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Tsk, Tsk: More Criticism of Beyoncé’s Moral Choices In a New York Times Op-Ed Piece

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Oh, my!  In an Op-Ed piece appearing in the last New York Times Sunday review Mark Bittman, food journalist and author and columnist for the Times has taken issue with Beyoncé Knowles’ morality for hawking sugary soda to her audience.  Mr. Bittman notes that Pepsi is putting $50 million into a Beyoncé Super Bowl promotion, part of which money will go to support Beyoncé’s “creative projects.” A correction to the article makes clear that about half of the $50 million thatwill be spent will go directly to Beyoncé and her “creative projects.” See: Why Do Stars Think It’s O.K. To Sell Soda? January 5, 2013.

Mr. Brittman’s leveling of this criticism at Beyoncé is reminiscent of the criticism I have leveled in Noticing New York articles at Beyoncé and her husband, Jay-Z, for shilling for the highly subsidized, eminent domain-abusing so-called "Barclays" arena and thereby being partly responsible for bringing it into existence at the expense of Brooklynites, the local community and the citizen taxpayers of New York.  See: Friday, April 8, 2011, “Reverse Morality” Clauses for Celebrity Endorsers: What Are They? Something Celebrities, Including Jay-Z, Should Try Enforcing.  Maybe it should be noted that the “Barclays” arena also partners to conspicuously sponsor the promotion of sugary soda: It sponsors Coke, the main competitor of Pepsi.

Beyoncé’s morality has also been previously called into question for her 2009 New Year’s Eve special performance for the Gaddafi clan (Gaddafi as in Lybia) in St. Barts in the Caribbean.  (See: Wednesday, March 9, 2011, An Insert Preview - Music Superstar Ethics: How Completely You Can Sell “You can say what you say, but you are what you are.” Jay-Zzzzus!)

Her husband, Jay-Z, also seems to have repetitive problems in terms of his choice of associates: Friday, March 11, 2011, Lightning Keeps Striking: It Couldn’t Happen To Some More Deserving People . . Over and Over, Again- Ratner, Illegal Bribes and Jay-Z and Beyoncé.

From Beyoncé’s looks and superbly healthy-sounding voice one might intuit (without it’s being guaranteed) that the 31-year-old Ms. Knowles is not a big consumer of sugary beverages herself;  She is merely selling a brand.

But is it fair for Mr. Bittman to be picking on poor Beyoncé?  After all Charlie Rose, who is such an unimpeachable PBS paragon of legitimatizing influence that New York’s Channel Thirteen itself uses him to sell trust in the station, also shills for sugary soda (once again Coca-Cola, Pepsi’s rival) and Rose has similarly shilledrepeatedly for the “Barclays” Center arena and its subsidy collector/developer Bruce Ratner.   . .

. .  But wait: Are there no parallels to Beyoncé performing specially for the Gaddafi clan New Year’s Eve in St. Barts?  Maybe there are: On the second occasion when Rose had Bruce Ratner on his program to promote the “Barclays” arena he also hosted at the same time the arena’s co-owner, Mikhail Prokhorov, a Russian oligarch who, as is almost necessarily the case in Russia, is embroiled with his wealth and its procurement in Russian politics.  This entailed some very uncomfortable groveling by Rose as he joked with Prokhorov about Russian politics as he worked to keep the tone of that program light in keeping with the show's overall happy sales pitch theme.

Isn’t Beyoncé just doing what so many of us decide to do?: Taking a job, making a living where one can be found in a world where options for an honest living are fast being gobbled up by our own homegrown oligarchs and our often less than suitably reputable corporations?  But Mr. Bittman argues that Beyoncé and her husband ought now to be past the point of desperation for money and to the point of making moral decisions:
I suppose it would be one thing if she needed the money or the exposure but she and Jay-Z are worth around $775 million.
Mr. Bittman’s hyperlink takes the reader to the information that Beyoncé and Jay-Z are the richest celebrity couple in the world.  But they weren’t always.  Perhaps one can theorize that the original moral compromises were made somewhere along the way to this status . . . so why then should anyone begin to make fine moral distinctions at this point?

Why would we expect Beyoncé and Jay-Z to make finer moral distinctions than Charlie Rose?  Because they have more money?

There is perhaps a more valid moral criticism of Beyoncé and Jay-Z that has been made.  Mr. Bittman characterizes Beyoncé as “a politically aware woman” because:
she with her husband, Jay-Z, raised money for President Obama and supported Michelle Obama’s “Let’s Move” campaign, meant to encourage children to exercise.
There is, however, disagreement about the political awareness and/or sincerity of the couple.    A reader comment selected by Times editors as amongst the best asks why Beyoncé  merits the label“politically aware” (several reader comments question this assessment) saying that she seems instead “much more ‘profitably aware’”.  Jay-Z himself says he doesn’t understand Occupy Wall Street’s concerns about the one percent and the ninety-nine percent (“what are you fighting for?. . . I don’t know what the fight is about. What do we want, do you know?. . . This is free enterprise. This is what America is built on.”)

The criticism of Beyoncé and Jay-Z that may be the most astute comes from black actor and activist Harry Belafonte when he concludes that the now-privileged couple have simply “turned their back on social responsibility”:
“I think one of the great abuses of this modern time is that we should have had such high-profile artists, powerful celebrities. But they have turned their back on social responsibility. . . . That goes for Jay-Z and Beyoncé, for example.”
See: Harry Belafonte: Jay-Z, Beyoncé ‘have turned their back on social responsibility’, by Alexis Garrett Stodghill, August 8, 2012.

There is no question though that Beyoncé has an influence on the culture.  Mr. Brittman’s column has so far generated 410 reader comments (with still another hundred comments awaiting moderation before they show up- We'll see if my comment shows up).  That’s a lot!  Most are primarily a defense of sugary soda as being something that’s not all that bad, not so much a defense of Beyoncé herself, but the top comment amongst the readers’ pick of the collection (which proceeds on to some other pithy observations) begins:
Did you imagine that celebrities are not just like ordinary people whose judgment can be distorted by the lure of money?

National Notice Article About Bloomberg Equating New York Teachers Union With NRA

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From the New York section of Monday's New York Times
Readers of Noticing New York will know that in the context of covering real estate and development policy in the city I often provide contextual background stories debunking the myths of beneficence and competence cultivated by Mayor Michael Bloomberg.  I’ve written another such article (Wednesday, January 9, 2013, A Teachable Moment: Bloomberg Veers Off Course In Gun Violence Prevention Debate) but I published it under the National Notice banner because it was, in part, a follow-up to an earlier National Notice article I wrote about gun violence prevention policy (Monday, December 31, 2012, Guns As The Solution To Guns? A Meditation on Corporate Solutions In General).

Noticing New York readers might be interested in the new article that also concerns Bloomberg’s relationship with the New York City teachers union (he commented that the union is like the NRA) and city education policy in general.  Gun violence prevention is also something that is going to get even more attention in New York in the coming days as Governor Cuomo made it one focal point of his State of the State address today.

For those readers who may not have caught up, in addition to writing Noticing New York I write National Notice when I am addressing subjects that principally involve national matters and policy, but I have always found that as the aforementioned articles may illustrate the themes of articles appearing under each of the two banners tend to be remarkably consonant, overlapping and integrated.  So Noticing New York readers may have an interest in popping over to read National Notice from time to time.   Noticing New York and National Notice also both have their own Facebook pages which can be "liked" to get notice of new articles.

Another “Times Effect”: The Times As Gatekeeper Of Populace’s Populous Debate. . Unpublished Noticing New York Comment On Beyonce’s Moral Choices

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What’s most important in this world?  What the New York Times pays attention to or what our multitudinous citizenry invests its time and energy in scrutinizing?  Sometimes a Venn diagram would show those two things as substantially overlapping with the New York Times exercising a gatekeeper role to ensure it remains soas much as possible.

In a New York Times Sunday Review article last weekend Mark Bittman, food journalist and author and columnist for the Times, picked up reminiscently on what has been a repeated theme in past Noticing New York articles: Whether Beyoncé Knowles is behaving morally when she questionably associates with and puts her image and influence behind questionable things.  In this case Mr. Bittman's focus was $50 million that went into a Beyoncé Super Bowl Pepsi promotion, half of which was going directly to Beyoncé and her “creative projects.” Mr. Bittman's concern is that the consumption of sugary soda is a significant public health problem.  See: Why Do Stars Think It’s O.K. To Sell Soda?, January 5, 2013.

On Tuesday I covered and commented on Mr. Bittman’s Beyoncé article here in Noticing New York: January 8, 2013, Tsk, Tsk: More Criticism of Beyoncé’s Moral Choices In a New York Times Op-Ed Piece.

However newsworthy Beyoncé’s connection to sugary soda really is, the public who have participated in making Jay-Z and Beyoncé the world's richest celebrity couple definitely seem to care.  In my Noticing New York article I noted that Mr. Brittman’s column had generated voluminous reader comments (410 reader comments with still another hundred comments awaiting moderation before they show up) and wondered if the comment I submitted to his article would show up.  At the time of this writing, the comments to the Bittman article published by the Times site moderators are up to 425 with comments having now been published.  In answer to my wondering: My comment has not been published.

Although in one case it is close, to date, the number of published comments on the Bittman Beyoncé column exceed, in some cases substantially, the number of comments on any of the other articles in the Sunday Review set up to take comments.  Here are the number of comments published on other pieces appearing in the January 5th Sunday Review (commenting for most of them are now closed).  Collectively, they do evidence that the Times comment sections provide an active and important forum for public comment.
    •    Can Social Media Sell Soap?, (appearing on the front page of the Sunday Review) by Stephen Baker: . . . 90 Comments

    •    The Surreal World: Capitol Hill (appearing on the front page of the Sunday Review) by Maureen Dowd:. . . . 287 Comments

    •    The Myth of Universal Love, by Stephen T. Asthma. . . . 325 Comments

    •    How to Choose a College, by Frank Bruni. . .183 Comments

    •    The Blessings of Atheism, by Susan Jacoby. . . 297 Comments

    •    Diary of a Creep, by Rend Smith. . . 423 Comments

    •    Dying for Freedom (about Lincoln and the Emancipation Proclamation), by Jim Downs. . . 323 comments

    •    Rapturous Research (about the exhilaration of authors when exhaustively researching an historical topic), by Sean Pidgeon . . . 153 Comments

    •    More Risk-Taking, Less Poll-Taking, by Thomas L. Friedman. .   264 comments

    •    Boehner, American Hero, by Ross Douthat. . .315 Comments

    •    The Public Editor: When Reporters Get Personal, by Margaret Sullivan. . .47 Comments
The New York Times published comments to Mr. Brittman’s Beyoncé morality story in three categories: “All,” “Reader Picks” and “NYT Picks.”  The additional fifteen comments published by the Times since I wrote on Tuesday appear as “Reader Picks” or “NYT Picks.”

For an idea of the additional comments the Times published while not publishing my comment here are the lead-in sentences of the last fifteen comments (they are largely reiterative of the 410 comments that went before):
    1.    Soda and diet soda are great items for celebrities to endorse, especially at the superbowl, where many ads (and parties) are focused on alcohol.. . .

    2.    Yes, if you isolate seeds from 200 apples and crush them (not swallow them) and eat them you will die of cyanide poisoning. But a few seeds will do nothing, . . .

    3.    Well Soda is American; an American thing to do: drink soda. . .

    4.    Once again Mark Bittman found food Jesus and now like a true fanatic he thinks we all have to convert.. .

    5.    Why don't they advertise the sugar free diet versions of these drinks? . .

    6.    How much money does Beyonce need? Seems like she and other celebrities take anything that comes their way without any thought to. . .

    7.    Doesn't anyone have any responsibility for their own actions anymore? One soda is fine. . .

    8.    Great article. Fit Fathers has been saying the same thing. Stars are hypocritical by. .

    9.    Get real. Soda, bacon, candy, beef, etc has been with us long before obesity. . .

    10.    Thanks Mr. Bittman for being willing to ask why popular entertainment figures are willing to endorse this particular seemingly innocuous product that actually causes . . .

    11.    In light of last week's CDC report on the lack of correlation between longevity and body mass (at least for "moderate obesity,") . . .

    12.    Give me a break. Comparing soda to cigarettes is a stretch, the vast majority of consumers consume soda with no ill effects . . .

    13.    It is a little laughable to think that Beyonce could be ashamed to endorse junk food. Almost everyone eats a little junk food now and then . . .

    14.    Can't wait until these celebs start endorsing 5 Hour Energy and Red Bull.. . .

    15.    Somehow it's fitting that Beyonce works to fill bodies with empty soda calories...after all she fills . .
Here is my comment that the New York Times editors moderating comments declined to publish:
Am I going to be the first reader to mention in my comment black actor and activist Harry Belafonte’s observation that Jay-Z and Beyoncé, now privileged with wealth and influence, have “turned their back on social responsibility”?  Mr. Belafonte wasn’t talking about the scourge of sugary soda, albeit a legitimate health problem, he was talking about broader societal issues.

Also, will my comment be published here and will it be selected as a New York Times “pick” if I mention that Jay-Z and Beyoncé have also both shilled for the so-called “Barclays” arena (part of the eminent domain and subsidy abusing Atlantic Yards project) which: 1.) The Times itself, with a conflict of interest, has shilled for even in its news pages, and 2.) partners to promote Coca-Cola, Pepsi’s almost equally sugary rival?

See the following Noticing New York article: [I then included the link to Tuesday's Noticing New York: Tsk, Tsk: More Criticism of Beyoncé’s Moral Choices In a New York Times Op-Ed Piece]
My inclusion of a link in my comment was not the reason for its exclusion.  Other comments published include links.

As I have pointed out before, the documentary “Page One: Inside The New York Times” described what it identified as the “New York Times Effect,” mostly using the Times’ own staffers to describe it, which refers to the way the Times leads the way in establishing what is, or is not, news.  It may be that the Times not only has an effect in leading the way to establish what is on the agenda for consideration as news but also has an effect on after-flow of the ensuing public discussion of those issues.

The morality of promoting sugary soda will be discussed; it happens to be a concern that New York Mayor Bloomberg has personally championed.  The morality of bringing the Atlantic Yards mega-monopoly into existence, including the so-called “Barclays” arena, will not be part of the public discussion.  As it so happens the same mayor has indicated that he wants the issues surrounding Atlantic Yards and the arena forgotten: “No one will remember how long it took.” (And by implication the associated issues and problems with the mega-project), says the mayor.  Says his mega-project-supporting ally, the Brooklyn borough president: “no one will ever remember what the fight was about.”

Not by happenstance, the top ranks of the city’s power elite are thoroughly permeated by individuals quite happy to see the mega-project issues similarly vanish from the public consciousness.  And the Times, which has relationships with all of these individuals, including the subsidy collector/developer Forest City Ratner itself, accommodates, scrubbing its news stories, even retroactively, of any mention of the issues, see: Saturday, September 29, 2012, Report: How The Times Expunged Its Own First Draft Of History On “Barclays” Center Opening To Replace It With The Pro-Ratner Narrative It Favors and Monday, October 1, 2012, New York Times Ghost Article: The Searchable Remnants On The Web Of Banished (Anti-Ratner/Anti-Jay-Z?) “Barclays” Center Opening Article.

Before I started writing Noticing New York I submitted prospective pieces to the Times that were not published.  If I ever were published in the Times I am sure that what appeared there would receive a greater readership than what I publish in Noticing New York.  That would have its advantages, but the advantage of a blog like Noticing New York is that when the Times does not publish what I write it can readily be published here instead, hopefully providing some balance.

If you have a reasonable comment on the Times Beyoncé article that the Times moderators won’t publish, I am happy to publish it here in Noticing New York.

Meanwhile, I have tried submitting the following new comment on the Bittman column to the Times:
I previously submitted a comment on this article that did not survive moderation to get published here.  It related Mr. Bittman's observations to the similar way that Jay-Z and Beyoncé have promoted the “Barclays” arena and the Atlantic Yards mega-project of which the arena is a part.  I notice that there is no mention in any of the comments published here to Beyoncé’s association with Atlantic Yards.  I am wondering whether any other of the comments that did not survive moderation to get published referred to Beyoncé’s and/or Jay-Z’s Atlantic Yards or “Barclays” activities.

Andrea Fraser, Frank Gehry, Ada Louise Huxtable, Art, Artists, Urban Renewal, Mega-Monpoly And The “Barclays” Arena

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Andrea Fraser in center, from her performance art work that reacts to Frank Gehry mythos, on each side of her, Gehry's two proposed "Ms. Brooklyn" designs for Atlantic Yards, the first on the left and the second on the right
Andrea Fraser is a performance artist whose work seditiously deconstructs and calls attention the implicit societal rules we follow, by which various works of art get `consensually’ elevated to agreed upon stature.  Part of the tension of her work is that you can hardly remain unaware of how Fraser bites the hand that potentially feeds her as she consciously reacts to art-world art as inherently commercial.  A wandering, problematical guest, she violates the etiquette of her host’s home, surfacing themes about the hemming dimensions of that world wherein intermediaries manage with politic correctness an expected order that includes reinforcing implicit bargains about relative caste.

