![]() |
Jefferson Review |
|
|
"Your Liberty is Our Interest" |
November 17, 2003 | |
|
Home / Archives / Search / Links / Quotes / Book Reviews / Advertise /Contact us / Subscribe / Calendar |
||
|
Ceaucescu: Father of Smart Growth
Author: Wendell Cox
The dirty little secret is that “smart growth” as promoted in the U.S. today requires exceedingly high densities to make a difference. Smart growth leaders realize that forcing people to live next to and on top of one another is no more popular in the suburbs of Portland or Phoenix than it was in Romanian villages. As a result, they generally discount the crucial role of density. In weaker moments, they trot out the Sierra Club-inspired charts showing that Mumbai (Bombay) or Calcutta densities lead to less use of the automobile (“the Great Satan”). But more often than not they espouse images of happy people walking and biking in neighborhoods no more dense than the sprawling suburbs of Paris or Los Angeles and where it never rains or snows. Yet the smart growth prescriptions are clear. Given the choice between authoritarian solutions and more direct, less-intrusive approaches, they opt for Ceaucesuist authoritarianism.
Probably most smart growth advocates have no idea that their principles would require no less than forced abandonment of much that is currently developed. But it is true. If, for example, material amounts of demand are to be shifted from autos to transit, then the urban area must be compact enough for transit to serve more than just downtown and the core. Hong Kong, at 12 times the density of Los Angeles and 25 times that of Portland, will do the trick. The transit system that can affordably replace the automobile in the urban areas of North America or Western Europe simply does not exist. More to the point, it hasn’t even been conceived. Smart growth is driven by platitude, not achievable vision. A light rail line here and a cutesy yuppie district there may be treasured by their comparatively small clientele, but they are swallowed up with little trace in the modern, automobile-oriented urban areas of the western world. Make no mistake about it. Achieving the ultimate ends of smart growth would require a no-less-comprehensive repopulation strategy than that conceived of by Nickolae Ceaucescu himself. Wendell Cox is principal of Wendell Cox Consultancy, a public policy firm located in the St. Louis area. He serves as a visiting professor at the Conservatoire National des Arts et Metiers in Paris. His email address is cox@demographia.com.
|
|
Weather (Louisville) / Mapquest / Search / White Pages / Business Search / CNN / Dictionary / E-card / MSN |
To forward this article to a friend, go to your toolbar and click "file" > "send".