6/8/10

Beyond and Behind "Built"


For my foreseeable Facebook future, no more indiscriminate "liking" and no more attempts at vacuous clever comments. It's time for me to take what I read, actually think about it, and then actually attempt to contribute something thoughtful and substantive to the conversation. It's not so much a "Facecation" as it is a way to actually communicate and share ideas.

So, here's a thought from a FB friend posted today as her status update:
I can finally enunciate my biggest issue with [St. Louis] "urban affairs" bloggers: their complete focus with the built environment to the exclusion of the social, economic and political environment.
I too have a similar thought, and, like my FB friend, I had not been able to articulate that thought until now. I think that the issue goes beyond just the "urbanist" bloggers. The issue goes to how our St. Louis civic culture conceives of our past, our present and our future.

The "urbanist" bloggers who focus on the built environment are incredibly important. It's readily apparent how much they love our city, and want to protect and improve it. Over the past sixty years, many of our city's architectural treasures met their demise from the wrecking ball. Even worse, what came to replace these treasures often were buildings aesthetically horrid and functionally deficient. If our city had a preservationist consciousness over these past sixty years, our city would be a much more beautiful and interesting place to live. The "urbanist" built environment bloggers do important and necessary work in seeking to raise a preservationist consciousness.

So, why does it seem that our city's "urbanist" bloggers focus near-exclusively on built environment? I think it's because notions of built environment are how our city's civic culture conceives of our city. It's a blessing and a curse traceable to our city's largest blessing and curse: the 1904 World's Fair.

In 1904, St. Louis "welcomed the world." It was a big deal. St. Louis was a big deal. The then-recently-completed Union Station has a stain glass window at the entrance to its Great Hall. The stain glass window depicts, from left-to-right, goddess-like representations of San Francisco, St. Louis and New York. All three in the same league. At the time, this representation wouldn't have elicited even a bemused chuckle. In terms of population and political and economic might, St. Louis was in the same league.

The Fair had an amazing complex of buildings and architecture. After the Fair, all of it was obliterated save for the Art Museum and the Flight Cage. The party was over. Over the years, St. Louis did not keep up with the cities once in its league. Politics and economics kept it largely static. In 2010, the idea of the goddess St. Louis enthroned as an equal of the goddesses San Francisco and New York elicits more than a chuckle.

The Missouri History museum seems singularly obsessed with the World's Fair. There is a perpetual exhibit there, and it takes up an entire wing. Why not be obsessed with the World's Fair? It's incredibly interesting. Most people who live here think it's interesting. It was massive. It was our city's moment of greatness. The vast majority of it is physically gone. It is the ghost of a mighty past haunting Forest Park. All that is tangible of this massive built environment are grainy black-and-white photographs.

In our St. Louis civic collective consciousness, built environment is inextricably linked to prestige. The World's Fair is the best example of this link. The Arch comes in a close second, representative of the high-modernist aspirations of the Sixties. There is a problem with this link. It's not the link per se, but the idea of the causal connection between built environment and civic prestige.

It seems to me that civic health, prestige, community (what have you) manifests itself in the built environment. It further seems to me that often we get this causal link reversed. (I am just as guilty of it as the next person.) We can't help it. Our past glories are manifested in the built environment.

It's incredibly important for us to preserve and celebrate our city's heritage. Each beautiful old building under the shadow of a wrecking ball is more than just a beautiful old building. Each is a manifestation of people's work and dedication ... each is a manifestation of community. Beautiful old buildings should be preserved if they can be preserved.

At the same time, a better understanding and participation in the here-and-now of our city's social, political and economic environment are crucial. Campaigns for preservation often seem to run against the need for jobs in economically-distressed communities. Preservation vs. jobs need not be the oppositional dichotomy. The goal of preserving and creating a healthy built environment first must come from understanding and participating in community. What is it that our community needs, and how do we, as a community, address these needs? The answers won't at first necessarily be physically grand or monumental. Community takes time, and its successes are measured and recognized in the long term. What matters is a sense of investment and a sense of trust.

Finally, it seems to me that we would do well to shed, once and for all, our fixation with the "might" and "grandiosity" of our city's past. I find strains of this fixation among our city's progressive urbanist bloggers (and in my own thinking). This fixation does not serve our city well, for the built environment or otherwise. What will serve our city well is the hard and humble work of community. What will serve this city well are communities engaged and invested in our civic health. What will serve this city well is democracy. Our built environment will manifest how well we serve ourselves.

5 comments:

PJLime said...

from Wikipedia:

"At its height, [Union Station]combined the St. Louis passenger services of 22 railroads, the most of any single terminal in the world. At its opening, it was the world's largest and busiest railroad station and its trainshed was the largest roof span in the world. In 1903, the station was expanded to accommodate visitors to the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair.

In the 1940s, it handled 100,000 passengers a day."

It seems difficult to live in the shadow of this history.

Matthew Frederick said...

Exactly. All the more reason to move on. Preserve and respect our heritage, but stop living in the past.

Unknown said...

From the front of the Kiel Opera House: "Democratic government will be the more successful the more the public opinion ruling it is enlightened and inspired by full and thorough discussion. The greatest danger threatening democratic institutions comes from those influences which tend to stifle or demoralize discussion." -Carl Shulz.
On the face of one of our great landmarks is inscribed a democratic ideal which likely informed the creation many of our greatest monuments and cultural institutions. I think you're right, Matt, that preservation of the built environment and community is important, and it doesn't have to sit opposite progress (i.e. transformation). I think many urbanists/preservations fear progress as they may believe (as I do) that it will require substantial, transformational change. The thing is, though, we may still have some great buildings, but we've lost the majority of the city's sense of community. We can't get it back unless we reinvigorate the City. and that will require significant changes - not only in our built environment, but in our community as well...

Alissa said...

Matt, I'm glad that you wrote this.

I do think that built environment is important - and it has a HUGE effect on the social environment and the public health - but it is so inextricably linked to all of the other (less tangible) environments. It's so maddening to see people talk about the urban fabric of JeffVanderLou, for instance, without discussing the loss of community pride and cohesiveness. People here are so focused on the city's palpable built history without remembering that our political history has caused so many of the problems we experience, now manifested in racial segregation and huge disparities in education, wealth and health.

Chris Naffziger mentioned that a lot of the focus has to do with folks' occupations, which is true. But there's no reason why urban planners should understand the context in which buildings exist.

Alissa said...

Sorry, SHOULDN'T understand the context.