The Whitney Museum’s site says that Ms. Fraser is, she believes, confronting fundamental conflicts and contradictions about this curated art that “have intensified along with income inequality.”  It continues:
Fraser writes, participants in the art world who perform these operations in art discourse “not only banish entire regions of our own activities and experiences, investments, and motivations to insignificance, irrelevance, and unspeakability, we also consistently misrepresent what art is and what we do when we engage with art and participate in the art field.”
Andrea Fraser Addresses Frank Gehry
                               
Andrea Fraser was brought to my attention by a young artist who fathomed quite correctly that I would be interested in her video performance work “Little Frank and His Carp” (2001) which targets the sensational promotion of Frank Gehry’s Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain.  The Carp?: There is a fish-shaped tower at the center of the Museum hall plus explanation in the video via the museum’s recorded audio guide.  (Click on the link to see the video.)

In a 2005 interview, quoted on UbuWeb on which the video can be found Fraser discusses Little Frank and His Carp:
What struck me about the audio tour for the Guggenheim Bilbao was the explicitness of the seduction....The audio guide promises transcendence of the social through a transgression: the always forbidden touching of art—or here, architecture-as-art…. The tour distances the museum from the difficulties of “modern art,” claiming that the building’s sensual appeal “has nothing to do with age or class or education.” Freed of social/symbolic restrictions, we can make ourselves at home in the sensual, caring arms of the (mother) museum.
Frank Gehry’s starchitecture is an apt target for Fraser given his positioning as a premium, deluxe artist pitching to an appreciative elite.  She gets extra mileage out of her choice in that Gehry, who often does museums and institutional settings for the presentation or performance of artwork, is often thought of as a rule breaker, and Fraser’s performance is about stripping down to essentials what rule-breaking actually is (I suppose that’s a pun).  The video was filmed with hidden cameras without the prior knowledge or permission of the museum.

Notions Of Architectural Responsibility Via Ada Louise Huxtable

In directing her attention to architecture Fraser has considered an art form that is not and cannot always be evaluated solely by the standards of art.  In this regard a paragraph in last week’s Times obituary for Pulitzer Prize-winning architectural critic Ada Louise Huxtable caught my eye for the crucial point it made that architecture has to be in service to other essential goals:
Though knowledgeable about architectural styles, Ms. Huxtable often seemed more interested in social substance. She invited readers to consider a building not as an assembly of pilasters and entablatures but as a public statement whose form and placement had real consequences for its neighbors as well as its occupants.
(See: Ada Louise Huxtable, Champion of Livable Architecture, Dies at 91, by David W. Dunlap, January 7, 2013.)

Along these lines, one interpretation of Fraser’s “Little Frank and His Carp” is that the architectural dominance of modern gallery spaces does not always serve the display of the art within nearly as well as it should.  Other criticisms of Gehry’s work is that the resources invested in its forms can be wastefully functionless and that it can disregard its relationships with and `consequences for its neighbors.’   But Gehry design does have intended functions which it is intended to be in service to . . . more on this later in this piece.

Reading the Times obituary for Huxtable, I was struck by the way that it made absolutely no explicit mention of urbanist Jane Jacobs, a fellow critic of the city’s shaping and development with whom Huxtable had much in common.

The Times obituary is extremely laudatory of Huxtable as it ought to have been and thus, in a way, self-laudatory, because it was the Times that hired Huxtable as “the first full-time architecture critic at an American newspaper,” but the article gives no hint how likely it was that the Times hiring of Huxtable in September1963 was motivated by Jane Jacobs’ very influential 1961 book, “The Death and Life of Great American Cities”  In contrast, the Observer’s very brief obit for Huxtable mentions Jacobs as background context to Huxtable's appointment.  Indeed, it turns out that Huxtable mentions Jane Jacobs and her book in October, writing the month after starting her stint at the Times.

Certainly there was a shared similarity of style, brook-no-fools attitude, and also themes in the writings for which each of the two women was esteemed.  Does this from Huxtable’s obituary not sound like it’s describing Jane Jacobs?:
She had no use for banality, monotony, artifice or ostentation, for private greed or governmental ineptitude. She could be eloquent or impertinent, even sarcastic.
Another similarity is the notion that with both Jacobs and Huxtable architecture and city planning became more accessibly egalitarian as they demythologized the professions, with the Times obituary for Huxtabel saying of her something that might strike a resonant chord if Andrea Fraser were reading it: “she opened the priestly precincts of design and planning to everyday readers.”

Huxtable’s very first work for the Times, before she was hired as a regular critic, was a 1958 Times Magazine article: The Art We Cannot Afford to Ignore (But Do); The Art We Cannot Afford to Ignore (But Do) (May 04).

That first Times article introduced a theme Huxtable was expressing perhaps even better years later (on the Leonard Lopate show in 2008), architecture’s importance because we inescapably must live with it:
(Architecture) is the art we must live with. If you want to experience painting or sculpture it’s an option. But there is absolutely nothing optional about your experience of architecture.
At the end of that 1958 article it sounds as if Huxtable made her own case for creation of the job the Times eventually hired her to fill:
The press which regularly reviews art, literature, movies, music and dance, ignores architecture, except for building news on the real estate page.  Architecture as a standard feature is virtually unknown, in spite of the direct and inescapable impact of architectural production.  Superblocks are built, the physiognomy and services of the city are changed, without discussion, except in a few of the more specialized or sophisticated journals.  Unless a story reaches the proportions of a scandal, architecture is the stepchild of the popular press.
Urban Renewal Failure

Superblocks and the transmogrification of the city’s physiognomy and services without public understanding or input?  What did Huxtable think of the urban renewal of the 50's and 60's?  On Lopate in 2008 she said:
That was the biggest mistake in the history of urban design. That was . . That grew out of the total ignorance of what was being lost. Urban renewal required total clearance. There was no provision for saving anything and that was how we learned how valuable the things were that we lost. . . .

 . . . There was no consciousness. That consciousness had to be found and raised; that the environment, the built world was a rich tapestry of time and style. We just didn’t know!
That too sounds like Jane Jacobs.

Similarly, in 1966 she wrote scathingly of urban renewal for the Times in “Project, Planned 10 Years, Has Been Called Unsound; Work Starts on Total Renewal Project” which is retitled  “How We Lost Lower Manhattan” in her 2008 collection “On Architecture: Collected Reflections on a Century of Change”:
    . . . it will erase all traces of the past in one of the most historic sections of the city. . . . A total bulldozer plan, as were all of New York’s early renewal efforts. . . . just at a time when the city has officially renounced the bulldozer approach. . .. Some buildings were in poor condition others were well preserved.  Land uses were a mixture of business and residential.  New York’s artists’ colony, priced out of fashionable Greenwich Village, was finding its lofts and atmosphere hospitable. . . . a compendium of of just about everything that can go wrong in the renewal process. . .  a negative object lesson for the large renewal programs now planned or in process. . . Developers were awarded the sites of their choice on which they carried out their own plans, not the city’s. . .  Lack of an overall plan. . The project has no relation to any of the surrounding downtown developments directly on its borders . . .  The Streets themselves will disappear under skyscrapers and superblocks.  There are no celebrated monuments to save, but there were scattered stands of homogenous brick and stone street architecture of the early nineteenth century that knowledgeable observers prize for pleasant proportions, as disappearing vernacular Georgian style, and historic associations. . . . Preservation and rehabilitation retain the city’s historic fabric and neighborhood character.  It also keeps older housing and commercial spaces operative.  New construction provides improvements and modern facilities.  Together, the two create the elusive synthesis known as urban character.
When there was an effort that included three separate museum exhibits launched in 2007 to rehabilitate the image of Robert Moses, the grand master of urban renewal, Huxtable wrote an essay in the Wall Street Journal, the paper to which she had by then moved, “The Man Who Remade New York.”  It disabused the revisionists of certain notions saying that “the rehabilitation of Robert Moses is not an easy walk down memory lane.”  Huxtable said with respect to the revisionists:
The acknowledged purpose here is to add balance to a story in which the brilliant restructuring of the public realm has been obscured by projects that rode roughshod over history and neighborhoods with unfeeling arrogance of epic proportions that lingers in the collective mind.
Huxtable accused New Yorkers of suffering from “planning amnesia” and concluded that it was fortunate Moses was stopped.  She juxtaposed Moses with Jacobs:
Planning in the early twentieth century was broad and paternalistic. . . Moses’s agenda was a perfect match.

The more intimate, humanistic view of planning as a small-scale, socially sensitive awareness of the street, the neighborhood, and individual lives had its catalyst in Jacobs’s 1961 book, “The Death and Life of Great American Cities,” which became the bible of the planning revolution.  This approach would have no appeal for Moses even if he understood it.  
Architectural Hats In The Ring

In that first 1958 essay for the Times Huxtable called upon architects to be various things, including, one expects, socially sensitive and responsible.  She refers to the architect as a “man of a hundred hats,”  assuming a different purpose with the donning of each hat: as a “practical man” providing shelter and physical necessities but as “an artist” providing the desire for beauty and “sociologically” giving form to the “living and working patterns of society” and “spiritually” creating “a setting for faith.”

So it was that she critiqued the building of the Pan Am Building (now the MetLife Building), focusing on social responsibility grounds.  From her Times obituary:
Rather than aesthetics, Ms. Huxtable focused on how the tower would alter the scale of Park Avenue, adding “an extraordinary burden to existing pedestrian and transportation facilities.” She continued, “Its antisocial character directly contradicts the teachings of Walter Gropius, who has collaborated in its design.”
The pro-development view at the time was, of course, different: Said William F. R. Ballard, the new chairman of the city planning commission, in an interview with Huxtable: “I can’t think of a better place to have a big building. . .  I don’t think concentration is such an evil. . . It’s the essence of cities. . . . Nobody’s been trampled yet.”

Huxtable Veneration For Gehry

Our discussion here has gone on at length about the calamities of urban renewal and the importance of social responsibility on the part of architects and those who shape the city, intending to come round again to Frank Gehry.  Ada Louise Huxtable, and this is important, adored Frank Gehry.  On Leonard Lopate’s 2008 show she said that Gehry was a “great architect” exempting Gehry from her criticism that there has been a lot of “wow” in architecture “for effect, and for show, and for status” that she said she had “very mixed feeling about” for which she partly blamed the press.  She said:
The “wow” buildings. Don’t blame it all on Frank Gehry. Gehry is legit; what he did at Bilbao is superb. He showed us how to marry all the arts in our time. But the lesson taken away from it was: We need something that looks “iconic,” that’s going to put our city on the map.
By 2008 Huxtable had virtually adopted Gehry.  In the June of 2001, Huxtable wrote in the Wall Street Journal: “Frank Gehry is the most staggeringly talented architect that this country has produced since Frank Lloyd Wright.”  (See: Architecture: The Bold and Beautiful— a Tale of Two Franks.)  This also appears in her 2008 collection “On Architecture.”  Her 2001 praise of Gehry could have been important because around that time (according to court records: before the summer of 2002) the Forest City Ratner company was conceiving of its Atlantic Yards mega-monopoly, part of which conceit was the anointing of architect Frank Gehry as integral part of its goal of selling the mega-project to the public and New York’s power elite.

Atlantic Yards, an eminent domain-assisted land-grab for the Ratner real estate organization, was essentially a retread of old style bulldozer urban renewal.  By enlisting Gehry developer Bruce, Ratner almost certainly hoped to have a leg up on the critics.  The Times obituary for Huxtable observes:
Her exacting standards were well enough known to be a punch line for a New Yorker cartoon by Alan Dunn in 1968. It shows a construction site so raw that only a single steel column has been erected. A hard-hat worker holding a newspaper tells the architect, “Ada Louise Huxtable already doesn’t like it!”    
No doubt the Ratner hopes were that before even such a single steel column was up Ms. Huxtable and those with influence like her would be on board liking it, or at least quieter in their criticism, despite the project’s failure to meet the social responsibility standards that normally might concern them.

Huxtable wrote repeatedly about Gehry, particularly his Bilbao museum, with extraordinary positiveness.

In 1997 she wrote “The Guggenheim Bilbao: Art and Architecture as One.”  Notably, the index of her “On Architecture” collected essays book treats the essay as being in part about the “urban renewal” of Bilbao, though Huxtable actually only uses the term “revitalizing projects” to describe what the once wealthy Spanish industrial city was doing when it commissioned the museum to replace old waterfront warehouses with the Gehry building.  (See also: “Hot Museums in a Cold Climate”- 1998 and “Museums: making It New”- 1999.)

Wary of Gehry Superblock Gargantuana and Profiteering Inside Development Deals?

A Gehry design would not necessarily cinch things with Huxtable or mean that her support was a done deal.  In the June 2001 essay where she called Frank Gehry the most talented architect since Frank Lloyd Wright she expressed mixed feelings about the Guggenheim’s proposal to build a Gehry-designed 400-foot-tall building on Piers 9, 13 and 14, south of the Brooklyn Bridge in Lower Manhattan, a proposal, which due to financial problems and a weak economy (and perhaps lack of support), was cancelled just months later.
What a Gehry-designed 400-foot-tall building Guggenheim’s Museum south of the Brooklyn Bridge could have looked like.
Ms. Huxtable commented that the proposed Gehry-design museum should get “brownie points for honesty” in that it did not “fudge its size and impact with doctored renderings” but that with its superblocks and “street closings” hearkening back to the “urban renewal era” it would take a “swath of land or water that could house a superliner.”  Calling it a “Godzilla Guggenheim” she expressed mixed feelings and “nagging suspicion that thus may be a baroque Brontosaurus or a waterfront barricade at is present scale.”

It is interesting then that Huxtable never criticized, or even critiqued Gehry’s Atlantic Yards vision.  In January of 2008 she took aim at the in many ways similar “Hudson Yards” on Manhattan’s West Side with objections that would, like most objections to that big project, be as easy to level at Atlantic Yards.  She said it was too big, too dense and no doubt the result of Machiavellian deal making “that will make someone very, very rich.”   The 26-acre Hudson Yards (Huxtable’s essay refers to it as 28) is only slightly larger than the 22 acres constituting what is officially called “Atlantic Yards” but is actually smaller than the entire 30+ contiguous acres that Forest City Ratner is effectively treating as a single development site.

Likewise, in November of 2008 Huxtable, being interviewed by Philip Lopate (Leonard Lopate’s brother), said critically that everything in this city is totally developer driven, though not mentioning Atlantic Yards as the most conspicuously developer-driven project of all.

By early June of 2009, when it was announced that Gehry was being dropped from the Atlantic Yards megadevelopment by Forest City Ratner, any criticism by Huxtable of the mega-project originally publicly unveiled at a press conference December 10, 2003 would have appeared awkwardly belated.  Further, more than a year prior, Nicolai Ouroussoff, then holding her former job of architectural critic at the Times had said that Gehry should walk from the degenerating Ratner project.

As it was, one of Huxtable’s well-aimed snipes at Hudson Yards from the prior year turned out to be accurate for the Ratner mega-monopoly as well sinceGehry’s departure from Atlantic Yards entailed a wholesale revision of thathuge project’s designs: “The only thing we can count on is that whatever is eventually built there will bear very little resemblance to what we are being shown now” as did another “Historically, the amenities have a way of fading away or being relegated to reduced, fringe status later on.”   

Hitching to Architects

The point is that on many levels the Forest City Ratner anointment of Gehry as Atlantic Yards architect may have had exactly the effect intended, including silencing Huxtable’s usual calls for social responsibility.

When Jane Jacobs and Ada Louise Huxtable were both writing in the early 60's who knew whether they would grow more similar sounding (as I think in many ways they did) or different.  Jane Jacobs, though she commented on architecture, was never an architectural critic.  In the six more books Jacobs went on to write (she had two more books planned that didn’t get published. . . one, “Uncovering the Economy,” she expected to publish in 2006, the year she died) and in her continued activism she concentrated on examining economic underpinnings to what works and the way the structures of society evolve and function.  Yes, like Huxtable, she was very much interested in morality* and the choices people should be making in the world (“Systems of Survival” -1992).
(* It is heartening and fitting that Huxtable’s last column, “Undertaking Its Destruction,”  published in the Wall Street Journal on December 3, 2012, addressed the plans to gut the historic, uniquely functional interior of the New York Public Library, extraordinarily “reducing the accessibility of its resources,” a plan deserving laceration that is driven by the city library system's new focus on turning over its real estate to developers.)
Jane Jacobs was not against new buildings or modern architecture, although in “The Death and Life of Great American Cities” she made it clear that she favored functionality over the superficial pursuit of pleasing appearances (“a city cannot be a work of art”. .  “confusion between art and life are neither life nor art”) and chastised artificial architectural exhibitionism (weird roofs and stairs- attempts to appear unique and different from their similar commercial neighbors in spite of not being special).  Unlike Huxtable, Jacobs did not seek out or look to champion architects she liked.  The Times obituary for Huxtable suggests that being able to praise triumphs rather than mistakes animated Huxtable.  One might suppose that Jacobs’ rigorous skepticism was less susceptible to being undermined because Jacobs did not identify her ideas with the endorsement of particular architects.

Art Of Audience Selection?

This takes us back to the themes surfaced by Andrea Fraser of art as commerce, with an exploitation of class, status and income disparities.

