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A city, then, is a blending of biological communities and the
technological structures and devices placed there by man, and it has at
least two functions, It must provide for the maintenance of the
biological communities housed there, for the exchange of language-based
information, and for the creation of wealth. If the demands of the
technological aspects of the city ignore or overshadow the biological
components of the city, the biological community suffers and will
deteriorate. Conversely, if the biological components deny full
expression of the technological development, the ultimate potential of
the city is not reached.The city as a biological community must have the
attributes of all biological communities, and one of these attributes is
minimum maintenance. There is no waste in a well-run ecosystem. So long
as there is an uninterrupted flow of energy into a biological community
it is a self-maintaining, self-regulating system. An ecosystem is
stabilized as it acquires an increasing number of elements and a
diversity of structural and functional forms. The greater the diversity,
the greater the ability to use efficiently the inflow of energy. As an
ecosystem or a biological community de-stabililizes, it becomes
simplified, is less able to use the energy entering it, and therefore is
less efficient. An unstable ecosystem undergoes relatively rapid change
due to inefficient use of the energy flow. If one considers all the
elements that support a city as maintenance functions, it follows that
cities that are good biological communities will require the least
maintenance and unstable communities will require more. There are many
indicators to the stability or instability of the city as a biological
community.
Some of the more meaningful indicators can be found in the rate of
infant mortality, the rate of school dropout, the rate of drug abuse,
the rate of communicable disease, the number of crimes against persons
and property, the number of people on welfare, the number of people
unemployed and underemployed, and the degree of malnutrition. The fact
that a city needs urban renewal may indicate that it is a failing
community. Urban renewal does not necessarily replace a poor biological
community with a good one, but may only create an environment in which
all the buildings are new in a neighborhood that is hostile to human
life. Not long ago a skid row section of a major Midwest city was
replaced by urban renewal. Prior to urban renewal the streets were
relatively safe because there were people on them most of the day and
night.
Furthermore, it was one of the few places in the city where an
individual could be self-supporting on the minimum social security
payment. The area is now a jungle of high-rise apartment and office
buildings that must be guarded. The apartment buildings are locked and a
guard must open the door for residents after 10:00 p.m. In short, a
viable biological community was replaced with a technological
conglomeration of buildings, some of which have won architectural
prizes, that stand in an ecological no-man's land after dark. Cities
must be viewed as biological communities if man is to be happy in them.
The cities will not be abandoned because they produce great wealth, but
they need not be places of great technical achievement at the expense of
the humanness of man. First and foremost, the biological needs of man
must be provided. Commerce and industry must be placed in a matrix with
the human community in a way that will provide a desirable and stable
habitat. Properly run, cities should not be difficult to operate and
maintain, for as well-balanced ecological communities they should
maintain themselves. The economic benefits from cities can be
significant by the most rigorous cost-benefit analysis, but if they are
exploited for short-term gains they will be burdensome and costly to
maintain and will bring into question their value and the desirability
of perpetuating them. The city is a crossroad, a conglomeration of human
beings, a haven, or a jungle, but most of all it is a place where man
the thinker shares thoughts with other thinkers.
Successful cities have retained their generalized biological forms
and functions; those that have not have perished. Over-specialization
has always been an evolutionary Achilles' heel, and overspecialization
has caused the demise of many cities and has prevented many villages and
towns from ever becoming cities.
In a simple environment with few complications man discovered that
cities were a means of creating and regulating wealth. This concept was
exploited so successfully that cities inevitably became the center of
man's technological development. The wealth of the city was not derived
from the commodities that were brought there, such wealth was in the
mines, fields, and rivers of the surrounding hinterland, but the city
provided for the system of creating wealth by giving value to things.
