DESIGN FIRST: DESIGN-BASED PLANNING FOR COMMUNITIES
10
contrasting them with a ‘conveniently adverse picture
of modernism’ and its failings (Gold, p. 8).
In developing the new, improved grand narrative
of postmodern city design during the 1970s and
1980s, professionals turned to smaller scale opportu-
nities instead of striving for new social and physical
utopias. Architects started taking note of what was
already in place and sought to enhance the urban fab-
ric rather than erase it. The study of history and con-
text became important again, and designers focused
on ‘human-scaled’ development, with a particular
emphasis on the creation of defined public spaces,
often taking the form of streets and squares, as
settings for a reinvigorated public life.
Our wholesale abandonment of modernist
principles and their replacement by a radical return
to premodern ideas poses something of a dilemma.
Based on the belief that modernist architects and
planners made serious errors about many aspects of
city planning and design, we tell ourselves we won’t
repeat the same mistakes, and consider our ideas
much more appropriate to the task of city design.
Here in America, our working concepts are based
on traditional values of walkable urban places
instead of the car-dominated asphalt deserts
produced in the search for a drive-in utopia. We pro-
mote mixing uses once again, where for five decades
functions were rigidly segregated, and we seek to
involve the public directly in the making of plans
instead of drawing them in the splendid isolation of
city halls or corporate offices. We feel certain that
these ideas are the right ones for the task of repair-
ing the city and advancing the cause of a sustainable
urban future.
But how can we be sure? After all, the modernist
architects and planners we now criticize so harshly
felt a similar degree of certainty in their mission and
ideology. Have we merely replaced one professional
paradigm with another that is also destined to fail,
despite our good intentions? In the face of this
conundrum, architects and planners must affirm
their principles and their commitment to action; our
cities and suburbs have a myriad of problems that
demand urgent solutions. But, being neither funda-
mentalist nor unilateral, we must simultaneously
reserve room for doubt, and be open to question. We
have to allow the possibility that we are wrong, just as
our predecessors were wrong before us! However,
unlike our modernist forebears, we embrace the
study of history and precedent in our work, and we
heed George Santayana’s words: ‘Those who cannot
remember the past are condemned to repeat it’
(Santayana, 1905: p. 284).
Accordingly, we pay particular attention to how
modernist architecture and planning operated
on the
ground
, the place where people were affected by it
most directly. By observing the transformations of
the nineteenth-century industrial city wrought by
modernist pioneers and their disciples in Britain and
America, we gain insight into the values and ideas
that shape our post-industrial city today.
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