Andrea Fraser’s work reactive to Gehry must be accepted as also a work of satiric criticism.  Her work and Huxtable’s architectural criticism both tell us something about to whom Gehry’s designation as Atlantic Yards architect was intended to appeal.  While Fraser in “Little Frank and His Carp” plays at mimicking the reactions of the consumer targeted for awe by Gehry’s designs, in other works Fraser has adopted the role of authoritative museum docent knowing what the public should like.  Whether right or wrong and however earnest in her pronouncements, this was a role that Huxtable inescapably on her pedestal could not sidestep.

Early on, near the beginning of this piece, I noted that I would return to discuss other intended functions of Gehry acritecture. 

Gehry is very good at selling himself.  Some artists are. . . Damien Hirst is another name that comes readily to mind.  They raise their profile by calling attention to themselves.  That skill on Gehry’s part translates into a transferable ability to call attention to and sell his clients.  It’s branding, at the core of which is the the intrinsic commerciality that typically constitutes branding’s foremost purpose.

Though never built and therefore concretized, Gehry’s branding in service to Ratner was selling urban renewal, 2.0.

Gehry’s architecture derives partly from the architecture of Los Angeles (where his office is).  The eclecticism of designs in that city may challenge categorization but I would say that Los Angeles architecture is largely defined by Los Angeles being car oriented; Its architecture is meant to call attention to itself from a distance, specifically the distance of the road or highway, with the perception of scale being set (in effect reduced) by the speed at which you are passing it.  It may be seen has having its antecedents in the likes of Wilshire Boulevard’s whimsical Brown Derby, designed to attract your attention from afar and call you in from the road.

The style's habit of clamoring for attention from a distance, seeking to promote its client’s brand over that of the competition, is about asserting itself over its surroundings: dominance, not community interrelationship.

The SHoP Architects design for the arena that was substituted when Gehry was disinvited from the Ratner team, albeit hastily contrived and therefore entailing certain problems (and solutions that may only be fully in place temporarily while the current configuration lasts), does a creditable job in achieving much of what Gehry-style Los Angeles architecture could have achieved in terms of branding and calling attention to itself.  Positioned at the convergence of three main traffic byways it gives one the drive-by experience advertised.
SHoP achieved its effect almost entirely with the lattice wreath, including television screen “oculus,” of weathering steel encircling the structure that is reminiscent of, but probably considerably cheaper than, the pasting-on of the flourishes now typically used by Gehry.  The rusting steel is actually a little like early Gehry work that used corrugated metal and rough, fresh-out-of-the-hardware-store unfinished surfaces and materials.

To say that the SHoP-designed building fails to fit into its surroundings is a worthless comment because a huge arena is never going to fit in amongst brownstones.  The colors are maybe a bit more subsdued: Had it been Gehry’s work there’d be the reflective sheen of more silvery and shiny surfaces, titanium, glass, whatever.  

As it is, the devloper/subsidy collector's segue to the new set of architects was seized upon to emphasize a strategic rebranding; that with the addition of its rusty steel panels the arena is an expression of genuine Brooklyn’s muscular grit rather than its eradication.   Gehry was calling his tallest glitzy tower “Ms. Brooklyn,” but rusty steel is maybe more convincing.  While anyone can buy into them, it is important to note that these conceits are being peddled up the income ladder and across the river.

While the arena as effectuated and managed is certainly intended to make money for its owners (something that should be easy to do given the extent to which it has been subsidized), the arena must also be interpreted, much as Gehry’s original appointment as architect was meant to function: as a sales pitch to allow Ratner to keep exclusive control of his vast government-aided monopoly directed to those whose decisions will ultimately matter.  Don’t worry; at the same time they will also be selling the message that “it’s not about class.”

The Ratner announcement of Gehry as project architect was not intended as a ploy to sell the project to the typical residents of Brooklyn or those in the surrounding community. . . It was more important to address the sales pitch to an elite, probably mostly found in Manhattan, more likely to have influence over the decisions to be made: The Gehry creation was what that elite might like Brooklyn to look like, perhaps to partake of and drink in the vision of it on the day of a stimulating visit.

The developer-oriented design for the Atlantic Yards mega-monopoly proposed a project that obliviously disregarded the scale and any interrelationship with the surrounding neighborhood into which it would be shoe-horned.  Similarly, as many may have noted with the opening of the so-called “Barclays” arena that has unblinkingly been named after a plundering bank in an era of banks gone wild, the marketing of the “Barclays” arena has been pitched more toward the upper end of the income scale than might have been expected of a basketball arena, more toward hoity-toity Manhattan clientele than surrounding neighborhood residents or regular Brooklynites.  It is certainly not pitched to the people evicted from the site by eminent domain abuse.

With $4.50 water, it is an expensive place to go, far more expensive than what it replaced.  Community residents complaining about the a flood of idling black cars and limousines the arena brings through their residential brownstone neighborhood point out that“the Barclays Center marketing plan . . .heavily promotes the venue’s luxury seating and dining options” with much of that clientele no doubt coming from Manhattan or other upscale areas outside the borough.

Echo-Tourism

It is hardly an exact equivalent but around the era of Prohibition whites would travel up to Harlem to go to clubs with all-black revues like the Cotton Club to get a taste of another culture.  It was sometimes referred to as “slumming.”  The taste of that culture obtained was inauthentic in that the Cotton Club, even though it featured many of the greatest black entertainers of the time was a white-only establishment, meaning that it was off-limits to patronage by same performers who performed there.

The Barclays arena was plunked down in a somewhat mixed neighborhood where an appreciable amount of gentrification was taking off no doubt shifting the color mix towards white, but it does sometimes feel to me as if there are echos of this “slumming” in a new generation of intracity  tourism.  The other day a wide-eyed couple speaking very good English but with stilted Europan accents emerged from the Williamsburg Savings Bank Building subway entrance to ask me and my companion where the “Barclays” is.  I assured them that it was big and very easy to find, telling them that it was a contiguous extension of the Ratner mega-monopoly, of which the shopping mall they were already standing right across the street from (I pointed) was a part.  They would find the “Barclays” arena, I said (pointing again) right around the corner.  I explained that the city taxpayers were subsidizing their tickets with a huge amount of money, information they seemed to take in with surprise but no understanding.  It didn’t tell them that many of us simply won’t go to the arena, that we treat it as off limits or any of the reasons this is so.

Theme Park Brooklyn

Inside the arena, much as was the case with the Cotton Club’s Negro revues, the arena owners, Bruce Ratner from Cleveland and Mikhail Prokhorov oligarch from Russia, are inauthentically selling their visitors the taste of “Brooklyn” that comes with “Brooklyn” brands packaged theme-park style therein.

Commissioned art angling for and receiving art-world style praise has been enlisted to enhance the effect as can be seen in this review of works by  José Parlá and Mickalene Thomas, both displayed at the “Barclays” arena: Heather Graham, KAWS, and More Turn Out for Jose Parla Painting Unveiling at Barclays Center, January 10, 2013.

The review of the work, which could echo in the mind like the satiric tease of an Andrea Fraser work, credits both artworks saying they “connect the gleaming, glowing” (pirate treasure!) of the new arena to the “surrounding community.”  Each work is extolled for how it represents “Brooklyn.”  To wit:
Thomas’s untitled enamel and vinyl work references the august architecture of Grand Army Plaza, the Brooklyn Bridge, Brooklyn Museum . . . . and Brooklyn’s brownstone townhouses. It articulates a vision of the borough as a great American city whose built character and civic landmarks are on an equal footing with those of its smaller but better known neighbor, Manhattan.
Parlá’s work named“Diary of Brooklyn” is similarly suggested to `embody’ the borough:
During last night’s unveiling Parlá explained that his goal was to capture “what it means to be urban,” because “Brooklyn embodies that.”
We are told that the Parlá’ mural was “inspired by the James Agee essay “Brooklyn Is”*
(* the 1000 word essay was commissioned by Fortune Magazine in1939 but unpublished until it appeared in Esquire in 1968, years before Mr. Parlá’s birth.)
As such we are being soothingly reassured that both the artworks somehow embody with verisimilitude the Brooklyn that the arena and the Ratner mega-monopoly are displacing.  Not dissimilarly, the Brooklyn Museum is now featuring merchandise in its gift shop designed by illustrator Claudia Pearson celebrating the charm of brownstone Brooklyn even though the Brooklyn Museum had a key role in bringing about the Atlantic Yards mega-project which is resulting in the substantial the destruction of such neighborhoods.  (See: Wednesday, December 5, 2012, A New York Magazine “Best Bet”: The Brooklyn Museum Offers Its Love Of Brownstone Neighborhoods, The Savaging Of Which It Lauded.)

Why did the Brooklyn Museum support Ratner and his project despite the deleterious effects in store for the community the Museum served and apparently still likes to celebrate?: Ratner was donating substantial funds to it, enough to put Ratner people on its board!

Above real Brooklyn buildings, including Freddys', torn down for Atlantic Yards, flanked by Ms. Pearson's Brooklyn musem gift shop designs (left) and Ms. Thomas's mural (right)
The brownstone image in Mickalene Thomas’s work is particularly similar to the Brooklyn Museum current gift shop items.  Maybe it is no surprise then that Ms. Thomas currently has, as the review tell us, a “solo show” at the Brooklyn Museum.  Going to the museum’s website page for Ms. Thomas we learn that:
Generous support for this exhibition was provided by Forest City Ratner Companies
This Brooklyn-substitutionsilliness reminds us how the Brooklyn borough president Marty Markowitz, a Ratner supporter, once suggested the way to fix-up the mega-project was to have the Gehry design incorporate into the mega-project “Brooklyn-style stoops at the base of some of the towers” for more of a “brownstone feel.” 

The harm to Brooklyn doesn’t go unmentioned in the fawning review of the two artworks: Twisting mention of this into an advantage, the review at its conclusion acknowledges the arena to be a building that “many Brooklynites find inherently antithetical — if not downright dangerous” in order to assert that this “only makes the commissions more compelling.”

Art’s Oldest Professional Concerns

Rarely do we tend to forget that architecture is, at its core, functional.  Ms. Huxtable would hardly want us to.  (With Jane Jacobs holding that art is actually distant from architecture's true importance.)   Further, Ms. Huxtable would want us to appreciate that things don’t boil down to a simple dichotomy, function vs. art: That it is inevitably more complex as her early description of the architect as a “man of a hundred hats” suggests.

When she made “Little Frank and His Carp” Andrea Fraser dealt with the art of architecture, recognized to be a `functional’ art, but her overall interest tends to be art’s unrecognized functionality, particularly the web of underlying social contracts whereby art commercially sustains itself.  And recognizing that artworks have such functionalities in the world raises the prospect of accompanying moral implications, the kind that Ms. Huxtable might seize upon.

Andrea Fraser isn’t a scold.  She is actually far from it.  But she does make it very uncomfortable for those who would prefer to think that art can be safely compartmentalized as just art, existing neutrally apart from the moral dimensions of its functioning.

Fraser has often used her body to titillate, potentially shock and to up the ante of her work.  She is thereby certainly capable of making a point.  In a brutally confrontational, risky work about the intersections of commercialism, art and morality Fraser blurred the line between art and good old fashioned prostitution virtually as far as it is possible to blur that line: She created a 60-minute performance piece in which a patron or “collector” of that art work paid her $20,000 and had sex with her.

Fraser’s work mostly unfolds in the high-toned milieu of the fine arts world.  I suspect that Frank Ghery would not have suffered the embrace of her her lampoon had the work she was addressing not been a fine arts museum or if Gehry’s `rarefied' aesthetic were not so attuned to and well-integrated in that world. The denial of underlying commercialism may be especially pretentious in that particular world; nevertheless, the themes Fraser raises of commercial interrelations are very easy to apply to the other arts.

Hip hop artist Jay-Z was given a small fractional interest in the ownership of the “Barclays” arena, plus other financial inducements to act as a promotional front man for the developer’s arena and Atlantic Yards project.  When Barbra Streisand, a superb artistic singer and famously self-proclaimed activist, performing at the Barclays arena (her concerts very heavily subsidized) mutates the lyrics of Cole Porter’s “You’re The Top” to compliment Jay-Z mere days after Jay-Z performing there has invited his audience to give the finger to the community that opposed the Atlantic Yards real estate land grab, Streisand ends up subverting her art to support that land grab just as Gehry was hired to do.

Whatever criticisms were leveled at Gehry for being socially irresponsible for promoting the Atlantic Yards project throughout the time he spent associating himself with it, there are those who still believe everything would have been absolutely well and fine in the end if the mega-project had been built according to his designs. . . .  that the only real tragedy is that Forest City Ratner ultimately jettisoned Gehry (saving money by finally going with a less expensive experimental modular design). . .  .

. . .  If Gehry's designs had actually been built can we not imagine that interested visitors to Ranter’s 30+ acre mega-monopoly would have been handed audio guides assuring them there were seeing “uplifting” achievements, refreshing to the spirit and, to quote the words of the Bilbao Guggenheim Museum audio guide, we would be told, “its warmth, its welcoming feel” make “you feel at home so that you can relax and absorb. . . .”

With luck there would be someone like Andrea Fraser available in the cultural wings to help interpret exactly what the public was supposed to “relax andabsorb.

Forest City Ratner Needs No Stinkin’ Badges To Rake In Cash From Unauthorized Parking Meters Posing As Legit

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This is great.  What we have here for you is a story from the Journal News in Yonkers about how Forest City Ratner was reportedly illegally collecting fairly appreciable money for a year and a half (May 2011 until fall 2012) in the form of what were supposedly `meter fees’ and `parking ticket payments’ by running a phony parking meter operation at its Yonkers government-subsidized Ridge Hill project.  See:  Yonkers officials: Ridge Hill parking meters weren't legal, by Colin Gustafson, Jan 14, 2013.

That's priceless!:  Forest City Ratner impersonating the government yet again . . .  I guess it just gets to be a habit with some people.  See also: Thursday, June 16, 2011, Sovereign Immunity, Reconfiguration of Brooklyn’s Traffic And The Peculiar Verisimilitude of Government Functions When Forest City Ratner Takes Over.

Forest City Ratner is now in the process of removing the Yonkers meters for which they apparently had absolutely no authority (or that were at very best of “questionable legality”).

Forest City representatives assured Yonkers City Council committee members that it was legal to have the meters, according to a video of the meeting The Journal News reviewed.  The Ratner behavioral assumption that everything public, including all the streets around can be treated as the Ratner company’s private property is pretty much the way things are unfolding with the “Barclays” arena “black car” congestion problem that is likely to be solved by dedicating Brooklynite parking space as waiting areas for the private arena.
Above, the green shows where within the 30+ acre Forest City Ratner mega-monopoly (outlined) once-public streets, avenues and sidewalks are now privately owned by Ratner, subject to Ratner rules
 I suppose that after a while it just gets really difficult for Forest City Ratner and cohorts to think of themselves as not completely owning all of the public highways and byways.  The Atlantic Yards mega-project involves the city giving the company streets, avenues and adjoining sidewalks (Pacific Street, Fifth Avenue and their sidewalks) some of which are being closed down completely and permanently by the real estate firm, some of which will be partly open to the public’s passage through, subject to whatever prerogatives of private ownership these new owners might want to assert. . .   And (something not everybody knows) the Ratner organization already owns the once-public Fort Greene Place (between Hanson Place and Atlantic Avenue), another part of the 30+ acres of contiguous mega-monopoly that includes Atlantic Yards, thus making the now private Fort Greene Place subject to different rules and authority from the public streets around it.

October 1963, An Historical Snapshot: Ada Louise Huxtable, Jane Jacobs, Robert Moses, Cars, Density, Bulldozers, Preservation

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One of Ada Louise Huxtable's first articles in the Fall of 1963 dealt with Jane Jacobs, car congestion in midtown Manhattan, density, the New Planning Commissioner and a whole lot more
Buckle your seat-belts for a bit of time travel.  I hope we might return from this trip more appreciative of aspects of where we stand in New York City today.  Our embarking point?: Obituaries provide a sense of history absent from the rest of the news dished up for us, especially when the person who has died lived a long and vital life.

I recently read the wonderfully written New York Times obituary for Ada Louise Huxtable (Ada Louise Huxtable, Champion of Livable Architecture, Dies at 91, by David W. Dunlap, January 7, 2013).  It took me back to the beginning of Ms. Huxtable's career, when she was hired by the Times as “the first full-time architecture critic at an American newspaper.”  One thing I found myself immediately wondering was how likely it was that her hiring in September 1963 might have been motivated, at least in some part, by the influence of urbanist Jane Jacobs’ 1961 book, “The Life and Death of Great American Cities.”  Though unmentioned in Dunlap's obituary for Huxtable, Jacobs’ book and activism, particularly in New York, were at that point in time raising the public’s consciousness of how building and development were shaping the city environment surrounding us.

What made me all the more curious about this possibility was that Mr. Dunlap wrote his obituary for Ms. Huxtable almost as if he intended to emphasize characteristics of Ms. Huxtable that were similar to Jacobs.  I wound up writing about this (plus a great deal more, including the social responsibility of artists and architecture) here: Tuesday, January 15, 2013, Andrea Fraser, Frank Gehry, Ada Louise Huxtable, Art, Artists, Urban Renewal, Mega-Monpoly And The “Barclays” Arena.

