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A modern city has two diametrically opposed functions. It must
provide services to the citizen, i.e., grocery and other stores, medical
services, libraries, transportation and communication services, and
entertainment, to name a few; and the city must serve as an
import-export center for information, money, goods, and materials. The
distribution of goods and services that are consumed by the residents of
the city is necessary to support the life of the citizen, but these
activities often conflict with the import-export function of the city.
Moreover, these activities do not always relate to the life of the
citizens directly and in most cases are segregated from them into
business and industrial areas.
Among the problems of the city is the construction of viable human
communities that satisfy the material and aesthetic requirements of man
while maintaining compatibility with the technical, business, and
industrial demands of the city.
Modern metropolitan areas are networks of communication and
transportationan interwoven network of the transportation of
people and things and the communication of information and ideas. The
water, sewer, electric, and telephone lines are obvious parts of this
network, as are the streets, roads, and highways. At the intersections
of the network, most cities have developed enclaves of specialized
activities such as shopping districts, restaurants, theaters, parks,
schools, libraries, business and manufacturing areas, and along the
transportation corridors, particularly at crossroads, the city is in a
continual state of change and growth.
Modern architectural concepts of the city as an assembly of plug-in
modules derive from the notion of the city as a network. Units for the
plug-in city are conceived as mass produced, easily assembled sections
that can be adapted for occupation as business or industrial premises or
as living quarters. Since all of the elements would be module in
construction, all that is necessary is for the unit to be plugged into
the facilities and energy sources appropriate to the function it is to
perform. Although the plug-in city has not developed beyond the drawing
board, its proponents claim that it would allow for great diversity in
design by using marketing methods similar to those in the automobile and
clothing industries where style and design, coupled with random
geographical distribution, produces diversity without affecting basic
function.
The various areas of today's cities, however, are not accessible
without the aid of transportation; the distances are considerable and
for most people the energy and time required to walk can be more
profitably used in other pursuits. The mix of residential neighborhoods,
business and industrial districts, and recreational areas that comprise
a modern city must function as an integrated whole if the city is to
prosper. The concept of the walking city relates to the scale-size of
its components and the relationship of this scale-size to man, and its
effects upon man the biological organism. If our future cities are to be
livable, greater emphasis will have to be placed on establishing a
viable biological community in those areas where people spend most of
their time.
The size of the components of the walking city is determined to some
extent by the physical capabilities of man, i.e., the velocity and ease
of human locomotion and the energy required to perform certain essential
tasks. In addition, each component of the city must enjoy a high degree
of self-sufficiency. In the ideal walking city, the goods and services
essential to everyday life will be conveniently located where people
live and work, requiring only a modest investment in time and energy in
order to procure them. Walking within the neighborhoods and districts of
the city is a perfectly feasible undertaking for most people and, in an
age when overweight is a major physiological problem, enormous health
benefits would be derived from the development of walking cities. Dr.
Jean Mayer, a world authority on obesity and energy metabolism, has said
that inactivity is one of the most important causes of overweight
because our bodies' regulation of food intake is not designed for the
mechanized, sedentary conditions of modern life. Thus, the development
of walking cities would not only re-establish man in harmony with his
environment, but would contribute to his physical fitness.
The size of the walking city can vary widely, spreading over hundreds
or thousands of acres, or it can be a megastructure or any combination
of low density-high density areas. The essential feature of the walking
city is that it be a complete human ecological community capable of
providing the services necessary to sustain itself, as well as providing
for the comfort, well-being, and security of those who live there.
A megastructure, that is to say a single structure occupying perhaps
a square mile of territory and rising a mile into the air, is a
mind-boggling concept. But ecologically the principles that apply are
comparable to those for the city spread over thousands of acres and
built according to conventional standards. A well-designed megastructure
includes places where people live as well as where they work and play.
These components, if they are to contribute to the integrated whole of
the city, must be accessible to each other by transportation scale-sized
to humansfor example, by escalator or elevator. The important
consideration is that those portions of the community with which man has
to interact must be size-related to him because he can only interact
with his immediate surroundings, not with the total city. Therefore,
although the city can have any number of components and attain enormous
size, each component must be scaled to human size.