Things become valuable because of what is known about them, or because
of their location, or because a buyer for them is known, or a supplier
of them is known. In short, the value and function of the city is to
provide the means for men to communicate with each other for their
mutual benefit. It was this communication that made it possible for
commodities to change hands and for wealth to be accrued, spent, and
lost thus increasing the probability of success and conferring value
upon the commodity by incorporating it into the system. As soon as
cities became financially more prosperous undertakings than hunting,
they were built, destroyed, and rebuilt; established, abandoned, razed,
and plowed with salt: burned, added to, and subtracted from. In short,
the history of man on earth, once the city was invented, consists of
experiments with the form, size, structure, function, and purpose of
cities. From their inception cities have been located where people
wanted to be, where they went for excitement, to gain their fortune, or
to have a good time. Cities have functioned in essentially the same
manner from the first built to the latest being built today. (Housing
developments and suburbia should not be confused with cities. They are
places to sequester families while making wealth in the city.)
The congregation of people with diverse interests interacting with
each other and the ferment generated by the business of the city,
namely, the creation of wealth, made the cities melting pots of human
intellect and they have boiled out a stream of technology for which no
end is in sight. This technology has steadily increased man's control
over his environment and his insights into the operation of the
universe, relentlessly created wealth, destroyed and exhausted
resources, polluted air and water, and, for better or worse, has
continued to increase logarithmically despite its long history.
The successful biological community, whether stationary or mobile, is
capable of occupying a site or territory, of maintaining itself on the
site or territory, and of reproducing itself there. It is a
self-regenerating and self-renewing system capable of sustaining itself
and extending its borders. It usually occupies the best sites in an
area. The successful biological community is characterized by variety;
variety of biotypes, variety of ages, and variety of functions, and it
is controlled by dominant elements that provide its main aspect and its
ability to interact with the environment, It includes a variety of other
elements which survive and thrive in the environment created by the
dominant elements. The elements of the successful biological community
reach their maximum development and stability through the replacement of
unsuccessful or inefficient individuals, generally the aged or those no
longer useful, slowly and over a long period of time. The elimination or
destruction of dominant elements opens the community to newcomers and
the space is usually filled by younger members with the same
developmental potential. When changes occur in a successful biological
community without seeming to alter its aspect, maturity and subsequent
stability have been achieved. As long as the conditions favorable to the
mix of elements of a mature community continue to prevail, the community
will inexorably reproduce and renew itself.
Cities have come and gone. On some sites there have been as many as
seven to nine cities built one atop another. Some cities are brand new
and some have existed from ancient days, yet each city with its living
survivors is really a thing of the present. The important element is the
diversity and stability of the city as it appears to its current
inhabitants, for each new generation sees the city anew. How long does
it take to assemble the elements of a thriving biological city? There
probably is no single answer but many simple-minded indications. Kinship
groups within the context of stable family configurations may take three
generations to develop, and trees planted along the streets and
rights-of-way take from 60 to 100 years to mature. The collective wisdom
of the community bent on determining the most stable configuration of
neighborhood through the mechanism of the creative activity of the
inhabitants of the neighborhood may take 20 or even 50 years, and if the
wealth-producing, interconnecting communications network does not form,
the city may never become viable.
How long does it take for a newborn member of the community to learn
enough about the life of the community and the city to participate in
its activities? If all these factors are weighed with the time scale of
human interaction on any level (getting to know one's neighbors, the
grocer, the filling station attendant, the banker, wholesaler, broker,
manufacturer, mayor, and local police officer) against the known rate of
migration into and out of neighborhoods, the problem becomes quite
complex. The simplest estimates tend to point to a long time, It may
take 100 years for a city to mature, growing and developing along with
its street plantings. If properly cared for, the city should last
millennianot necessarily in exactly the same form and with each
ancient element preserved, but in conjunction with new elements whose
functional equivalents determine the biological viability because it is
built into the system. A city should extend itself, but it cannot do so
if it is infested with even-aged, even-sized structures having a single
function and only partial diurnal-nocturnal occupancy and if great
distances separate families from children and children from the city.
The city has a life of its own, it has the biological energy and
vitality of any biological system relentlessly moving toward its most
stable configuration.
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