Doing research to explore the possible interrelationships vis–à–vis Huxtable and Jacobs at the time Huxtable was appointed, I found that Huxtable wrote mentioning Jacobs and her influence in one of her very first columns.  The Times announcement of its appointment of Huxatble ran September 9, 1963. The Times article in which Huxtable wrote about Jacobs appeared October 16, 1963.  It was Huxtable's welcoming interview with William F. R. Ballard, newly appointed as the new chairman of the City Planning Commission.  (See: Planner Defends Cars in Midtown.  . . .  The article shows up with several possible alternative Times titles, including this longest version: “Planner Defends Cars in Midtown; New Chief of Commission, Sworn by Mayor, Backs Municipal Garages Begin Duties Today” and “Planner Defends Cars in Midtown Theories Much Sought Caution on Bulldozers”.)

Hindsight Insight on Urban Renewal

The Ballard interview article provides a wonderfully instructive snapshot of what was going on at a key moment in time, especially as we can now look back at that moment in the context of what we know in hindsight.  In 1963 the city was still several years away from committing itself to a program of historic preservation, several years before establishing Brooklyn Heights as its first historic district (1967), quickly followed by Greenwich Village, and though the tide of public opinion was turning against Robert Moses and his urban renewal and massive road-building programs those programs were still being strongly urged upon the public.  Demolition and destruction were on the public's mind.  Demolition of the original  Beaux Arts Pennsyvania Station (announced July 1961) began in October 1963.  Hot topics under discussion, shades of today, were the desirability of automobiles in Manhattan and the subject of urban density.

Huxtable’s interview with Commissioner Ballard reads like her model for writing might be straight reporting, not the kind of criticism with which we now strongly associate Ms. Huxtable.  Its seemingly neutral bent actually comes across as being the opposite of critical.  Huxtable describes Ballard as “ruggedly handsome” with a demonstrated technical competence and “optimistic, persuasive, energetic,” equipped with a vision for a “bigger, better, more comfortable New York” based on planning theories that Huxtable characterizes as “safely somewhere to the right of center, involving a new kind of civic-togetherness.”  She finishes off the article on this tritely upbeat note about Ballard’s view of the city:
He summed up his views with a statement few new Yorkers would contest: “This is the greatest City in the World.”
There is in the tone of her writing no whiff of the insight you hear from her in a 2008 interview with Leonard Lopate:
The chairman of almost every commission we have is always a political appointee.
In 2008 she was discussing whether appointees like Chairman Robert B. Tierney of the city Landmarks Preservation Commission should be expected to have professional expertise relevant to their appointments.  Huxtable’s answer was to say she puts her faith in the professional expertise of others such as the actual commission members.  Ballard had a certain amount of expertise relevant to the position to which he had been appointed: He was an architect who had been involved in shaping the zoning code. But in Huxtable’s interview Ballard clearly comes across as a politically conscious individual, apt to dutifully address the pros and cons of both sides of an issue.  I suspect that it is only in retrospect we realize how harsh some of his sentiments sound.

Addressing the subject of Jane Jacobs, Ballard provides counterpoint, arguing for urban renewal even while demonstrating his ability to give lip service to contrasting views.  Here is Ballard on the subject of the increasingly disfavored “bulldozer approach to urban renewal”:
When you destroy an old neighborhood completely, you are wiping out something that, sentimentally, I think should be preserved, if it can.  It may run counter to sensible planning, but that’s one of the things that makes the whole operation of planning fascinating.
More revealingly, Ballard criticizes Jacobs, who had just succeeded in preserving the West Village (1961) from bulldozer urban renewal, defeating efforts by Ballard’s predecessor:
She is unnecessarily negative in wanting to preserve everything exactly as it is. . . This is a lack of imagination.  But she is right about the loss of humanity in acres of identical housing.  The solution is not to freeze things.  You go ahead, enlivening, softening, and humanizing the new plans.  We’re learning as we go along.
Huxtable, who specifically mentions the title of Jacobs "The Death and Life of Great American Cities" book in the article, dubs Jacobs the bête noire of Ballard’s predecessor, James Felt.  Ballard was then the new planning face to the Mayor Robert F. Wagner administration, which might have suggested some softening compromise with Jacobs’ views, but here he still sounds apparently eager to get on with the large-scale, pulverizing churns of neighborhood demolition the real estate industry was backing.  One wonders how far we have come when Amanda Burden, the city’s current city planning commissioner, similarly speaks coyly of blending Jane Jacobs’ style values with a rehabilitated veneration for Moses-scale disruptions:
    . .  our plans therefore have been as ambitious as those of Robert Moses, but we really judge ourselves by Jane Jacobs standards.
(See: Saturday, November 5, 2011, Now Appearing In Gary Hustwit’s New Documentary “Urbanized”: Amanda Burden, New York’s High Line and Community Protest.)

In retrospect, fifty years later, (notwithstanding Amanda Burden's vision of kinder, gentler editions of Moses ambitions) most of us are probably absolutely clear about how incredibly valuable Jacobs’ preservation of the West Village was (as well as the preservation of the rest of Greenwich Village, SoHo and Brooklyn Heights, etc.).  We see, also, the insufficiency of Ballard’s vision of preserving only some things within an overall environment rather than the “rich tapestry of time and style” (Huxtable words in 2008), or saving just some “celebrated monuments” in lieu of retaining “the city’s historic fabric and neighborhood character” (Huxtable words in 1966).

A City For Automobiles?

Library of Congress image of Lower Manhattan Expressway via Wikipedia
In her 1961 book Jane Jacobs had taken on another fight, the primacy of the automobile, arguing for the restoration of space back to the pedestrian use.  In this respect, Jacobs’ battle to save the West Village was intrinsically connected to her fight to defeat Moses's plans for a ten-lane Lower Manhattan Expressway that would have destroyed Greenwich Village, SoHo, Little Italy and Chinatown. - That plan (cancelled in 1962) would have involved a huge ramped clover-leafing midtown access smack-dab in the middle of Greenwich Village.  It would have been just south of Washington Square Park.  Under the Moses plan, the extension of Fifth Avenue through Washington Square Park, fought over by Jacobs and Moses (1955-1956), would, although it was not revealed at that time, have led directly to the clover-leaf acess. (See Jan Gehl's essay "For You Jane" in "What We See: Advancing the Observations of Jane Jacobs.").

In her 2010 book, “The Battle for Gotham: New York in the Shadow of Robert Moses and Jane Jacobs,” Roberta Brandes Gratz, a longtime friend, colleague and disciple of Jane Jacobs, writes about how it was only after she wrote her 1961 book that Jacobs discovered and fully understood that the Moses long-term plans for automobiles in Manhattan (dating back to a 1929 regional plan) involved a network of highways lacing the borough up and down ( a “Los Angelizing” the borough, a“net catching Manhattan”) with a series of crosstown highway crossings connecting a surrounding oval of major roadways.

In a conversation with Roberta Brandes Gratz years afterward, Jacobsexplained how the proposed Westway along the Hudson (ultimately defeated) should be considered part of the materialization of this overall scheme.  The multiple highways going across Manhattan under the plan?: The Lower Manhattan Expressway downtown crossing, a crossing at Thirtieth Street (the Mid-Manhattan Expressway), roadway extending “from Forty-second Street north and from Battery south around and up the East Side” and a Cross Harlem Expressway at ground level at 125th street was also proposed, while the Trans-Manhattan Expressway at the very narrow northern tip of Manhattan up at 178th Street was actually built.

1964 Regional Plan Association map of expressways proposed to traverse Manhattan
In close up
In Huxtable's 1963 interview Ballard has some interesting quotes about his view of automobiles.

Even though Commissioner Ballard made it clear when he left office that he still advocated highways in Manhattan, it may be less than fair play to furnish the preceding information prior to supplying you with his 1963 remarks since: 1.) Ballard's most immediate focus when speaking was on parking garages, and 2.) as Jacobs made the point to Ms. Brandes Gratz, Moses always kept the full scale of his plans under wraps;  “only pieces of it” kept “surfacing.”  Commented Jacobs, Moses made his proposals piecemeal because, “Nobody would ever consent to the insanity of doing the whole thing.”

This is what Commissioner Ballard said of the automobile in mid-town Manhattan in that inaugural interview with Huxtable:
The better and fuller life includes the free use of the automobile. . .  Planners who try to discourage its use make me sick.
His standard for whether too many cars are being added?: Whether the traffic still moves.  He says:
I believe in direct transportation.  The apartment house garages required by our new zoning haven’t affected the streets.  Our traffic still moves.
Addressing Density

Our traffic still moves?  Ballard's criteria for evaluating acceptable density sounds remarkably similar: Whether people are trampling each other.  At the time of the interview the giant new Pan Am Building, (now the MetLife Building) was a public concern (a ‘running argument’ says Huxtable). Only months later, April 14, 1963, Huxtable wrote her official Times review negatively critiquing the completed building.  Part of her critique was of the building’s density: Architecture Stumbles on; Recent Buildings Are Nothing Much to Brag About Other Newcomers "Sixth" Avenue Coming Up (Retitled: Pan AM: “The Big, the Expedient, and the Deathlessly Ordinary” in her book of collected essays “On Architecture: Collected Reflections on a Century of Change.”)  But as we will return to in a moment, even before the building’s completion, even before starting as the Times official architectural critic, Huxtable had already participated in the “running argument,” speaking out against the social irresponsibility of the building’s size.

In the interview, Ballard (with little hint of personal contradiction by Huxtable as she is quoting him) defended the density the enormous building would bring to its key location:
I think it’s great.  I can’t think of a better place to have a big building. . .  It’s at the focus of all midtown commutation and transportation; the best place for it.  I don’t think concentration is such an evil. . . It’s the essence of cities; it can be a good thing.  Architects don’t pale at the handling of the problem.  I don’t see the disasters that the weepers and wailers predicted.  A park there would have been an absurd idea.  Rush hour? Nobody’s been trampled yet.
As noted, in April Huxtable weighed in officially when the building was completed, confirming her view as the New York Times critic that the building put too much density on the site:
Of  these new buildings, Pan Am has by far the greatest impact on the city scene. Criticism which has been plentiful since the building’s inception, is directed largely at is physical and sociological implications: the effect of seventeen thousand new tenants and 250,00 daily transients on the already crowded Grand Central area and its services and the unresolved conflicts and responsibilities of the city and private enterprise in control of urban densities and master planning.
She simultaneously assaulted the building's aesthetics: “a colossal collection of minimums. . . minimum good materials of minimum acceptable quality executed with a minimum of imagination. . .” penultimately ending up:
This is a prime example of a New York specialty: the big, the expedient, and the deathlessly ordinary.*
(* Although Ms. Huxtable has said she didn’t change or update her essays for publication of her book, the very last quote above I only find in the version of her essay appearing in  “On Architecture: Collected Reflections on a Century of Change”.)

Previously, before being appointed official Times critic but writing in the Times and perhaps auditioning for that role, she wrote critically of the building while it was still under construction, “it continues to cause consternation among those who believe that such an oversized structure will overtax our already burdened midtown facilities” and she asserted it was a “depressing sight” in contrast to the exceptionally pleasant sight the public had been presented with when the old Grand Central building had been demolished to make way for it: Our New Buildings: Hits and Misses; A survey of the construction that has given New York a new face shows too few departures from the characterless and the imitative, April 29, 1962.

Huxtable's criticism published in the Times at that time was mild compared to what Huxtable wrote in 1961  “In Four Walking Tours of Modern Architecture in New York City” which she put together for the Municipal Art Society (ultimately partly quoted in the Times as part of her Times obituary and quoted more fully in The Pan Am Building and the Shattering of the Modernist Dream):
The erection of such an overwhelming structure— the largest single office building in New York— will radically alter the scale of the buildings along Park Avenue.  It will also add an extraordinary burden to existing pedestrian and transportation facilities, and in these aspects its antisocial character directly contradicts the teachings of Walter Gropius, who has collaborated in its design.
Writing a memoriam piece upon the death of Walter Gropius, Huxtable, a hard taskmaster at least when it came to this building, reiterated her social responsibility criticism:
The final irony was the betrayal of his own teaching of social and urban responsibility in one of his last jobs where he acted as consultant with Peitro Belluschi, for the "smoothing up" of the urban outrages of New York's notorious Pan Am Building.  This still saddens his admirers. 
(See: He Was Not Irrelevant, July 20, 1969.)

The building's aesthetics aside, it can be easily argued that Ballard was more correct in his defense of the building’s density than Ms. Huxtable was in her criticism that the density consigned the building to socially irresponsibility.  The Pan Am now MetLife building has now been up for fifty years and it remains true that no one has yet been “trampled.”   (Although flights to the helicopter pad atop the buildings were discontinued after an accident in which five people were killed.)  Ballard's observation that the building is over a transit hub and making it efficient is correct.

There are caveats, however, before jumping to conclusions about who was right or how right they were. Huxtable was talking in part not just about a single building, but the alternation of the scale of Park Avenue (which the Pan Am building surely did).  When she said it would add an “extraordinary burden” to services and facilities in the area one must also think in terms of the burden that all the bigger buildings add to the area when additional development ensues to match that alteration of scale.  Irrespective ofwhether Ms. Huxtable was entirely correct that the particular building’s density was unsupportable or burdensome it made sense that she was wary of the density then.   And now?  . .   Recently the Bloomberg administration has unveiled plans to almost double-- starting in 2017-- the density of Manhattan’s already very dense Midtown business district, that entire district surrounding Grand Central and the Pan Am building, from 39th Street to 57th Street on the East Side.

Should we not now wonder if the criteria for Bloomberg officials as to what constitutes the acceptable upper limit for density is literally the standard Commissioner Ballard imagined: That you keep building until people get “trampled.”

Ballard might have been surprised to learn that Jane Jacobs, whom he criticized as too negative when speaking to Ms. Huxtable, considered herself a fan of density.  But Jacobs believed in adding density gradually, not in an overwhelming rush.  If the density of the Pan Am building works reasonably well now, fifty years after the fact, another appropriate test to apply was how well its addition to the neighborhood worked right after it was built, something that we must think back through our foggy memories to assess.

Was Huxtable still finding her footing when she interviewed Ballard?  What should be clear from all of the above is that despite her flattering descriptions of Ballard’s good looks, competence, and altruistic goals she couldn’t have disagreed with him more about the social responsibility of the Pan Am building.  It makes you wonder what else she was reporting of his words she personally disagreed with while not cluing in her audience . . .  although, without speaking specifically for herself, she does inform her readers that Ballard disagreed“with many professional planners not only on automobiles, also on . .  the giant Pan Am Building.”

Huxtable does not often address the issue of density.  “Density,” for instance, is not listed in the index of her collected essays despite that being one of her key criticisms of the Pan Am building.  In other essays in that collection she commented with dismay on how the city strained to keep the Ground Zero site at the same density rather than reduce Silverstein’s financial stake in the site, albeit in one of these mentions she refers to how density can be considered “the soul of the city.”   Her expression of dissatisfaction with another huge multi-acre scheme, Hudson Yards, indicates an impatience with the reflex of maximizing density: “we will get a lot of very, very big buildings that will make someone very, very rich,” she says of the Hudson Yards site proper, controlled by the Related Companies, and then notes that, similarly, the surrounding acres “have already been rezoned in part for the biggest buildings possible.”

The subject of the value of density, qua density, came up in a 2008 interview Phillip Lopate (Leonard's brother) did with Ms. Huxtable that appeared in the Times wherein Huxtable averred that she (like Jacobs) was basically a fan of density:
Lopate: I take it you’re for density but not for overbuilding.

Huxtable: How can I be against density? I’m a New Yorker! I grew up with density.
Interestingly the exchange came out of Huxtable’s commenting negatively about urban renewal (taking us back to the bulldozers we spoke of at the beginning), that:
 . . . urban renewal tried to get rid of density. It was viewed as concentrating poverty and disease. Now there’s the awareness that density is more energy-efficient and less destructive of the environment than urban sprawl.
This is something that many people may not know about old-style urban renewal: It often didn’t increase density.  It often replaced more with less, which might help emphasize the point for those of us looking back, how urban renewal was often most importantly about getting rid of things and often who was being gotten rid of.  (James Baldwin referred to urban renewal as “Negro removal.”*)  Moses’s rebuilding of New York resulted in a slowing of the city’s rate of growth and then its first huge population decline staring in the 60's.  It was partly due to the way the shift to the automobile (discussed above) exported population, but Moses’s urban renewal had to be a contributing factor.  A very important part of this exodus was the city’s middle class.
(* I found Bruce Norris's Pulitzer Prize-winning 2010 play, “Clybourne Park,” disappointingly shallow in terms of the “dissection of race, gentrification and real estate” that it was supposedly about.  Tantalizing though, it briefly raised, without pursuing, the conspiracy theories that virtually all governmentally assisted urban revitalization reflects master planning to further disadvantage racial minorities.  Remember: To dub something a conspiracy theory doesn’t mean that it lacks truth.)
These days we tend to associate the demolition of our existing city fabric with density because so often the death sentence for existing parts of the city comes with sudden changes in zoning (like in Williamsburg, Brooklyn) that include increases in density to induce the turnover of a neighborhood.  Nevertheless, when people are being dispossessed by such zoning changes or by current-day substitutes for old-fashioned bulldozer urban renewal like Atlantic Yards, it is safe to bet, just like the old days, that the people being evicted are mostly on the other side of a social divide from those conceptualizing and deciding upon the implementation of such plans.

