The city as man's habitat is a complex concept. It must include all
of the elements necessary to man's survivalthose elements that are
necessary to his comfort, well-being, and security. But in addition, the
city as habitat for man must include all the elements of man's
technologyhis industry, his work, his business.
The city habitat of man is not isolated, but forms a continuous
environment with the surrounding countryside. Depending upon the
climate, latitude, and physiography, the hinterland may be farmland,
forest, mountain, desert, or any of the other conditions that prevail on
the surface of the earth.
Wherever man builds cities he does so for the purpose of generating
the wealth to be derived from natural resources, communications,
knowledge, and information. The mass migrations from rural areas to the
cities did not come about because the land could no longer support the
people but because the cities beckoned with their increased economic
opportunities. Since World War II, the natural reproduction processes
have caused city populations to swell further.
Yet, even today, the sizes of the cities that man has created vary
widely. Some remain quite small communities centered around a single
industry or around one or a few mineheads. Others are enormous
metropolitan complexes that contain many communities. But whatever the
sizesingle-purpose city or multi-purpose megalopoliseach
resident relates only to those areas that touch his daily life. For most
people, these are the neighborhoods where they live and raise their
families, the area where they work and earn their livelihood, and the
area where they play and enjoy their hours of recreation. This is true
no matter what the size of the city and differs only in that large
cities offer a greater variety of employment opportunities, recreational
facilities, and variety of housing than do small ones. Such differences
are quantitative not qualitative.
If one considers the reasons for setting aside great national areas
for parks as contrasted to cities, they are relatively simple but
similar. First, with the Yellowstone Act came the concept of the
preservation of ecosystem processes and public policy to preserve
certain areas together with plant and animal communities in their
natural state. Many parks have been established as a result of this
policy, including most of the great national parks.
Following the establishment of Yellowstone National Park, many areas
were added as parks because of their great scenic beauty or because they
were outstanding examples of particular geological, plant geographical
types, or because they were habitats for the vanishing animal
populations of the continent. The National Park Plan is based upon the
recognition of the desirability of having examples of all physiographic
regions of the nation represented along with the plant and animal
life.
Once these national area parks are established their maintenance
depends upon an understanding of the ecological and environmental
factors that produced them in the first place. It is axiomatic in the
principles of ecology that natural ecosystems will come into equilibrium
or balance with the totality of physical and biological factors that
produced them.
Managing natural park areas is a matter of arranging those
environmental factors that are most likely to produce the stable
ecosystem that will preserve the natural state of the vegetation and the
resident animal population. If one compares the basis of maintaining and
managing the natural environment of man to that of the natural areas of
national parks, there is a great deal of similarity.
Man lives in family units, and families, in turn, are gathered
together into neighborhoods. These neighborhoods, together with the
technological means for providing man's livelihood, form communities.
The predominant organisms of this community are human beings at various
stages of growth and development. The ecosystem of man may also include
other plants and animals, the products of man's technology, and the
means of operating that technology.
The ecosystem processes that operate in the community of man are the
biological and physical ones that operate in natural ecosystems and
which have essentially the same properties common to any natural
ecosystem.
In man's ecosystem, the biological processes are those that occur
without the aid of man as well as those that are created by his
technology. As a matter of fact, the environment of man may have been
modified and shaped extremely to accommodate his machines, although man
himself and his biological requirements remain the most important
element in his own ecosystem.
The principal technological influences in man's ecosystem are the
houses and buildings that contain man and his machines and the
development of a means of transportation. Ribbons of concrete and
asphalt connect the places where man lives and the places where he
works, and ribbons of concrete and rails of steel connect and transport
people and goods to cities. The airlanes between the major ecosystems of
man are virtually filled with transportation devices also carrying goods
and people from city to city, i.e., from ecosystem to ecosystem. Rivers
and harbors are dredged, engineering projects contain floods and create
shipping channels, rivers are rechanneled to provide areas for
development, and canals are dug to carry water for municipal and
agricultural purposes or to transport manufacturers' goods.
In many respects, the biological properties of man have been only
superficially accommodated to the machines he must use and with which he
must live. The history of technology is replete with examples of man
being used as a link between machines or as a human force of power to
manipulate primitive, simple tools in the construction of complex
engineering works.
Man may live in substandard housing, he may drive unsafe automobiles,
or work in occupations that are hazardous or detrimental to his health
or he may live, work, and play in the most salubrious environments,
environments that are most conducive to the realization of his humanity.
Regardless of the exact circumstances or details, the environment,
together with man and his technology forms the ecosystem of man. The
fact that some communities are dangerous or hazardous or inhuman simply
points to the array of physical and biological factors that are driving
the ecological balance away from that which is most favorable to
man.