The technology of megastructures is not a future dream but already
exists; for example, the World Trade Center in New York City. The flaw
in the World Trade Center is that it is a concentration of business
activities without the concomitant residential communities. As a result,
there is an influx and outflow of people, with an enormous number of
people using the building during the daylight hours and at night its use
falls to a low level. The entire Wall Street area of New York City and
comparable business districts in most modern cities experience a similar
fate. These areas are viable human communities only between 8:00 a.m.
and 5:00 p.m., when the Nation's business is conducted and local retail
business flourishes. For the rest of the time the streets of these areas
are deserted and dangerous.
The shift from the single-purpose function of suburbia or a World
Trade Center or a city of thousands of acres to communities of business,
industry, and residences will require reintroducing into the city some
of the elements that existed in most of the world's cities before the
advent of the automobile. Since the advent of the automobile, the city
has been slowly transformed to accommodate it, and because of its
energy, speed, and distance capabilities, the car has distorted the
man-city relationship. Suburban expansion preceded the automobile and
was made possible largely through the development of mass transit
trains, but the areas around the transit terminals usually remained
scale-size. The areas around the city's mass transit terminals
accommodated and still accommodate persons on foot or with yet other
public transportation. The areas around mass transit terminals in the
pre-automatic crush were also served by local public transportation and
usually serviced towns and villages that were quite compact by today's
standards.
The automobile provided man with an overwhelming sense of power and
independence and accelerated the development of dormitory suburbs. As
the latter grew, so did man's dependence upon the automobile, for
suburbia provided little in the way of work or recreational and cultural
diversions, thus making mobility essential in order to participate in
these activities.
In his study of the city of Detroit, C.A. Doxiadis concluded that
every resident of Detroit needs a car because a person with a car has 20
times as many social contacts and opportunities to make a living or to
exercise free choice in purchasing or entertainment as a person without
a car. The only solution to man's dependence on the automobile lies in
an adequate public transportation system, but even then the one man-one
car regimen will be hard to break.
Frank Lloyd Wright's approach to establishing man in harmony with his
environment was to construct houses that were as much a part of the
landscape as possible. His ideal city was a rural setting of open spaces
and widely separated dwellings. Business and industry were located at a
distance. Broadacres, as his plan was called, more aptly
describes the ultimate suburbia, with individual dwellings isolated on
substantial plots making it impossible for the whole to form a viable
human community.
The ideal habitat for man is not necessarily that which blends
aesthetically with the landscape; it is that which satisfies man's
organic as well as his psychic requirements. The concept of home as a
habitat should not begin with a decision about the number of rooms or
the amount of rent or even how much open space is associated with any
given dwelling. The paramount need in a human habitat centers on the
physical and biological surroundings that generate a feeling of
security, comfort, and well being. Obviously, our surroundings must be
conducive to functioning efficiently and the decor and furnishings must
please our artistic sense, but without the basic survival requirements
built in from the beginning, no collection of buildings, whatever their
artistic merit, by themselves constitute a viable human community.
The single most essential element that a community must provide for
its members is security. People living in tribal societies often live in
dwellings that provide little other than privacy, yet they are secure if
the community is secure. The wall paintings in the caves of the Dordogne
region of France and elsewhere were created after the fact of the
security and comfort of the cave. A cave was not only a place to find
protection from the elements; the physical construction of a cave
permitted it to be defended with a minimum of force, and this alone
justified its utility as a dwelling for man. The analogy of a modern
apartment to a cave is complete down to the single opening (the front
door) being its strongest defense feature.
If a dwelling is to provide security to its occupants, it must be in
a community that engenders security, both within the domain and in the
community beyond. The Treetop Hotel of South Africa's Kruger National
Zoological Park probably meets most of the requirements for good housing
and provides security for the residents as long as they stay within the
habitat, but the surrounding community remains hostile. If each man's
home must meet the physical requirements of a fortress, no community is
possible; for only in the collective ecological properties of
communities is security attainable, and only after the requirement of
security is satisfied can comfort and well-being be attained. Schools,
libraries, art galleries, symphony halls, universities, amusement parks,
baseball and football stadiums, and all the other paraphernalia of
modern life are irrelevant in environments not habitable by man, and it
is security that makes habitation possible. Comfort and well being make
a secure environment livable and provide the millieu for the
amenities.
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