Intersection of Traffic and Density In Current-Day Modern New York

New York City is currently reclaiming its streets for pedestrians under Department of Transportation Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan.  An essay Commissioner Sadik-Khan contributed to “What We See: Advancing the Observations of Jane Jacobs,” a collection of pieces that pays tribute to Jane Jacobs by working to build on her ideas, begins (p. 242) with an expression of how Sadik-Khan sees her work as a continuation of the “epic battle between Robert Moses and Jane Jacobs over the streets of New York.”  Sadik-Khan’s essay is titled: “Think of a City and What Comes to Mind? Its Streets.”

“Our traffic still moves,” was apparentlyBallard’s test whereby one would judge whether too much priority had been extended to urban automobiles.  Commissioner Sadik-Khan hews to Jane Jacobs perception that, many might find counter-intuitive, but which is bearing out, that if the conveniences and roadway space for automobiles are removed (“attrited” as in attrition), the traffic “still moves,” with congestion simply evaporating.  That, is in contradistinction to a city like São Paulo, Brazil which, with a street transportation plan that Ms.Sadik-Khan observes was put together by Robert Moses himself, is enduring the concomitant ultimate ramifications of such a plan: It has bumper-to-bumper gridlock and the business elite resorts to getting around by helicopter (here we are back to the kind of midtown helicopter pads discontinued at the Pan Building!).

Serving the demands of cars results in traffic congestion, but when that demand is not served, demand evaporates.  There is a reverse corollary to this: Commissioner Sadik-Khan speaks of “latent demand” for pedestrian space and plazas.  The more such space is supplied, the more pedestrians materialize to fill it.

It’s interesting how this interrelates with density and how exactly that is working out in Time Square, which with upzoning and redevelopment has become an exceptionally dense pedestrian environment.

The closing down of large portions of Broadway to vehicular traffic was, according to the Bloomberg administration, to deal with escalating levels of congestion and because people were “getting pushed out into the streets” and the sidewalks couldn’t handle it.

The Bloomberg administration is now reinforcing that increased dedication of space to pedestrians,  protecting pedestrians from traffic (and possible `terrorists’) by adding bollards and concrete barriers, see: Times Square ‘Bow Tie’ Is to Get Belts of Steel and Granite, by David W. Dunlap, January 13, 2013.

Before the pedestrian areas were expanded in the Broadway Times Square area I used to walk around carsin the streets  to get around the congestion.  The pedestrian areas have now been expanded but the on-foot congestion has grown to fill in those expanded areas so that now, if I am in a hurry and need to move fast, I eschew the experience of the flashing lights and animated screens on Broadway and walk up to 46th Street by the not-very-aesthetically-satisfying, less crowded, mid-block concourses just to the west.

This is what the congestion is like around Time Square’s 42nd Street and the Bloomberg administration wants to almost double the density of the very nearby Grand Central business district?

Historic Preservation

Although Ballard’s expression of what the goals of historic preservation should be are somewhat enigmatic, his words contain a clear recognition that the first historic preservation laws, not yet in force when he was being interviewed by Huxtable, were about to be enacted in the city with strong public support.  As noted, the appalling destruction of Pennsylvania Station was on people’s minds.  Here, from Huxtable's interview, is Ballard again:
On Historic preservation, he said: “Like food and water, I’m all for it.  I’m for landmark’s legislation.  I believe in preserving worthwhile monuments, it’s tricky to decide what’s worthwhile and what’s simply old.  How much is sentimentality and how much is good common sense?  People are more important that old buildings.”
One reason the fight for historic preservation was gaining traction, soon to take hold as official city policy (in legislation) ahead of the then ongoing fights against urban renewal, was that the Times was very actively supporting the first of those two fights.  Writes preservationist and historian Anthony Woods in “Preserving New York: Winning the Right to Protect a City's Landmarks”:
The New York Times would radically increase New York’s preservation consciousness by running well over twenty pro-preservation editorials between December 1961 and the passage of the Landmarks law in the spring of 1965.  This would be in addition to its impressive news coverage of the ceaseless stream of preservation stories marking that turbulent time.

In this period, preservation was blessed to have at the New York Times not only an editor of the editorial page who appreciated the importance of preservation, but a brilliant writer who also embraced its values.  That editor was John Oakes, and the writer was Ada Louise Huxtable.

    * * *

Even before Ada Louise Huxtable made history in 1963 as the first full-time New York Times architecture critic, focusing “public opinion on the city’s built environment as never before,” she was writing in its defense .  As early as 1961, John Oakes had enlisted her to write editorials for the paper.  In this capacity she authored, without attribution, a series of forceful editorials that would keep the cause of preservation front and center until and well beyond the passage of the Landmarks law.
Huxtable, trained as an architectural historian, presented her advocacy for historic preservation as grounded in practically.  In 2008 she said this in a Leonard Lopate Show interview:
This is such a complex subject. You can’t just say save your building when there is no way to save it, when there is no money, when there is no way to keep it and preservationists tend to be very tunnel vision about that. Particularly in new York preservation is a . . it’s a very complicated thing that requires a lot of tradeoffs and a lot of willingness to look at all sides of a problem. We don’t have that now. We have a preservationist movement that really alarms me a little bit because they don’t want to deal with reality. They just want to forge ahead and save buildings and it is not that simple.
But she argued that economic principles tended to favor taking the route of historic preservation  In a May 1999 article for the Wall Street Journal titled “Manhattan’s Landmark Buildings Today” (which is in her book of collected essays) she says at the outset that “Old buildings must earn their way” and then makes the case that they generally do, concluding:
Old Buildings survive because it rarely make sense in bad times to demolish, while in good times there is every incentive to invest.  The city renews and enriches itself when it reuses its landmarks in an economically sound way.  In New York, the art of architecture is inseparable from the art of the deal.
Unlike Huxtable, Jane Jacobs was not, per se, an advocate of historical preservation for its own sake.  Jacobs recognized the value of neighborhood landmarks but did not feel that being historical was a prerequisite to buildings being landmarks.  She was in favor of preserving old buildings but not because they had historical value but because a mix of old and new buildings benefitted neighborhoods in part because the economics of older, less expensive buildings were less costly than those of new buildings.  Jacobs was a preservationist, believing in the preservation of neighborhoods, but what she believed in was the preservation of the fabric of neighborhoods, their dynamics and their social interrelationships.  Seeing neighborhoods as functioning ecosystems replete with valuable street life she was not about preserving neighborhoods frozen in time because she saw them as continually evolving systems.

While there is inevitable overlap to the arguments for preserving beautiful historic old buildings and preserving neighborhoods that include a mix of just plain old buildings, one critical convergence is that both Huxtable and Jacobs would tell you that there is economic benefit to doing what each of them they advocates.  But while Huxtable observes common sensibly that old buildings often survive in economic bad times because it rarely make sense to demolish them then, under the urban renewal that Jacobs fought demolition of old buildings (and their neighborhoods) was precisely what was done when the economy was bad.  It was done on a large scale . .  And  and the buildings demolished were sometimes not replaced for decades.  No wonder that when Commissioner Ballard left office toward the end of the Moses era he was theorizing why all the jobs in a city with a declining population were disappearing.

Is there value to preserving history for history’s sake?: We ought to note that this article that concentrates on looking back to the past is, of course, all about the value of persisting artifacts to spur our memory, together with a sense and appreciation of history.

More About William F. R. Ballard

According to William F. R. Ballard's own Times obituary (appearing September 29, 1993- he died at 88), he was city planning commissioner from 1963 (October 16) to 1966 (November 24).  He was replaced by Donald H. Elliot.

Notwithstanding the negativity Ballard expressed to Huxtable about Jacobs in that first interview, the Times obituary puts Ballard’s fights with Moses, not with Jacobs, front and center in the highlights of his career:
What followed were nearly four years (sic) of political and governmental clashes of competing developmental interests. The stormiest ones involved a continuing conflict between Mr. Ballard and Robert Moses, with Mr. Ballard opposing many of Mr. Moses's most ambitious projects, such as a bridge spanning Long Island. Sound.
There is also this:
A year later, he said a proposal to build public housing in Central Park was "patently absurd."  
Robert Caro’s “The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York”* (1974) has one anecdote concerning Ballard to the effect that under Mayor Wagner the battles he had with Moses were lost:
There were many times when the Mayor announced to friends that he was going to refuse a Moses demand, but the pattern following the announcement was always the same.  William F. R. Ballard, a chairman of the City Planning Commission, recalls vividly Wagner “agreeing to back me— told me he would— and then ended up backing Moses.”  And some version of Ballard’s words are repeated by dozens of officials caught in tugs of war between the two men.
(* Caro’s epic “Power Broker,” a tool often turned to by many to remember and understand much of New York's history, makes no mention of either Jane Jacobs or Ada Louise Huxtable although Jacobs’ seminal 1961 book is mentioned in his bibliography and Caro actually wrote a whole chapter about Jacobs that he ultimately did not include because of the book’s length, one third of which had to be cut.)

Public opinion was mounting against Moses and his development practices and Moses's power was about to end at the hands of the next mayor, John Lindsay, acting in concert with Governor Nelson Rockefeller.

While we remember that Moses was ultimately deposed from power in this era, in 1963 when Ballard took office, demolitions for urban renewal were still lumbering forward sometimes for projects that seemed to continue with life of their own, into the late 70's, well after Moses himself had been officially ousted from power (the key date being his departure from the Triborough Authority in 1968) and even after New York’s sobering fiscal crisis hit in 1975.  For instance, the Schermerhorn-Pacific urban renewal plan, representing a significant prime chuck or Brooklyn real estate, didn’t get underway until 1973.

Unfortunately, the ideas of Robert Moses persisted tenaciously.  While we think of Jane Jacobs’ ideas as ultimately triumphing and being a cause of Moses’s 1968 departure from Triborough, 1968 was the same year Jane Jacobs left New York for Toronto, Canada to ensure that her sons would not have to fight in the Vietnam War,* and even in 1968 with Moses departed, the neighborhood-eviscerating Lower Manhattan Expressway was not entirely dead, the Regional Plan Association urging that it be built even in August of 1969.  Under the Bloomberg administration many of Moses’s ideas were fashionable again (though not the expressways) and there was a concurrent effort to rehabilitate the image of Robert Moses an effort to rehabilitate the image of Robert Moses that included the launching of three separate museum exhibits.
(* Jacobs, in Canada, continued to write books, participate in activism and extend her influence as a thinker and respected theorist.)
Upon his departure in 1966, Mr. Ballard, unhappy that he was requested to leave his office (John Lindsay was now mayor), identified for the Times some “planning questions that remain unresolved.”  Notably these included as his first and last mentioned points:
    •    The “grinding problem” of building desperately needed highways, such as road across lower Manhattan, without displacing hundreds of people.

    •    A more effective distribution of wealth was needed as more and more jobs were eliminated by technology.
The first point makes you wonder how hard Ballard was actually fighting Moses on some of the the things Moses wanted.  The reference to the loss of jobs likely says something about the deleterious effects Moses’s policies were having.

Not everything was seriously grim during Ballard’s tenure in office: His staff gave him a Planning-by-darts game which he played with the new mayor, Lindsay, perhaps hoping to get into his good graces.  One of the game's multiplicity of fictional booby prizes was getting to walk up “six flights of stairs for tea with Jane Jacobs.”

Ballard’s Vision Of Unleashing Energy vs. Jane Jacobs' Vision


Just be before the very ending of the Ballard interview article (where Ballard makes his “greatest City in the World” remark) he offers a thought that juxtaposes weirdly with the thinking of Jane Jacobs:
I would like to promote the interest of the whole community and its future. . [pause for emphasis]  Have you ever thought of the brains and imagination stored up in New York, and what it would mean to get it working in the future?  I think there’s a way to tap it.  I want to bring these people into the planning picture.
The thing about Jane Jacobs is that despite the unnecessary negativity and “lack of imagination” that Ballard attributed to Jacobs, Jacobs had indeed thought a lot about “the brains and imagination stored up in New York” and what it means for it to be activated. Truth to tell, she believed in it more positively than Ballard and had probably thought about it a lot more. All of her work was based on her perceptions and faith that one didn’t need the pseudoscience of “planning” to mobilize that energy, that people were already very much in the picture making cities happen, that the government `city planning' interventions whereby the working fabric of neighborhoods were ripped up and destroyed were antithetical to making use of this energy and represented an expulsion of the people from that same process in which Ballard said he theoretically wanted to involve them.

More About the Hiring of Huxtable

Here is more about the hiring of Huxtable.  The day after the David Dunlap-authored obituary of Ms. Huxtable appeared, Michael Kimmelman, the current architectural critic for the Times, offered an appraisal looking back (See: An Appraisal- A Critic of the Curb and Corner, by Michael Kimmelman, January 8, 2013.)

Mr. Kimmelman does mention Jane Jacobs to put Huxtable’s engagement by the Times in context:
She emerged during the era of Lewis Mumford and Jane Jacobs, with whom she belongs in the pantheon, but as the first full-time critic writing on architecture for an American newspaper, she also had that rare journalistic opportunity to pioneer something of her own, to fill a yawning gap in the public discourse, to carve a path with moral dimensions, “to celebrate the pleasures of this remarkable art,” as she put it.
In my last Noticing New York article went back, to look in depth at a 1958 piece Huxtable did for the Times Magazine to observe that Huxtable, writing there, virtually made her own case for creation of the job the Times eventually hired her to fill by arguing that the “press which regularly reviews art, literature, movies, music and dance, ignores architecture, except for building news on the real estate page” and that “architecture as a standard feature is virtually unknown.”

Mr. Kimmelman went back one year further to note:
Ms. Huxtable’s first publication in The Times seems to be a letter to the editor in 1957, complaining about an art review of photographs of architecture in Caracas, Venezuela, that ignored the deleterious effects of those photogenic but authoritarian buildings on the fabric of the city and its people.
Kimmelman had already declared at the beginning of the article that, “She cared about public standards, social equity, the whole city.”  Even if Huxtable was ghost-writing Times editorials starting in 1961 as  Anthony Woods tells us, these would still seem to be Huxtable's earliest writings for the Times.

In a 2008 interview Phillip Lopate conducted with Ms. Huxtable that appeared in the Times Ms. Huxtable provided the following account of her 1963 hiring.  It elides revelation that she had already been ghost-writing the Times historic preservation editorials:
Aline Saarinen had been The New York Times’s chief art critic, but when she married Eero Saarinen, she thought she should not write about architecture anymore. The Times’s editors were upset; they said they needed to get someone else, and so she recommended me. I went in all dressed up with my clippings, and I remember saying: “All you’ve been doing is printing the developers’ P.R. releases in your real estate section. You have nobody covering this very important field.” So they created the post for me of architecture critic.
(See: Her New York, November 7, 2008.)

That's the end of this tour through history.

In the end, even if some hard-learned lessons are already in danger of fading from our memories, nothing we have covered here is a very far remove from the present day.  Ms. Huxtable, who assumed the role of architectural critic for the Times in 1963, wrote her last column for the Wall Street Journal just last month.  1963 was time of great jeopardy for the city with much hanging in the balance as to whose ideas would prevail.  If we forget, if we again find ourselves distracted and reading just the P.R. releases in the real estate sections, we will probably have to learn many of these lessons all over again.

So I suggest we be on the hunt for good obituaries worth scrutinizing that will allow us to maintain our consciousness of our past.

Bloomberg’s Increasing Annual Wealth: 1996 to 2012 Plus Updates On His Annual “Charitable” Giving

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How much will Bloomberg’s wealth go up?  Bloomberg looks skyward.. . . .The image above is from the November 1, 2012 press conference when, with multiple counties in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut declared disaster areas due to Superstorm Hurricane Sandy, Bloomberg couldn't have looked more bored or been more disrespectful to FEMA’s Secretary Napolitano, who was in New York to provide help.  See: Friday, November 2, 2012, Despite Expected Kudos, Bloomberg Tires of Hurricane Relief Administration Role: That, Or He Tremendously Disrespects Homeland Secretary Janet Napolitano.  Video is available on Youtube.
Groundhog Day (also known to some of us as the Celtic Midwinter Celebration), the midpoint between the Winter Solstice and the Vernal Equinox will soon be upon us.  That means that Forbes, in just a few days more, will be unearthing its new individual wealth calculations, and we will find out whether Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s wealth has again escalated by a startling amount.  In September we learned that Bloomberg’s wealth, as estimated by Forbes, had jumped from $19.5 billion in 2011 (and as late as February 2012) to $25 billion for 2012.

The 28% jump in Bloomberg's wealth in 2012 was ascribed to Forbes estimating "the growth of the mayor’s fortune based on a rise in revenue at Bloomberg L.P.", Bloomberg L.P. being the mayor's company that does business with virtually every significant business that interacts with the city in any way, important or otherwise.

