Tag Archives: my brooklyn

Blog Post 01: The Right to the City

Do people have a right to the city? Do longtime residents and businesses have a right to remain where they are?  If so, how should local governments, urban planners, and other decision-makers ensure these rights are maintained?*

    People should have a right to the city because they are the ones who built the community rather than just a group of buildings. Long time residents and businesses should have some kind of participation to decide how their community is managed and developed in a fair way. The documentary “My Brooklyn”, explores the results caused by gentrification and displacement in a neighborhood, such as when a city government rezones an area to build expensive properties out of the financial reach of long time residents and small businesses. One of the parts of the film shows interviews of wrenching stories of small businesses that have to be evicted by rent increases or demolitions that are going to be done in the area. The wig store owner who does not know how she will pay her children’s college tuition and the man who ran his own restaurant for 26 years are some of the small business owners who feel powerless to see that their businesses are threatened with displacement by a large condo development. It’s hard not to feel that a luxury store is a bad replacement for these small companies that worked so hard to get their businesses going. Not only were these people forced to displaced their businesses within 30 days but they were not even able to publish fliers of their relocation for their customers of years. Another film that has the same issues of unfair gentrification and displacement is “Citizen Jane: The Battle for the City”, which explore resistance movements against urban renewal programs that affected the community in many ways. In this film you see housing projects rise up, only to be demolished when they were recognized as failures buildings. Robert Moses was a powerful public official who had no mercy to displace and demolish buildings to get what he wanted in his own way. Moses describes urban chaos as cancer that was needed to be surgically removed by demolishing. Local governments, urban planners, and other decision-makers should ensure these rights are maintained by listening suggestions of long time residents so cities grow without destroying the diversity and demonstrating what makes them unique as a community.

 

Post 1: The Rights to the City

Do people have a right to the city? Do longtime residents and businesses have a right to remain where they are?  If so, how should local governments, urban planners, and other decision-makers ensure these rights are maintained?

Like Jane Jacobs, I believe that people have a right to the city they live in because they are the ones who reside their and give a city life. Without them, a city would be a ghost town. No energy, no feeling and no purpose.

Many longtime residents and businesses have spent decades building the businesses, communities and genuine neighborhoods that we love within the city. Even though change is inevitable, they have the right to remain where they are, without additional pressure, such as rent increase, forcing them out.

In the documentary “My Brooklyn”, we saw how the government, urban planners and other decision-makers dealt with the long-term locals when it came to the development of Fulton Mall. They didn’t care about what happened to them after they got permission to develop. They only saw the master plan for a new and prosperous area. Decision makers, urban planners and the government need to ensure that the rights of locals are met by listening to their concerns when new development projects are being proposed. They should not be evicting individuals from their business or home.  However, they should take time to walk among the locals, experience the city like a they do and seeing the individuals that make up a community would help influence the design of a new development in an existing neighborhood that is more community-focused.

Shuwen Chen-POST 1 – Do people have a right to the city? Do longtime residents and businesses have a right to remain where they are? If so, how should local governments, urban planners, and other decision-makers ensure these rights are maintained?

People have a right to the city such as engaging the city improvement schemes and ways to live. In the film “Brooklyn”, Anderson shows us the gentrification of Brooklyn begins in 1988. The old neighborhood is forced to reshaping due to the government’s plan of rezoning. As a result, hundred small businesses are evited by the developers and the politicians. Small stores are replaced by high rise luxury housing and chain retail. The small store owners are so desperate about to be forced to moving out of their district due to the “improvements” by the developers and politicians. The old residents who created a culture that got dismissed with oblivious racism. The city officials disregard the needs of the less privileged is as same as much-maligned as Robert Moses. The film of Citizen Jane: Battle For The City is about Jane Jacobs has a voice against the most powerful ideas that urban planning movement of willing to displace the entire city blocks by rebuilding them, and she doesn’t agree the beautiful architecture was superior to crowded streets. She insists the mixture of stores, offices, and housings for longtime residents will make the city great rather than nationwide to build new high-rise, civic plazas, and office buildings interspersed with parks. Compared to Le Corbusier saw the streets as “an dislocated organ” that is crowed, noisy and unpleasant and want to change it by building multiple high-rise and beautiful skyscrapers, Jane Jacobs saw something different about the streets that she thinks a “sidewalk ballet” of people interacting with and depending on each other. Longtime residents know their neighbors for long time which provide them emotional connection and make them feel safe in their life. Jacobs focus on civil lives such as how sewer system working, what exist in that area for people use a lot, and the connection between the streets and the neighborhoods and the function of the city that is similar as the ecosystem. In the other hand, Robert Moses is a hungry and powerful man who built highways, housings, parks by displacing thousands of people. He is willing to sacrifice small group of people to achieve his goal, and he would take down anyone in his path without caring the consequences of his actions. Even though some plans are good for the city, his action causes lots of people get isolated and desperate.

