Quote:
Originally Posted by IanWatson
The problem with urban planning is that it's really complex. Cities are our lives laid out in physical form. They are human psychology, economy, and sociology made tangible. They mean different things to everyone, and every resident comes with differing perspectives formed from their unique combination of resources and life pressures. That makes it really, really, really hard to have a nuanced discussion, particularly in the format of public meetings or civic lectures. The rhetoric tends to be dogmatic because that's pretty much the depth of conversation you can accommodate.
|
You make good points, I guess the focus of my rant is that contemporary planning has become absolute with little compromise or understanding of the human condition almost mirroring post-WW2 planning which is its antithesis; full libertarian-style build everything people want with little form over function. We understand now the importance of walkability, sustainable density vs cost and so on, but to go all-in in that direction is also flawed. Many contemporaries legitimately think that cars=hitler and they will not be convinced otherwise. It's really asinine and I'm not a fan of telling people how to live and they
will like it not matter what.
If HRM had its act together they would have been planning and organizing funding for LRT 15 years ago so we wouldn't be in the mess we're currently in. The history and geography of the city and its surroundings cannot be solved by simple infill or banning all suburban detached housing because "sustainably" only. A majority of people, particularly young couples with families prefer that mode of housing and it won't go away no matter how much urbanists screech about its evils. Why not plan around TOD and village centres? Why does everything need to be completely centered around the CBD? There is no room to expand and there are too many heritage blocks that need to be preserved (oh god I'm siding with NIMBYs for once

). Why not compromise with planned growth around HRM? It seems like the only viable way.
Look at the lands along the west area of Hammonds Plains and Stillwater Lake west of the wildlife land preserve. Why not partner with developers to construct a town centre there complete with detached, semi-detached townhomes and "missing middle" style residential & commercial connected by LRT to downtown and Burnside? What about connectivity to Bedford and the Sackvilles where you
can reasonably and affordably rezone medium density along Sackville Drive with park & ride access along the new interchange they're building on Margeson Drive? What about Dartmouth? I've never come across any of these long-term planning strategies incorporated in the Centre Plan or other documents. It's incredibly short-sighted because "dynamic" urbanism is only tolerable and thus only possible on the peninsula.
Quote:
Originally Posted by someone123
I agree it is complex. I think one problem is that it is tempting for planners and architects etc. to speak with unjustified pseudo-scientific authority. This phenomenon is obvious if you look back at rhetoric from the 1960's and earlier, but it's still happening today, with a different set of values. It is not just the fault of the public, nor does it only have to do with the planners themselves who have all sorts of political pressures on them. This problem affects all social sciences and I think it might be getting worse since those fields have grown so much.
|
What we see now is a 180 of post-WW2 planning. It's as if anything remotely related to that outdated style of suburban planning cannot be allowed to be integrated into contemporary planning by any means. That methods changed but the attitudes didn't and I'm not a fan of it.
I also notice a large number of people with sociology and even philosophy BAs digging their talons into important planning positions which admittingly irks me the wrong way. Not because those philosophies themselves don't have merit but I've noticed a pattern through my own experiences working for contractors on the geomatics and technical side that a lot of these people have an attitude predicated on an agenda based mostly on qualitative means rather than quantitative. In Saskatoon it was (and still is) really bad. Halifax doesn't seem that much better, based more on what I see rather than personally experienced, mind.