Desirable and/or human communities, on the other hand, are also the
result of ecological factors that promote the desirable or favorable
balance or equilibrium. Cities act no differently from natural
communities in responding to the inevitability of achieving a balanced
equilibrium among all the forces that impinge upon them. Change in the
equilibrium point, that is, where improvement or deterioration of
community conditions occurs, is always accompanied by a mix in the
ecological factors. Thus, the management of cities differs in no
conceptual way from the management of any ecosystem.
To achieve this goal, the habitat of man, in common with all
habitats, should incorporate appropriate environmental constraints and
environmental management practices in order to create ecosystems that
promote the common weal.
It is in the city that most people spend most of their time. It is
here that man earns his living and seeks his recreation. The city is a
biological community or a collection of biological communities; it is
the ecosystem of man and must be managed in much the same way that we
manage any natural resource.
But in the management of city ecosystems, as with any other, we must
first establish goals. Once that management judgment is made, the
methods of achieving the goals are no different from the management of
any natural ecosystem.
Man lives in and makes use of environments that are a continuum from
the city to the wilderness. The main factor in differentiating the
elements of this continuum is population density and man's impact upon
his environment. In a city, man's influence is at its peak, whereas in
the great natural area parks and wilderness man has the least impact.
Between these two extremes, man's impact is felt to varying degrees in
cultivated agricultural land, in the managed timber forests, in the
grazing lands, and in the rivers, estuaries, and waters of the
continental shelf. Man's influence, principally through his technology,
is present everywhere.
The great natural area parks have many urban-like properties, and
many of them are steady-state communities in their own right. Yosemite
National Park, for instance, is a steady-state city of 50,000 people
during the height of the season. It has a mayor in the form of a
superintendent, a chief of police, street maintenance personnel, grocery
stores, and sewage disposal plants. In fact, it has all the elements and
requirements of a city of 50,000 inhabitants. The people who inhabit the
park change from day to day, but this shifting population requires
essentially the same services that would be required by a static
community.
Moreover, cities have many features in common with natural areas,
including natural vegetation and wildlife, and many cities are situated
on the banks of rivers and streams.
Man seeks out those places in the cities that are of interest and
where there are other people and pleasing activity. A part of the charm
of cities is the extent of diurnal and nocturnal activity. Places in the
city that are most enjoyable are often those where people are on the
streets anywhere from 12 to 18 hours each day. The most hazardous areas
in cities are those that are in use only during the working hours of the
day and which are deserted the rest of the time.
The most popular cities are those populated by people of diverse
ethnic backgrounds, where cultural opportunities abound, and those that
offer that variety fabled to be "the spice of life."
San Franciscans live in the areas of greatest activity and make
maximum use of their public places. The trend to single-purpose,
highrise buildings in San Francisco will probably adversely effect
thisa price San Francisco will pay for keeping up with its more
modern sister cities. One day, San Francisco will be viewed in
historical context as the way to build a very pleasant city before the
advent of single purpose, highrise buildings.
In exactly the same way that natural ecosystems with great diversity
are stable, cities with great diversity are stable. In the same way that
ecotypic interchangeability leads to diversity and stability, so it is
that many competing entities produce greater economic stability in
cities.
If we set aside great areas of the natural landscape to preserve the
natural ecosystems and call these places parks, we can and must look at
our cities as great natural ecosystems and make provisions for their
preservationnot only preservation of the relics from our heritage,
essential as that may be. We must also preserve the processes that
produce stable, wealth-producing cities that provide the basic elements
of comfort, well-being, and security. To that we must add pleasure,
recreation, and the full range of ecosystem interactions necessary to
man. Such a city is, in fact, a park by all the standards we have
defined.
To bring about these changes requires not wealth (that is generated
by the growth of the city itself), but direction. Much has been done
already and a growing public awareness of ecosystem interactions
suggests that the trend will continue. We look forward to a period of
great development during which the form and function of future cities
will be determined. Will they be ecologically sound?
Our present population of 200+ million will increase to 260 million
by the year 2000. How will this growth be accommodated in our present
urban structure? Will we build more cities? Rebuild the ones we
have?
Whatever the choice, the thrust and force of the future is at our
backs. In making the choice, we can begin with the premise that man is
more comfortable and more at ease in a living environment. Man needs
cities that are viable communities, with safe and pleasant streets,
adequate transportation, and a minimum of pollution. Economics and
aesthetics demand that our cities be made livable again. There is no
alternative, for we cannot desert them and we are not about to perish in
them.
Theodore W. Sudia
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