So that useful background is available to everyone when the new figures are announced this seems like a good time to update how astoundingly Bloomberg's wealth has increased every year, especially since taking an interest in, and entering, politics.  See the update below (Forbes publishes figures in September and again in February):
1996 - $1 billion
1997 - $1.3 billion
1998 - $2 billion
1999- $2.5 billion
2000- $4 billion
2001- $4 billion
2002- $4.8 billion
2003- $4.9 Billion
2004- $5 Billion
2005- $5.1 Billion
2006- $5.3 Billion
2007- $11.5 billion
2008- $20 billion
2009- $16 billion (interim March figure)*
2009- $17.5 billion (A year of $105 million in direct campaign expenditures, plus. .)**
2010- $18.0 billion (Bloomberg surpassed by David H. Koch)
2011- $19.5 billion
2012- $25 billion
 * For more on how Bloomberg's wealth declined (because he didn't see the financial crisis coming?- And how the press missed it) see: Bloomberg Update: Fire and Ice (Sunday, April 12, 2009)

** Respecting this: Direct campaign expenditures were about $105 million. Bloomberg, in his three bids for mayor, easily burned through more than $250 million in direct campaign expenditures. Taking into account funds Bloomberg spent indirectly for political purposes you get into billion dollar figures.

*** Bloomberg was still reported to be New York City's richest New Yorker in March of 2010 but in September 2010 was surpassed by David H. Koch, one of the two equally wealthy brothers providing substantial funding to the Tea Party. It is to be observed with some interest that Bloomberg's accretion of wealth substantially accelerated when Bloomberg got involved in politics. In August of 2010 people began writing about how David Koch and his brother Charles were funding the Tea Party, which emerged starting in the beginning of 2009 (i.e. just weeks after Obama’s January 2009 inauguration.) Looks as if it can be very good for one’s financial status to get involved in politics! (Though to be fair the Kochs were involved in politics before the advent of the Tea Party.) The brothers' privately-owned Koch Industries is a diversified conglomerate that had its origins in crude oil refining and still has substantial investment in pipelines and refineries. Consequently, Koch Industries has a history of accidents, spills and pollution of the environment.

Noticing New York previously published and commented on running tallies of the mayor's escalating wealth.  See:  Sunday, October 16, 2011, Bloomberg’s Increasing Annual Wealth: 1996 to 2011 and Tuesday, February 3, 2009, Bloomberg’s Increasing Annual Wealth: 1996 to 2008.

Noticing New York has also reported on the history of the mayor's "charitable" giving, which is important because the mayor is at the very top of the list of such spenders in this country.  It also seems like a good time to provide updated figures in this regard.  The 2012 calendar year has closed, tax returns are due and new lists and information about what people have given and deducted will also be published soon.

Below in chart form is updatedinformation about Bloomberg’s level of giving and the years of associated Bloomberg political campaigns. 
$26.6 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 1997 (when he distributed to 433 groups). Handouts have increased every year since - Press mentions of Bloomberg philanthropy begin this year 
$45 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 1998 - Year Bloomberg started talking publicly about running for mayor 
$47 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 1999 
$100.5 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2000 (579 organizations)- Year before first mayoral election campaign 
$122.5 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2001 (540 groups) Was elected mayor in November 
$130.9 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2002 (655 groups) Became mayor 
$135.6 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2003 (653 groups) 
$138/139.9 million*:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2004 (843 groups) 
$143.9 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2005 (987 groups)- Second campaign for mayor in connection with the 2005 election 
$165.3 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2006. (1,077 groups) 
$205 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2007.- The year he started to run for president.- The year he left the Republican party 
$235 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2008 (1,221 recipient groups)- The year that Bloomberg started running for his third term as mayor and overthrew the city’s term limits restrictions.
 $254 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2009 (1,300 organizations).  2009 was the year that Bloomberg was elected in November to his third term as New York Mayor after spendingapproximately $105 million in acknowledged direct spending on his campaign (many multiples of what his challenger could raise from the public) and, in addition, Bloomberg's political aides (also holding public posts) get fabulously huge bonuses for campaign work.
 $279.18 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2010 - Bloomberg ranked the #2 American "giver", "giving" to "arts, human services, public affairs, and other groups".  2010 was the year that Bloomberg shifted his charitable spending,which had always concentrated on New York City recipients, to focusing on recipients connected to issues of national significance.
 $311.3 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2011 - Bloomberg ranked the #5 American "giver," "giving" to "1,185 arts, human-services, public-affairs, and other groups".

Early available figures coming out for 2012 giving don’t yet mention a figure for Bloomberg or where he will be in the rankings.

* (difference between Times and Chronicle of Philanthropy figures)

(Figures for calendar years1997 through 2008 available from:
•     the Chronicle of Philanthropy
•     Mayor's $weet Charity, by David Seifman, January 27, 2009
•     Bloomberg’s Gifts to Charity Exceeded $165 Million in 2006, by Diane Cardwell, September 17, 2007
•     Nearly 1,000 Groups Gain From Bloomberg’s Largess, by Sewell Chan, October 18, 2006
•     2003 tax year? For Bloomberg, 'Rich' Is Just Too Weak an Adjective, By Leslie Eaton, July 3, 2004.
•     In 2002, Bloomberg Lost a Bit (for Him) and Gave a Lot, by David Johnston (Correction: David Cay Johnston), June 14, 2003)
The 1997 through 2008 figures were originally consolidated to go along with this Noticing New York article about Bloomberg's "charitable" giving: The Good News IS the Bad News: Thanks A lot for Mayor Bloomberg’s “Charity” (Monday, February 2, 2009). For more on what those numbers mean in context click to read the article.
It is important to keep track of Bloomberg's wealth and "charitable" spending because Bloomberg is a public official and the earning of his wealth is subject to many conflict of interest concerns.  At the same time, cycling around, that wealth is deployed for political purposes that include the "charitable" spending above.  The charitable spending above does not reflect the non-tax-deductable augmenting amounts the Bloomberg donates to political campaigns and causes.

The news of what Mayor Bloomberg was `donating to charity' used to be big news in the local New York City press and it was clear that Bloomberg was pressing to get that information out to local reporters as part of his image.  Since 2009, the year that Noticing New York published a chart of Bloomberg's donations, that information has not been as readily available in the local press.  As you will note from the links for calendar years 2009, 2010 and 2011 above, it is still available.  Previously, news of exactly what Bloomberg was "giving" to charity would surface in news, usually reported in May, about Bloomberg's tax returns.

I am not sure whether there has actually been a change in what gets revealed to New York reporters at tax return time in terms of his business dealings or “charitable” contributions, but Bloomberg does not provide his actual tax returns for review by the public.  Instead he allows reporters to come and view redacted tax information for less than three hours.  No copying is permitted.

In early 2010 a New York Times story observed that the mayor doesn’t like talking about his money, although he “swells with evident pride at how his charitable contributions, topping more than $200 million a year [much closer to already topping $300 million a year by then], have helped to boost the arts in New York, and finance antismoking and traffic safety endeavors in poor countries.”  See: February 22, 2010, Bloomberg Doesn’t Want to Talk About His Money, by David W. Chen.

2010 was also the year that the mayor was taken to task in the spring because a 2009 tax return for one of his private foundations (which was subject to disclosure) showed that Bloomberg had offshore investments.  See: The Mayor's Money: Bloomberg Pressed on Offshore Investments, Saturday, April 24, 2010, by Bob Hennelly.  For more discussion of this, together with information about how Bloomberg was restructuring his giving patterns in 2010, redirecting it to national charities, and also information about the new board with political overtones Bloomberg set up headed by his First Deputy Mayor and chief political strategist, Patricia Harris, see: Monday, May 24, 2010, Looking a Gift Horse in the Mouth? An Examination of Brooklyn Bridge Park in Terms of the Politics of Development, Part I.

For a long time and until just recently, Bloomberg was not only the mayor but also the city's richest individual (now he is only the second richest), his wealth having skyrocketed after he announced his interest in politics. For more about the unprecedented peculiarity of that and Bloomberg's conflicts of interest as mayor while his wealth accumulated see: Thursday, October 22, 2009, This Is Rich! Looks Like Bloomberg is Making History and Sunday, November 1, 2009 Bloomberg vs. Thomson (54% to 29%?): It’s Not What You Think. (For Instance the “P” is Missing and What Might “P” Stand For?). The image above is from, and explained in, those posts.

For an older story about how the media is not keeping up with the story of Bloomberg's wealth, the conflicts of interests involved in where it comes from and his so-called "charitable" giving see: No Real Debate About It: Press Remains Way Off Track in Presupposing Bloomberg’s “Charity” (Friday, October 2, 2009)
For Noticing New York's remarks on Bloomberg's term limits extension see: Challenging Bloomberg Unlimited (Sunday, October 18, 2009)

The Occupy Wall Street protesters whom Bloomberg evicted from Zucotti Park didn't have a very good relationship with the mayor.  Many of the placards on display when you visited the protest were critical of Bloomberg, including the one below that suggested that Bloomberg be spoken to "about the looting." Conversely, Bloomberg was critical about what the protesters have to say.  It hardly seems as if much time has gone by since the mayor's November 2011 eviction of the protestors from Zucotti Park, but if the protestors ever retake the space their signs will need to be updated. With Bloomberg's wealth last estimated at $25 billion the sign below from that time putting his wealth at a mere $18 billion is sorely out of date.
Above, just one of the many now very outdated  Occupy Wall Street placards addressing the subject of New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg's wealth.
I thought it might also be useful to provide Bloomberg's wealth and "Charitable" giving information in another form, so below is a consolidated chart that shows both:

Sports Glummery: Goodbye To Professional Sports Teams Like Dem Dodgers Bums Doesn’t Mean Riddance To Paying For Them, Now Says The Times

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It’s front page news today. . .

Many bemoan the Dodgers unceremoniously departure from Brooklyn, New York back in 1957, but the New York Times tells us that due to an impending deal with Time Warner Cable the company's subscribers in Southern California are going to be paying “between $4 and $5 a month” more even if they don’t watch the Dodgers.  And because Time Warner Cable won’t be able to charge enough to cover the entire cost of the Dodgers deal it is very possible non-sports watchers may see a degradation of the quality of the rest of their cable service as Time Warner figures out how to absorb the shortfall it will be swallowing.

The Times didn’t say that New Yorkers will themselves see a rise in cable prices due to the Dodgers deal, only that New Yorkers (along with Los Angeleans) are already in some cases paying a “$2 to $3 monthly surcharge” to pay for“regional sports networks.”  Since I expect Dodgers games will sometimes be played on New York channels I bet the cost somehow factors in to what is paid although I couldn’t discern from the Times article for certain that either the existing arrangement or the impending deal means that New Yorkers pay much for Dodgers team games they don’t watch, only that they pay a lot, in general, for professional sports games even when they are not watching them.

One piece of good news reported in the article is that, “Verizon FiOS, perhaps testing the waters, announced a sports-free package of channels this week that is $15 cheaper than a similar package with sports.”

The New York Times has now caught up with and put on its front page something Noticing New York was writing about last July: how those of us who don’t watch and otherwise shun having anything to do with professional sports are paying a lot for them anyway in our cable TV subscription packages.  The Times article is here: Rising TV Fees Mean All Viewers Pay to Keep Sports Fans Happy, by Brian Stelter, January 25, 2013.

Noticing New York’s article in July, which went into more detail about what options (or the lack thereof) New York City residents have to try to avoid the extra amounts they are having to pay for sports they don’t watch (and may actually consider not all that great to have around in other ways), is here: Monday, July 9, 2012, More Sports Glummery.

The topic of the Times article and my earlier Noticing New York article is variation on a theme that I made the subject of independent research I did with my professor (Charlotte Price) when I was studying economics at Sarah Lawrence: how and when it can become possible for people to wind up paying for and buying things they don’t want.  It’s sort of a challenging set of propositions that run counter to the standard expectations and intuitions that generally ensue from and accompany normal economic theorems.

This is what the Times said in its article today sounding like the subject that drew me to research it back then:
For the most part, all of these networks are requirements, not options for cable customers. (Some distributors charge extra for packages of sports channels for die-hard fans, but the big networks remain in the packages that most customers get.) [Even though the Times says Dodgers games ] . . . were lucky to garner 100,000 viewers on any given day.

    * * * *

“The cable industry has done everything it can to bundle programming and force consumers to buy things they don’t want,” said Gene Kimmelman, a former Justice Department antitrust lawyer.
When I was trying to figure out these paradoxes of people paying for what they did not want back at Sarah Lawrence I kept coming back to models that involved collective decision-making and found myself often getting into the realm of political decision-making.   This was when my professor assisted me by introducing me to the work of Kenneth Arrow.

As for non-sports fans being forced to pay for that which they are not fans of, when politics and their manipulation come into play in decision-making, the examples of what results are probably all the more extreme.  That’s when you get the example of the so-called “Barclays” arena where every non-sports loving New Yorker is being forced to pick up the costs of subsidizing tickets for every game to the tune of perhaps $20.00 a seat every game.  A couple of games can easily come to $700,000.00 and there are many more games than that.  And then we have the hoggish Yankee Stadium to pay for too.  The list, of course, goes on.

Still the Times has been cheering the arrival of the “Barclays” arena without pointing out that many, many New Yorkers don't want to pay those extra taxes they are being forced to pay to heftily subsidize it.

More On Jay-z And Beyoncé- Criticism of Beyoncé’s Morality In Lip Syncing . . . A Distraction From Real National Issues

Latest (Early) Update On Bloomberg’s “Charitable” Giving- A Preview Of 2013? (Added to Info For Years 1997 to 2011)

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Bloomberg looking skyward.. . . .The image above is from the November 1, 2012 press conference whenBloomberg made faces behind FEMA’s Secretary Napolitano, who was in New York to provide Superstorm disaster relief assistance.  See: Friday, November 2, 2012, Despite Expected Kudos, Bloomberg Tires of Hurricane Relief Administration Role: That, Or He Tremendously Disrespects Homeland Secretary Janet Napolitano.  Video is available on Youtube.
An article came out in the New York Times with information about such a large beginning-of-the-year donation that Mayor Michael Bloomberg is making to his alma mater, Johns Hopkins University, $350 million, that it is worthwhile to use that number to do a quick footnoted fill-in and update the information available about how much Bloomberg has “given” to charity every year.  All told, Bloomberg has now sent $1.1 billion to that university.  See: $1.1 Billion in Thanks From Bloomberg to Johns Hopkins, By Michael Barbaro, January 26, 2013.

As a reference point, consider that Bloomberg is making the contribution of $150 million in New York taxpayer money to the New York Library system contingent upon the system’s transfer of significant real estate to developers, shrinking the system to consolidate three main branches and essentially dismantling and decommissioning the main 42nd Street library from its intended purpose since afterwards it will no longer be the research library it was designed to be.  See: Critic’s Notebook- In Renderings for a Library Landmark, Stacks of Questions, By Michael Kimmelman, January 29, 2013, Undertaking Its Destruction, by Ada Louise Huxtable, December 3, 2012, The Leonard Lopate Show: Controversy at the New York Public Library, (audio interview with Scott Sherman and Caleb Crain) Monday, March 12, 2012, Upheaval at the New York Public Library, Scott Sherman November 30, 2011.

For more information about Bloomberg’s escalating wealth over the years since declaring his interest in politics (now up to $25 billion) and how he deploys it, including for political purposes and the conflicts of interest in his dealings, see: Friday, January 25, 2013, Bloomberg’s Increasing Annual Wealth: 1996 to 2012 Plus Updates On His Annual “Charitable” Giving.

Below in chart form is updatedinformation about Bloomberg’s level of giving and the years of associated Bloomberg political campaigns.(There is a gap in the chart below because information about the amount of Bloomberg’s 2012 giving is not yet available but should be available very soon.)
$26.6 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 1997 (when he distributed to 433 groups). Handouts have increased every year since - Press mentions of Bloomberg philanthropy begin this year 
$45 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 1998 - Year Bloomberg started talking publicly about running for mayor 
$47 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 1999 
$100.5 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2000 (579 organizations)- Year before first mayoral election campaign 
$122.5 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2001 (540 groups) Was elected mayor in November 
$130.9 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2002 (655 groups) Became mayor 
$135.6 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2003 (653 groups) 
$138/139.9 million*:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2004 (843 groups) 
$143.9 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2005 (987 groups)- Second campaign for mayor in connection with the 2005 election 
$165.3 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2006. (1,077 groups) 
$205 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2007.- The year he started to run for president.- The year he left the Republican party 
$235 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2008 (1,221 recipient groups)- The year that Bloomberg started running for his third term as mayor and overthrew the city’s term limits restrictions.
 $254 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2009 (1,300 organizations).  2009 was the year that Bloomberg was elected in November to his third term as New York Mayor after spendingapproximately $105 million in acknowledged direct spending on his campaign (many multiples of what his challenger could raise from the public) and, in addition, Bloomberg's political aides (also holding public posts) get fabulously huge bonuses for campaign work.
 $279.18 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2010 - Bloomberg ranked the #2 American "giver", "giving" to "arts, human services, public affairs, and other groups".  2010 was the year that Bloomberg shifted his charitable spending,which had always concentrated on New York City recipients, to focusing on recipients connected to issues of national significance.
 $311.3 million:- Bloomberg’s charitable gifts in 2011 - Bloomberg ranked the #5 American "giver," "giving" to "1,185 arts, human-services, public-affairs, and other groups".
$Unknown now:- Coming soon-2012
$350 million*:-  (* to Johns Hopkins as of 1/27/13 and increasing) 2013

Early available figures coming out for 2012 giving don’t yet mention a figure for Bloomberg or where he will be in the rankings.

