To Lend Lease's London HQ to hear a talk by Adam Freed,
Deputy Director of Sustainability in the New York City Mayor's office.
Their city plan, 'PlaNYC' (nice plan, shame about the name)
has a lot that London could learn from, in respect of what is planned and how
they propose to achieve it:
sustainability-led, progressive, interventionist series of programmes
and initiatives concerning development, transport, infrastructure and energy,
driven by an ambitious City administration with powers and budgets that
London's Mayor can only dream of.
One of the most surprising aspects was the extent to which
this felt like 'big Government' - delivered by a Republican Mayor in a country
where if you suggest that poor people should be provided with state health
care, you are branded a Communist.
Impressively, the programmes seemed designed to benefit disadvantaged
outer parts of the city at least as much as Manhattan, where the high profile
successes such as the High Line and Times Square are located.
The tone was one of can-do pragmatism rather than ideology
or political manouevring. It was the
American architect Daniel Burnham who said 'make no little plans', but while in
the UK masterplans and strategies are expected to have an 'overarching vision',
in NY there seemed to be a distinct lack of windy rhetoric and a strong desire
to actually get on with things. Our
London Plan programme is all about telling other parties what they can or
should or can't or shouldn't do - the NY equivalent seems to be more about
doing things. If a developer there
builds affordable housing - yes, they have that too - he can put more flats on
his site. A bit like what happens in
London in practice in some cases, but our plan doesn't actually say that
anywhere. Americans are be better at
cutting to the chase - codifying things to allow progress without endless
negotiations.
London's administrative and political structure is
dysfunctional, and our Mayor is right to seek more control over infrastructure
and other things. Mayor Bloomberg puts
some of his vast personal resources into particular public programmes - a modern version of the
bread and circuses of the Roman Emperors, perhaps. Our Mayor was born in New
York City, and appears to know a lot about the Roman Empire - if this summer's
circus works out well, expect a stronger push for more control.
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