished,
almost saintly figure. Moses died in 1981, a vilified has-been who
seemed to represent a dark age in American cities.

Yet there is something quite wrong in the completeness of Jane Jacobs’s
victory, and something unjust about the wholesale denigration of Robert
Moses. As individuals, there is much to like about both people. It is
easy to idolize a woman without a college degree whose brilliant books
changed the world’s understanding of cities. And Moses gave his life to
his city and his state, earning far less than he could have in the
private sector, and soldiered on, fighting against constant opposition
for what was, in its time, widely understood as good policy.

We should not revile public servants as dedicated and capable as Moses.
He may have been wrong, but he was not a villain. Moreover, much of what
Moses did was *not* wrong. His parks and his pools were a great blessing
to New Yorkers in the years before air conditioning. His roads and his
bridges were not all bad, either. Millions of Americans have saved
hours, months, and years by taking advantage of this transportation
infrastructure.

Jacobs was right that cities are built for people, but they are also
built around transportation systems. New York was America’s premier
harbor, and the city grew up around the port. The meandering streets of
lower Manhattan were laid down in a pedestrian age. Washington Square
was urban sprawl in the age of the omnibus. The Upper East Side and
Upper West Side were built up in the age of rail, when my
great-grandfather would take the long elevated train ride downtown from
Washington Heights. It was inevitable that cars would also require urban
change. Either older cities would have to adapt, or the population would
move entirely to the new car-based cities of the Sunbelt.

When Henry Ford made the car affordable, millions of Americans
understandably wanted to drive. After all, the average commute by car in
the United States is twenty-four minutes, whereas the average commute by
public transit is forty-eight minutes. The automobile certainly created
great challenges for every older city that was built at highway-less
higher densities. No matter what Jacobs thought, there simply was not a
car-less option for New York. For the city to continue growing and
changing and leading the world, it needed to be retrofitted for the
automobile. And that enormous task was given to Moses. Perhaps he did
too much for the car. I am certainly on Jacobs’s side on the Lomex
issue, and cannot possibly approve of the destruction of Tremont; but
New York’s fall would have been far more precipitous if it had ignored
the automobile altogether.

It is hard today to accept the allegation that Moses was responsible for
New York’s demise. The troubles that New York experienced in the 1970s
were hardly unusual. Except for Los Angeles, every one of the ten
largest American cities in 1950 lost at least 10 percent of its
population over the next thirty years. New York is exceptional not in
its decline but in its resilience, and perhaps Moses deserves some
credit for that. New York and Los Angeles are the only two of those ten
big mid-century cities that have gained population over the past sixty
years.



**Jacobs did help to** make public decisions more accountable, which is
an incontrovertibly good thing. There is little to like in arbitrary
public power—but at this point the pendulum has swung too far. Today it
often feels as if every neighbor has veto rights over every new project,
public or private. When Jacobs’s heirs argue for limits on eminent
domain and expensive boondoggle projects, I stand with them. When they
impose more and more restrictions on private owners building on their
own land, I shake my head. Jacobs herself did not oppose only highways
and urban renewal, but also far more benign private projects such as
NYU’s library. Education is crucial to urban success. Surely a
twelve-story university library would not have hurt Greenwich Village.

Jacobs’s greatest insight was that cities succeed by enabling people to
connect with one another. Humans are a social species, and our greatest
gift is our ability to learn from others. Many of the finest
achievements of human civilization occurred because smart people learned
from one another in cities. As Jacobs understood better than anyone
else, the chance encounters facilitated by cities are the stuff of human
progress. But Moses was also right that cities need infrastructure.
People cannot just argue forever on an unpaved street corner. They need
homes to live in and streets to travel along and parks for relaxation.
Jacobs underestimated the value of new construction—of building up.

*The Death and Life of Great American Cities* argues that at least one
hundred homes per acre are necessary to support exciting stores and
restaurants, but that two hundred homes per acre is a “danger mark.”
After that point of roughly six-story buildings, Jacobs thought that
neighborhoods risked sterile standardization. (The one public housing
project that Jacobs blessed, at least initially, had only five stories.)
But keeping great cities low means that far too few people can enjoy the
benefits of city life. Jacobs herself had the strange idea that
preventing new construction would keep cities affordable, but a single
course in economics would have taught her the fallacy of that view. If
booming demand collides against restricted supply, then prices will rise.

The best way to keep cities affordable is to allow private developers to
build up and deliver space. Jacobs was right that high-rise public
housing is a problem, as street crime is much more prevalent in
high-rise, high-poverty neighborhoods. But in more prosperous, privately
managed buildings, height is not a problem. If you love cities, as
Jacobs certainly did, then presumably you should want the master
builders to make them accessible to more people.

Successful cities need both the human interactions of Jane Jacobs and
the enabling infrastructure of Robert Moses. Anthony Flint has done a
fine job describing the battles between these two great figures, but
unlike the Louis-Schmeling fight, their conflict should not be resolved.
An absolute victory for Moses leads to heartless cities, built to
accommodate cars but not pedestrians, with high-rise buildings that are
disconnected from their streets. An absolute victory for Jacobs means a
city frozen in concrete with prices that are too high and buildings that
are too low. New building is needed to welcome the diversity that makes
urban magic. No city can survive without the personal engagements
beloved by Jacobs, but no city can thrive without master builders such
as Moses. Mumbai and Shanghai had better take note.



*Edward Glaeser is the Glimp Professor of Economics at Harvard. He
directs the Taubman Center for State and Local Government and the
Rappaport Institute for Greater Boston.*

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