* (difference between Times and Chronicle of Philanthropy figures)

(Figures for calendar years1997 through 2008 available from:
•     The Chronicle of Philanthropy
•     Mayor's $weet Charity, by David Seifman, January 27, 2009
•     Bloomberg’s Gifts to Charity Exceeded $165 Million in 2006, by Diane Cardwell, September 17, 2007
•     Nearly 1,000 Groups Gain From Bloomberg’s Largess, by Sewell Chan, October 18, 2006
•     2003 tax year? For Bloomberg, 'Rich' Is Just Too Weak an Adjective, By Leslie Eaton, July 3, 2004.
•     In 2002, Bloomberg Lost a Bit (for Him) and Gave a Lot, by David Johnston (Correction: David Cay Johnston), June 14, 2003)

Haberman Interviews Kent Barwick: Grand Central Terminal As An Important Battle Won. . And The Battles To Be Won Today

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Kent Barwick: From 2006 StreetsBlog Interview
I am very fond of Kent Barwick, former president of the Municipal Art Society (among many important roles) and highly appreciative of the extraordinary amount of good he has done in the world.  Clyde Haberman frequently writes some of the best commentary about the New York scene.  Therefore I was reasonably appreciative of Mr. Haberman’s interview of Mr. Barwick that appeared in the New York Times a few days ago.  It focused a lot on what many are paying attention to right now: The arrival of Grand Central Terminal’s 100th birthday and the fact that the terminal is still here with us providing us great pleasure and in better condition than ever.  (See: Breaking Bread- Kent L. Barwick- Looking Out on Grand Central, and Looking Back on Saving It, By Clyde  Haberman, January 27, 2013.)

As recounted in Mr. Haberman’s piece, Kent Barwick was involved in the terminal’s rescue.  The whole thing was nearly destroyed like Pennsylvania Station before it.  Its rescue almost didn’t happen and might not have happened without Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis intervening, in almost deus ex machina fashion, to insist that there is no such thing as a “done deal” and that despite what everyone tells you things can be changed even at the “eleventh hour.”  

The Haberman article amounts mostly to a feel-good taking stock of the very good thing that happened, the very important battle that was won in 1975.  That’s all important enough and quite necessary but the article also briefly addresses the battles that are important to win now.

Mr Barwick offered the following about Atlantic Yards as quoted by Mr. Haberman: “The public should be at the table with a stronger hand in shaping the project.”

That’s entirely true but it doesn’t inform the reader that the Atlantic Yards mega-monopoly needs to be taken away from, the developer, Forest City Ratner, because you can’t negotiate effectively with a monopoly.  Despite Mr. Barwick's advice, the public will never have a strong or effective hand in shaping the project if the developer is not deprived of the government’s continuing backing that assures his monopoly.  The mega-project needs to be bid out amongst multiple developers.  (See: Saturday, September 29, 2012, Report: How The Times Expunged Its Own First Draft Of History On “Barclays” Center Opening To Replace It With The Pro-Ratner Narrative It Favors and Friday, September 30, 2011, Could the Atlantic Yards Monopoly Be Even Less Regulated Than It Is? Why A Mega-Monopoly Continuation Isn’t Workable.)

By the way, with respect to Atlantic Yards and the ability to take the project away from Forest City Ratner, we are hardly at the eleventh hour, especially if the project takes, as has been envisioned, another forty years or so to complete.  Public hearings on what to do with the mega-project are upcoming.*
(*  A public scoping meeting has been scheduled to obtain comments on the draft scope of work for the DSEIS.  The meeting will be held on February 27, 2013 from 5:00 P.M. to 8:00 P.M. at St. Francis College, Founders Hall, 182 Remsen Street, Brooklyn, New York.  Copies of the draft scope of analysis may be obtained from ESD’s Web site, www.esd.ny.gov/AtlanticYards, or may be requested through the contact information provided below.  Comments on the draft scope of work may be presented by members of the public or any interested party at the public scoping meeting or submitted in writing to: Empire State Development (Attn: Atlantic Yards), 633 Third Avenue, 37th floor, New York, NY 10017, atlanticyards@esd.ny.gov.  Written comments will be accepted until 5:00 P.M. on March 14, 2013.)
 Mr. Barwick’s statement quoted above also falls short of his previous characterization of the mega-project as the “poster child for what goes wrong when process is ignored.”  (In a Streetsblog interview, see: Wednesday, November 29, 2006,  What Went Wrong With “Atlantic Yards?” An Interview With Kent Barwick, President of the Municipal Art Society, by Ezra.)

Here is more from that previous interview:
Barwick says that the people of Brooklyn and their elected representatives have been shut out of planning for Atlantic Yards and all major decisions have been made behind closed doors. The result is a poorly designed project that has polarized the community and that squanders both opportunity and public trust.

The project can be saved, he says, but only if people are given the chance not just to speak but to be heard. That would happen if the state recognizes that, properly, its client at Atlantic Yards is the citizens and government of New York City, not a private developer.

That is no radical notion, argues Barwick. It is law and policy embedded in regulations and the city charter, thanks in large part to agreements he and the MAS helped hammer out two decades ago after a prolonged battle with the Koch administration over the proposed sale to a private developer of publicly owned land on Columbus Circle.
On another topic of critical importance today, Barwick commented to Haberman on Mayor Bloomberg’s desire to rezone the area around Grand Central for increased development of almost double the density before the year is out.  Haberman quotes Barwick saying quite sensibly: “I don’t think something like that should be rushed into in the final hours of somebody’s administration.”

For more history of the area and recent discussion about the density around Grand Central here in Noticing New York see: Tuesday, January 22, 2013, October 1963, An Historical Snapshot: Ada Louise Huxtable, Jane Jacobs, Robert Moses, Cars, Density, Bulldozers, Preservation.

New City-Wide Policy Makes Generation Of Real Estate Deals The Library System’s Primary Purpose

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Library Trustee meeting Tuesday night at Brooklyn Heights Library proposed to be sold to a developer
Do we want a shrinking library system for a growing, wealthier city? . .

. . .  It’s what we are going to get as the principal purpose of the library system becomes the generation of real estate opportunities for developers.  This new city-wide policy has, in a very harmful way, turned into a perverse incentive for the city to defund libraries and drive them into the ground.

Read Michael Kimmelman’s article on the front page of the New York Times this week to learn more about the plans to shrink, and consolidate into each other, three of the most important midtown libraries, a plan that involves irreversible elimination of the irreplaceable research stacks of the main library at 42nd Street.  See: Critic’s Notebook- In Renderings for a Library Landmark, Stacks of Questions, January 29, 2013. Mr. Kimmelman is the New York Times new architectural critic.  At the time of her recent death, Ada Louise Huxtable, the first Times architectural critic, for whom that post was created, had gone on to write for the Wall Street Journal.  Her very last column in December is also stingingly critical of the plan to shrink and consolidate Manhattan's main libraries:  Undertaking Its Destruction, by Ada Louise Huxtable, December 3, 2012.

Meanwhile, the same thing is going on elsewhere in the system.

Brooklyn Heights heard of parallel plan this week, also to create real estate opportunity for a developer (the library system's spokesman for the plan said that envisioned deal could quite possibly be made with Forest City Ratner, owner of the adjoining site, through a no-bid arrangement with the city).  Once again system libraries would be shrunk for consolidation purposes, this time Brooklyn’s Downtown Business Library would be moved out away from the business district and to move into already existing library space the main branch would have to give up at Grand Army Plaza.  A much smaller library of more limited purpose would remain in Brooklyn Heights built into what a developer builds on the site.  (See: FIRST PUBLIC AIRING: Plans to rebuild Brooklyn Heights library, move Business branch, face a skeptical audience, by Mary Frost, Brooklyn Daily Eagle, January 30, 2013 and also LIBRARY SHAKEUP: Business library quits Downtown; questions shroud future of Brooklyn Heights branch, Carnegie libraries, By Mary Frost, Brooklyn Daily Eagle, January 16, 2013 and Tale of the Tweets: Brooklyn Heights Library Hearing, By Homer Fink on January 29, 2013.)  The Brooklyn Heights library is at 280 Cadman Plaza West at the corner of Tillary Street.

At the same time,1.2 miles away the system is proposing to sell the Pacific branch library in Boerum Hill next to another Forest City Ratner property, the very highly subsidized "Barclays" arena spearheading the Ratner mega-monpoly.   That library is at 25 4th Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11217, on Pacific Street right near the corner of Atlantic Avenue and Flatbush Avenue.  (See:  Brooklyn Public Library plans to sell two dilapidated  branches and move them into smaller locations, Brooklyn Heights and Boerum Hill branches on the block, by Reuven Blau, New York Daily News, Tuesday, January 29, 2013.)  Presumably, Forest City Ratner will have the inside track to expand its government-assisted mega-monopoloy at that location.

Josh Nachowitz in the Brooklyn Heights Blog
At the meeting this week in Brooklyn Heights Josh Nachowitz, the spokesman for the library's plan, denied that the system was looking at real estate deals system-wide and had been doing so for some years.  This was despite the fact that I interjected that system had been looking at doing such deals for a number of years.  In 2007 I was interviewing with a developer for a position and was given by them a list of library sites in Brooklyn (not otherwise discussed in this article) the city was reaching out to developers about.  Instead, the representation made at the meeting was that the library system was responding to a recent and unanticipated financial crisis.

But that crisis is a manufactured one.  The Brooklyn Heights Library usage has gone up 77% in circulations and 41% in attendance between 2002 and 2011, but funding was cut 20% since 2008.  Kimmelman in his New York Times article discussing representations made by library spokesmen about the condition of the stacks at the central library and said that it suggests to him “a kind of demolition by neglect.”  Demolition by neglect is time-honored but nefarious strategy real estate development-oriented people use to achieve indirectly what they could not do directly.  Cutting off funds to libraries in this fashion allows library officials to promote sale of the libraries by saying, for instance, “The two libraries on the block, the Brooklyn Heights and Pacific branch in Boerum Hill, are in need of crippling repair costs the system can't afford.”

While there is an eagerness and real estate deal incentive to make such representations, the veracity of such representations with respect to the condition of the stacks 42nd Street was challenged in an interview Scott Sherman and Caleb Crain did on The Leonard Lopate Show: Controversy at the New York Public Library, Monday, March 12, 2012.  I highly recommend that interview (click below to listen) in which you can hear an incredulous Mr. Lopate sound increasing convinced that library system representatives were giving misinformation to his show's reaserchers.



Scott Sherman, participating in that interview, wrote an article that appeared in The Nation about the planned consolidation and sell off of the Manhattan library real estate:  Upheaval at the New York Public Library, Scott Sherman November 30, 2011.  

However eager system officials are to close libraries for real estate deals, real estate deals don't always proceed smoothly.  The heavily used and much loved Donnell Library across from the Museum of Modern Art on 53rd Street in Manhattan was closed in the spring of 2008 to make way for a real estate deal.  That deal fell through, although the library remained closed.  The last projection is that if all goes as now hoped, the library will be replaced with a new building, a ritzy high-end hotel including some library space (29,000 square feet) sometime in 2014The new policy of pressing for real estate estate deals isn't system wide?  Ironically, collections from the Donnell Library were sent to and consolidated into the Mid- Manhattan branch library which is now, in turn, proposed to be one of the three Manhattan libraries consolidated into the 42nd Street library building behind behind the lions named Patience and Fortitude by Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia.    

The last time the site for the Brooklyn Heights library was bulldozed (urban renewal) part of the larger site, right next to the library, remained vacant and was used as a parking lot for the better part of three decades.  Then, that part of the site that had been vacant for so many years was given to Forest City Ratner on a no-bid basis, together with subsides and incentives.

The property being sold in Brooklyn Heights is not actually an asset of the library.  At the meeting in Brooklyn Heights this week Mr. Nachowitz said the building has been managed in such a way that it now needs $9 million dollars in capital investment, but if the building is sold that money goes to the city and it is already established that the Bloomberg administration has a policy of cutting back on library spending.  There is a theoretical promise that the library system will be allowed to have more funds if this deal is consented to by both the library system and the public but that promise is unenforceable.  Even if a pot of money X is put on deposit somewhere, money is fungible and, as with parks (see Parks Commissioner Benepe's remarks), the city can take away with one hand what it gives with the other.  (This is very similar to the same game played in cutting back of state college funding to encourage sale of school land for hydrofracking.  See:  Monday, October 15, 2012, Do They Really Think People Just Don’t Know What `Fungibility’ Is?: A Good Question To Ask As The Fracking Industry Tries To Pull Another Fast One.)

Let's put some of this in financial perspective.  Mr. Nachowitz says the entireBrooklyn Public Library system “has $230 million in capitol needs systemwide, and we get $15 million a year from the city.”  (Even though the real estate sell-offs are city-wide there are technically separations between the Brooklyn and Manhattan library systems.  This becomes less relevant if you take into account city funding and, for example, the fact that Mayor Bloomberg appoints eleven of the trustees to the Brooklyn system. The Brooklyn borough president whose "charities" are funded by the mayor appoints another eleven and the balance are elected.). . .  Bloomberg is sending$350 million of his personal funds to Johns Hopkins University this year (he's over one billion dollars now including past gifts to Johns Hopkins), but he's going to withhold $150 million in taxpayer money from the libraries unless they consent to the sell-off of the midtown properties?  The closing of the Donnell Library reportedly grossed a $67.4 million purchase price (that is not net of expenses) and yet the city still starves the library system for money.

The consolidation plan for the Manhattan libraries involves irreplaceable elimination of the research stacks of the Main library at 42nd Street.  In other words research that could be done in a day might take weeks as each additional book you request as you realize that you need it would now take a day or more to retrieve rather than being immediately available.- And, no, there isn't a digital solution or reason to be doing this.  Perhaps in the future researchers will be better off taking a train to Baltimore to do their research in Johns Hopkins libraries.

At one point Mr. Kimmelman makes these points in his article:
As for those alternatives, the Mid-Manhattan site at present has the potential to be redeveloped as a 20-story building. The library could also sell some 100,000 square feet of unused space at the site, or seek city permission to transfer air rights (there may be more than a million square feet) from 42nd Street. A new Mid-Manhattan branch should cost a fraction of gutting the stacks and could produce much better architecture. 
Not mentioned by Mr. Kimmelman is that the the Bloomberg administration recently unveiled plans to almost double-- starting in 2017-- the density of Manhattan’s already very dense Midtown business district, that entire district surrounding Grand Central and the MetLife (formerly Pan Am) building, from 39th Street to 57th Street on the East Side.  The Mid-Manhattan site is just barely outside of the tentative proposed boundary lines.  (See map, click to enlarge.)  Want to make a bet about whether somebody tries to change that?

The zoning for the Brooklyn Heights library site (C6-4) currently has an FAR of 10 (for residential equivalent of an R10), which is fairly high, but it could be increased still further, something a developer would be interested in seeing happen.  Because there would be a condominium unit for a small library in the new building (a community facility), the entire permitted structure could be bigger than normally permitted under R10.  Mr. Nachowitz represented at the meeting this week that it would not be possible for the library system to sell air rights rather than selling the site itself.  Right now some of the site is open space, a small bit of decorative park that has unfortunately (and ill-advisedly) been closed to the public for years, and space that has been used for parking.

Move the business library out of downtown Brooklyn?  Judy Stanton, Executive Director of the Brooklyn Heights Association, commented to the Brooklyn Eagle:  “This is the third largest business district in the city. . .It seems odd to move the business library further away.”

The reason to move the business library out to the boonies (away from all the downtown transportation) is that Downtown Brooklyn/Brooklyn Heights real estate is more valuable to developers and the site also has the higher density zoning.  (The 60,000 sq ft Brooklyn Heights library would shrink to 16,000 sq ft in a new building.)  The Pacific library site is also being targeted for a sell-off because of the value of that site to real estate developers.  Other sites are further down the priority list for sale because the real estate is less valuable, building at high density is likely more problematic and large-scale endeavors are likely to require the mobilization of more subsides.

It should also not be overlooked that local neighborhood libraries also provide community space with all its potential value.

Can the trustees and the librarian administrators of the system be counted upon to stand up and speak out to tell us what truly ought to be happening?  I already mentioned that many of the trustees are appointed by the mayor and, under his influence, the borough president.  About the Manhattan consolidations Kimmelman says this:
The parties in charge are earnest in their conversations. While remaining hard to pin down on the dollar amounts, they are eager to demonstrate that every conceivable alternative strategy has been explored, weighed, re-examined and rejected. Proceeding in any other way than by investing in this potential Alamo of engineering, architecture and finance would be irresponsible, they’ve concluded. I have found this to be a not-uncommon phenomenon among cultural boards, a form of architectural Stockholm syndrome.
If you listen to the Scott Sherman and Caleb Crain interview on the The Leonard Lopate Show it sounds far worse, with browbeaten librarians concerned about being fired and losing their pensions as the system lays people off to contract.  Obviously, management can try to sell their ideas to the workers.  Those who buy into the spiel can be brought to the fore.

One of the very worst things about what is being proposed is the idea that it is being promoted as a "public private partnership" as if this were a desirable thing.   Such things are better thought of these days as "private public partnerships" because public officials habitually put private developers in the driver's seat and compromise their integrity as inter-tangling motives mix.

