Wednesday, July 02, 2014

City Lab post on the DC Office of Planning's pop-up proposal: "Income inequality lurks beneath DC's 'pop-up' housing debate''

See this tweet follow-up to this City Lab article:

Whether pop-ups are "ugly" or not isn't the issue. The city needs more housing supply.
3:51 PM - 2 Jul 2014

Comments, Bloomingdale residents?


A sample of a beautiful Bloomingdale pop-up.


Click on the link to read the * entire * CityLab post.

Which you want to do.

Income Inequality Lurks Beneath D.C.'s 'Pop-Up' Housing Debate

Rowhouse additions offend the sensibilities of some homeowners. But when cities protect their interests, they do so at the expense of residents.

1 comment:

Todd said...

What total nonsense. A debate on aesthetics is veiled NIMBYism? Kriston either completely misunderstand the contribution of urban planning and public architecture to the quality of civic life in a community or she believes that it is irrelevant. To lower the debate around aesthetics to a simple Marxist struggle of the haves vs the have nots is to completely trash a body of professional knowledge that goes back many centuries about how to create public spaces that reflect the creativity, particularities, priorities and cultures of the people who live there and which promote civic engagement and social and individual well-being. In Kriston's estimation, why preserve the Mansard facades of downtown Paris? Why care about the piazzas of Venice or the chatets of the swiss alps or the West Sudanese architecture of Bamako? Why protect any places's "sense of place" ? After all, if architecture is just a pretext for what's really going on behind the scenes (ie the rich lording it over the poor), then why doesn't Kriston just "keep it real" and move to someplace where we aren't preserving the special sense of place.....why not move to Motor Mile? Or next to the Home Depot parking lot? There are lots of places in the USA she can live in harmony with the indigenous people, but probably not in historic districts in Washington DC where people care about history and architecture and see it as a part of the public commons that need to be protected and preserved for the benefit of everybody in the community.