Describe the way each film (My Brooklyn, Citizen Jane, Human Scale) and the lecture presentation (Healing Spaces: Marching On! Blackness and the Spatial Politics of Performance) discuss public space and its role in cities. Which notion of public space appeals to you? How to you feel about public space in New York City?
The film My Brooklyn discusses public space by delving into how gentrification fundamentally changed certain neighborhoods in Brooklyn. What stood out to me was that this entire evolution was planned as the âDowntown Brooklyn Planâ. Coincidently Mayor Bloomberg at the time approved of this plan and was an advocate in its conception. Michael Blomberg is currently amid a late 2020 presidential campaign push in which he could become the Democratic nominee. It makes me wonder if this will ever come up in the following months, it also makes me question the influence our leaders have in the development of our cities. Citizen Jane and the subject of the film, Jane Jacobs absolutely changed the way I view Robert Moses. I had heard of Robert Moses and his influence on the âdevelopmentâ of NYC because my major often mentions him. I now have a different perspective on Robert Moses and canât help but feel disappointed that a single person could have such a drastic impact on not only the city but the fabric of other metropolitans such as Chicago and the neighborhoods of lower income. I am pleasantly surprised that Jane Jacobs won the âwarâ against Moses and is an influential person in the role of city development. Human Scale discusses public space and its role in the cities by making a case for designing cities around people and not cars, buses and the traffic they dictate. This form of planning for vehicles has been prevalent since the 1960âs. The film mentions the specific ways Robert Moses planned for transportation rather than for the planning for the population. Public space in NYC is of importance to me because it is the city in which I live, and comfort is what we all seek in this world whether it be economic, emotional and proper planning can have a bearing on all these factors. We should be planning for the people and if public officials and planners arenât doing this then they arenât working to meet the needs of the community. Healing Spaces: Marching On! Blackness and the Spatial Politics of Performance was a lecture presentation that spoke about topics that overlap with public space. Under Jim Crow Laws public space in the 19th and 20th century was inaccessible most of the time for African Americans. They werenât completely shut out and had moments such as expositions, pageants, parades and protests when public space was claimed. Jane Jacobs and people with her mentality would advocate for the use of public space because public space should primarily revolve around population not circulation. Marching On: The Politics of Performance explores the histories, driving forces, and legacy of marching and organized forms of performance. Dr. Mabel Wilson blends both important topics through her architectural background and as a professor of African American and African Diasporic Studies at Columbia University.
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