The local government should implement the solution such as create special zoning to protect small business by limiting land owners who couldn’t consolidate several small areas to build big and high-rise buildings for privilege people. They should facilitate the development of communities and their life style on the basis of the right to the city and the right to living. Urban planners and developers can not just come in and build something they want without considering the old neighborhoods. They need to figure out the way to preserve the neighborhood character while improving the city and inviting the density, and they have to build enough affordable housings for the old habitants, they must avoid increasing the segregation and inequality in the city. Both of developers, government and urban planner need to reform the land use process and create benefits for communities with their consciousness about the preserving the old neighborhoods in stead of treating them as an obstacle to powerful people to making more money, and ensure the city with sustainability, democracy, equity, and social justice. People do have their own rights to the city which is about democratic control in the city with the right to access, occupy and use urban area instead of demolishing and evicting the old neighborhoods.

 

Blog Post 1: People have their right to choose where they stay – Jayden Fang

People do have the right to stay in the communities that they want to live because they are the  first group of people who live in there. They witnessed the development of the community from prosperous to desolate. Small businesses had established relationships with their customers and residents already get used to meet their neighbors in the street every day. In the film “My Brooklyn”, the local governments, urban planners and decision makers had released the new plan to rezone the downtown Brooklyn, which they forced those small businesses to move out, so they could build their luxurious stores or apartments. However, they didn’t offer any financial assistance or provide the information of recommend location for small business owners move to other than just inform the owners to leave within a month. I don’t agree on how the local governments and city planners treat small businesses of the local community. Yes, those planners may try to come up with a new plan to make the community better, but they didn’t make a reasonable deal with the small business owners before they start with their plan, which what they did is just inform the small business owners and snatch their property. The local governments and urban planners should hold several meetings and survey to inform not just the small businesses but also the residents that live in the community to ask their opinion of the new plan. Meanwhile, the city planners should research and make a site analysis about what people, and the community actual need instead of building something that shouldn’t belong to that area.

POST#1- Should people have the right to remain where they are?-

Do people have a right to the city? Do longtime residents and businesses have a right to remain where they are?  If so, how should local governments, urban planners, and other decision-makers ensure these rights are maintained? *

 

People do have right to the city because they live here. They are the ones that are going to experience all these new changes. I believe that local governments, urban planners, and other decision-makers should assure the rights of longtime residents and businesses to have the right to remain where they are due to, they have been in this place for a longtime, trying to make a living. For example, in the documentary “My Brooklyn”, they didn’t care that they were shutting down all these small businesses and at no cost helped them move somewhere else to continue their business. These local governments, urban planners and other decision makers should stop and think what people want instead of what they believe they need. Urban planning should be about making the city better for the people living there, not to remove people and neighborhoods. For example, in the documentary “Battle of The City”, Robert Moses started to want to represent the people and fix the problems in these congested neighborhood and just make life easier for those living in these neighborhoods. But instead along the process he forgot about what makes a neighborhood. Which is people, kids playing on the streets, the safety of people watching the streets. Therefore, I think residents and businesses have a right to remain where they are because us people need to have a voice in the decision making when it comes to the neighborhood they live in.

Blogging assignment for next Tuesday, February 5

Today we discussed My Brooklyn and viewed the film Citizen Jane: Battle for the City, considering the questions How did Jane Jacobs see the city differently than the trained architects and planners? and How would you assess Robert Moses’s projects? All good or all bad or a bit of both? On Tuesday, we will continue our discussion and view the film The Human Scale.
We reviewed how to blog on the OpenLab. For our next meeting, on Tuesday, February 5, please write one 100-word (minimum) blog post in response to this prompt:

Do people have a right to the city? Do longtime residents and businesses have a right to remain where they are?  If so, how should local governments, urban planners, and other decision-makers ensure these rights are maintained?*

Remember, blog posts are due by the start of class for which they are assigned.

*adapted from My Brooklyn Study Guide, 2015