These arrangements create situations where it becomes impossible to assure that the public has benefitted from fair deals and honest bids.  It probably no accident that this is the kind of environment in which Forest City Ratner chooses to operate almost exclusively and, as an example of how it can be abused, Forest City has repeatedly taken advantage of these situations to blackmail the public by threatening to withhold a promised benefit unless it is delivered more favorable terms than originally agreed upon.  One situation was quite comparable to what is envisioned here occurred with Ratner's Gehry-designed building on Spruce Street on the Manhattan side of the Brooklyn Bridge: The Ratner organization was given a site in exchange for the promise of building a school in it (like promising to include a library) but it then threatened to halt construction unless the local community board agreed to confer greater benefits upon it.

One possible hint that Forest City Ratner may have its sights set on being given the Brooklyn Heights library property is that it just managed to obtain a lowering of its real estate taxes (its second) on its adjacent property, something that could have relevance later on: Monday, January 28, 2013, Daily News: Ratner's One Pierrepont Plaza office tower gets taxes lowered $160K/year in reassessment.  Will it also be going after the Pacific library site that is next to its arena property?

When people running charitable organizations take their eye off the ball and get distracted with real estate instead, disaster can befall: St. Vincent’s Hospital in Greenwich Village was in the middle of a distracting real estate shell game when it suddenly declared bankruptcy.

Can the public help by contributing the funds needed to close the gap?  When the real estate development bug takes hold it is hard to defeat: Further south, Brooklyn Heights and neighboring Cobble Hill are facing the loss of another charitable institution, Long Island College Hospital.  Not long ago LICH received a huge donation increasing its endowment but that funding was raided and taken away.  Th fact that it now stands depleted of funds is being used in the arguments to allow closure of the hospital and sale of its property for real estate development.

There is one remaining piece of very bad news for those* trying to figure out what to do in Brooklyn Heights.  Sometimes there can, indeed, be good rationales for redeveloping or further developing a site.  If there are such rationales one inevitably is going to face very slippery slopes in defending the public's interest.
(* There is a new committee of citizens being formed to oppose the real estate deal.)
Irrespective of whether there could be some good rationales for developing the site further (as there actually likely are) there is a problem putting trust in those whose bad judgement can be seen in the bad priorities behind effectively eliminating Manhattan's central 42nd street research library to create a real estate deal.  There is also a problem with rewarding the strategy of defunding libraries by authorizing the deals as a result of such calculated behavior.  Let's start by insisting on what we want and properly need in terms of a library system and properly funding it first, before anything else is done.

Handing out real estate deals should not be the priority.
Some of those who heard about and turned out for Tuesday night's Brooklyn Heights Library meeting 
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PS (added February 9, 2013): The following recent article (with links to others) that ends with a link to a petition to stop the defunding and skrinkage of the library system for the sake of creating real estate deals: Saturday, February 9, 2013, Libraries That Are Now Supposedly “Dilapidated” Were Just Renovated: And Are Developers’ Real Estate Deals More Important Than Bryant Park?

City Strategy Of Withholding Basic City Services To Blackmail Public Into Accepting Bigger Development

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On right, Pacific branch library proposed to be closed to for the sake of real estate deals.  This photo is from:  Reflecting Pictorially, And Otherwise, On The Un-Truth And Consequence Of BP Markowitz’s Assertion Arena Is In Business District, Not Brownstone Neighborhood 
Should the Bloomberg administration be allowed to pursue strategies of withholding basic services from city communities in order to blackmail the public into accepting bigger development projects the administration wants but the public doesn’t?

To understand exactly what we are talking about here it is worthwhile to go back to the Walentas Two Trees development of the Dock Street Project, opposed by people like Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award-winning, historian David McCullough because, given its huge size and location, it will blot out historic vistas of the iconic Brooklyn Bridge.

Here is how things went:
    •    A version of the enormous project was proposed and the public rejected it and the special permissions needed to make it possible.

    •    The community wanted and felt it needed a new school.  The Bloomberg administration told the community it could not have a new school.

    •    Then the Bloomberg administration said that the community would be given the new school it desired, provided that the new school was put in the Walentas Dock Street project (making it even bigger) and that project was approved.  This was notwithstanding that the Walentas project was not of an optimal design to house such a school.

    •    Later, internal administration e-mails surfaced that showed that the city administration was green lighting the community school only for the purpose of getting the Walentas project approved and that it would not consider furnishing the school in another or more optimal location if one could be found.  Because those administration officials knew this couldn’t be their position publicly they decided to just pretend to consider alternative sites for a school.

    •    The approve-the-project-for-a-school plan garnered an increased level of public support for the Dock Street project but, in the end, the special approvals needed for it to proceed were granted only when they were pushed through the City Council by Speaker Christine Quinn over the objections of the community and the local elected city council member representing the area.
That’s one clear cut example.

I have just been writing about another similar Bloomberg administration strategy: The Bloomberg administration’s defunding of the city library system in order to create a (“demolition by neglect”) financial crisis and holding out the carrot that it will restore funding to the library system only if the public goes along with the selling off of library sites for the sake of real estate deals around the city and, in the process significantly shrinking library services for our growing, wealthier city.  See: Thursday, January 31, 2013, New City-Wide Policy Makes Generation Of Real Estate Deals The Library System’s Primary Purpose.

There are other examples of the manipulative creation of such Faustian bargains:
    •    Across the river on the Manhattan side of the Brooklyn Bridge, you have Forest City Ratner's extra-tall Gehry-designed building on Spruce Street.  That building towers over everything else in the vicinity and Ratner’s control of the site is related to the inclusion in the building of a school the community needed and which should have otherwise been provided.  The blackmail quality of the terms of that bargain took an accentuating turn when the Ratner organization threatened to halt construction unless the local community board agreed to confer still greater benefits to Ratner than had been originally worked out.

    •    The St. Vincent’s shell game of a real estate circus that ultimately resulted in the demise of St. Vincent’s Hospital in bankruptcy was at one time promoted with the notion that Rudin Development, the private real estate developer designing and pushing the deal (that would have effectively sold off a portion of the Greenwich Village Historic District), was offering to be involved with “giving” a school to the community.    
When I was writing yesterday about the starving of the library system in order to blackmail the public to approve real estate deals I missed noticing a piece of the overall puzzle unfolding in this regard.  It involves the defunding that is demolishing libraries by neglect and it loops us back again to the Walentas Two Trees development that is again requesting a zoning increase premised upon its provision of a benefit the public wants and should otherwise be entitled to.  It was written about in Atlantic Yards Report: Friday, February 01, 2013, Pacific branch library building adjacent to Atlantic Yards site too expensive to repair, destined to close; will it be demolished?

Image used by Atlantic Yards Report is from library's web site
One of the many libraries the city is seeking to sell off for real estate development after defunding and demolition by neglect is the Pacific branch of the Brooklyn Public Library at Fourth Avenue and Pacific Street just below.  (See yesterday’s article for information about many other libraries in the city system whose doom is similarly threatened.)  The library is adjacent to the site of Forest City Ratner’s Atlantic Yards mega-monopoly and a stone’s throw from the “Barclays” arena spearheading it.  We hope that officials do not plan to add to Ratner’s contiguous multi-acre mega-monopoly by giving the site to Ratner, but library officials have refused to disqualify or blackball Ratner as a future owner (without bid?) of library properties as a result of the sell-offs toward which they are maneuvering.

The city wants to close the Pacific branch library . .  And what is envisioned as the plan whereby the public can get that library back?  The public will have to approve greater density for a new Walentas Two Trees development building that will include such a library.  Here is the developer’s public spiel as to why they should get greater density for their proposed project (nearly double the number of apartments currently permissible) with a zoning change in order to give the library back to the public (emphasis supplied):
The development company claims putting about 300,000 square feet of apartments above 50,000 square feet of commercial space and cultural offerings — including three Brooklyn Academy of Music theaters, a new home for the Pacific Branch of the Brooklyn Public Library, and a rehearsal space managed by 651 Arts — is a far better proposal than the tallest possible structure it could build without a zoning change, which would set aside about 152,000 square feet for arts and commercial tenants and 171,000 square feet for housing.
(The above is from: January 16, 2013, Looking for apartments: Two Trees seeks zoning change to allow more housing near BAM, By Eli Rosenberg, The Brooklyn Paper.)

Bigger building Two Trees wants to build with zoning change.  Click to enlarge


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PS (added February 9, 2013): The following recent article (with links to others) that ends with a link to a petition to stop the defunding and skrinkage of the library system for the sake of creating real estate deals: Saturday, February 9, 2013, Libraries That Are Now Supposedly “Dilapidated” Were Just Renovated: And Are Developers’ Real Estate Deals More Important Than Bryant Park?

What Could We Expect Forest City Ratner Would Do With Two Library Sites On Sale For The Sake Of Creating Real Estate Deals?

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As the result of a new city-wide policy making the generation of real estate deals the library system’s priority the city expects to be selling off sites to developers.  See: Thursday, January 31, 2013, New City-Wide Policy Makes Generation Of Real Estate Deals The Library System’s Primary Purpose, and Friday, February 1, 2013, City Strategy Of Withholding Basic City Services To Blackmail Public Into Accepting Bigger Development.

Two of the sites identified for sale in the forefront of this march towards divestiture of assets with a concomitant shrinkage of the system are in Brooklyn.  Brooklyn development, especially when government officials are involved, is considered Forest City Ratner's turf, to the virtual exclusion of all others.  Whether by coincidence or not, both of these sites (library sites are unfortunately city-owned) are immediately adjacent to property the government has previously put in the hands of Forest City Ratner pursuant to no-bid deals and with special terms and subsidies.

Brooklyn Heights Library next to Ratner One Pierrepont
Another view
When asked, Josh Nachowitz, spokesperson for the Brooklyn Public Library refused to disqualify or blackball Ratner as a future owner (again without bid?) of library properties as a result of the sell-offs toward which the system is maneuvering.   That refusal is notwithstanding the fact that Forest City Ratner already has a very dangerously large government-assisted monopoly in Brooklyn and a record of failing to deliver on public benefit promises with a history of blackmailing the public to change terms of agreements.

In the words of a front page article in the New York Times last fall by Charles V. Bagli and Joseph Berger the developer and subsidy collector Bruce Ratner has a:
reputation for promising anything to get a deal, only to renegotiate relentlessly for more favorable terms.
(And that is from the New York Times which has a business relationship with Ratner and a bias towards supporting the developer.)

There is little doubt that Forest City Ratner will be interested in acquiring the two library properties adjacent to its own, one where Brooklyn Heights borders Downtown Brooklyn, the other where Boerum Hill borders the Ratner malls, “Barclays” arena and the rest of the Ratner Atlantic Yards mega-monopoly.  It may even be suspected the firm will have the inside track if for no other reason than that the firm specializes in government relationships and the spoils of crony capitalism and city officials will be heavily involved in the disposition.

Therefore it is worthwhile to ask what Forest City Ratner would be likely to do when it acquires these two library properties.  Here is what Ratner is going to want to do.

New Brooklyn Heights Tower Overlooking Cadman Plaza
Rendering of the potential Ratner "Mr. Brooklyn"

Distance between Heights library site and Mr. Brooklyn site
The Brooklyn Heights Library site being sold on at 280 Cadman Plaza West (at the corner of Tillary Street) is three short blocks (.3 miles) from 285 Jay St, (at the corner of Tillary Street) the site where a few years ago, the last time the real estate market was healthy, Forest City Rater planned to build “Mr. Brooklyn” (his “second attempt to build the tallest building in Brooklyn”), a potentially 1000 foot high “spire.”  See: December 1, 2007, Mr. Brooklyn, by Adam F. Hutton, The Brooklyn Paper.

That building had a number of similarities with what the library is now proposing to do:
    •    Ratner was “partnering” then with a public agency, exactly what the library system representatives say they are proposing: “Ratner is partnering with a public agency — in this case, City University of New York”

    •    Ratner would be erecting the larger building that would include space it would provode to the public agency (probably factoring into its ability to attain such hugeness under the zoning code)“The complex — on Jay Street between Tillary Street and Tech Place — would consist of a new, 11- to 14-story City Tech laboratory and classroom building, and an adjacent underground auditorium and gym. It is not known how much Ratner would be paid for this work.”
The 2007 Brooklyn Paper reporting on the plans made a point of the secrecy respecting exactly what was planned:
    •     . . the secret, closed-door deal is already casting a shadow

    •    Secrecy is nothing new for Ratner.

    •    The Ratner spokesman’s renunciation of the rendering shrouds the project in additional secrecy.
Chart from The Brooklyn Paper showing the relative size of the Ratner "Mr. Brooklyn" to other large buildings
How large a building could Forest City Ratner build on the Brooklyn Heights library site?

The library system representative describing the envisioned deal to the Brooklyn Heights community this past week represented that no rezoning of the site is necessary for the site to be redeveloped, saying that the FAR* for the site was 10.  The zoning for the Brooklyn Heights library site (C6-4) currently has an  FAR of 10 (for a residential equivalent of an R10, the highest density residential district), which is fairly high, but it could be increased still further, something a developer would be interested in seeing happen.  A bonus, taking the permitted FAR up to 12 is available if, for instance, some of the existing open space on the site is preserved as a public plaza.  That’s obviously an FAR higher than the public was told at the meeting last week.  In addition, because there would be a condominium unit for a small library in the new building (a community facility), the entire permitted structure could be bigger than normally permitted under that R12 FAR standard.
(* FAR stands for permitted “floor to area ratio.”  Simply put, an FAR would mean that a twelve story building could e built using the entire footprint of a site or a twenty-four story building could be built using half the footprint.)    
Green space beside the library that that might be replaced in order to get the developer a 20% density bonus
More space that's open beside the library that might be replaced to get 20% extra density
The library was constructed as part of an urban renewal plan.  The fact that arguments could be made that aspects of that plan still pertain could potentially throw in wild cards in terms of figuring out what is actually permitted, whether it be more or less. 

Finally, the permitted FAR could be increased by obtaining a zoning change for the site something the developer would likely seek after it contractually locks in control of the site.  To avoid such a change being considered an illegal “spot zoning” change that might involve an upgrade of the entire (rather small- see map below) C6-4 district, which could have the effect of allowing Ratner to transfer unused FAR zoning rights from his adjacent site to the library site.  The library system spokesman last week said that there were no development rights the library could transfer to an adjacent site: He did not say that development rights couldn’t be transferred to the library site.

Above center the triangular block with the Brooklyn Heights library site and the Ratner One Pierrepont building that could be treated as a single parcel for transfer of rights to pursue extra density
The highest permitted residential FAR in the city (with bonuses, etc.) is 12 but the highest commercial FAR that might apply is 15 and this might still wind up enabling more FAR to be transferred back to the library site, permitting what is effectively a higher FAR for the library site whether not it is commercially or residentially  used.  (Given current market conditions the best bet in is that the Heights library site will be developed as a residential building.)
Zoning map section above shows C6-4 district on Tillary at left containing Heights library site and the C6-4 district on right in which Mr. Brooklyn was to be located
Might a 74-711 transfer of development rights be possible from any of the historic landmark buildings in Brooklyn Heights?  At this time I can’t tell you.

The library site ending in a narrow triangular tip is not in all respects that easy to develop for other uses.  Concern about how elevator and utility cores will be accommodated may be one reason those formulating this plan want to downsize the current library space from 62,000 to 16,000 square feet.  (Another reason for them to want to downsize the library is to de-accentuate the perception of how much money is being spent to just to stay in the same place: In other words, the amount being spent to demolish and the reconstruct the library.  That's all profit for the developer but not the community.  Anyone who says the library somehow comes "free" is wrong)  The difficulties posed by the site’s triangular shape might cause the developer to seek variances to achieve the maximum size building that can be built.
8 Spruce Street zoning district (next to R8 district)

Would all of this allow Forest City Ratner to achieve on the acquired library site, something equivalent to the potentially 100-story “Mr. Brooklyn” it was planning only few blocks  further east on Tillary Street?  That’s unlikely, but zoning is complicated to figure out.  I don’t have enough information or professional expertise to know exactly how tall a building could be managed, but I also can’t tell you how Forest City Ratner planned to make Mr. Brooklyn 100 stories tall (it was also in a C6-4 zoning district, see map above) and I can’t tell you exactly how (other than political connections) Forest City Ratner managed to make its Gehry-designed 8 Spruce Street, crammed into the financial district on the Manhattan side of the Brooklyn Bridge (with a school in the bottom, similar to this library plan and the Mr. Brooklyn plan), 76 stories tall and thus the tallest residential building in the Western Hemisphere (image from Wikipedia's Wikimedia commons on right).  It did involve transfer of development rights: That Spruce Street tower, next to what is only an R8 residential district, is also in a C6-4 district just like the Heights library site, see the segment of the zoning map above- exact project location indicated in Google map below.  

Location (A) of 8 Spruce Street Beekman tower
When Josh Nachowitz was speaking at last week's public meeting he did not answer the question of how tall a developer would build the building replacing the library building on the Heights site as if he did not know the answer.  I have been informed that, off the record, he has told others in internal discussion the building could be forty stories plus parking below.  That height, tall enough to generate harbor views by soaring above the rest of Brooklyn Heights, would be without the transfer of additional development rights.  The price the city would be paid for the land (the money received goes to the city, not to the library system) would be based on those forty floors, not what the developer might finagle to add to it with transfers after the fact.  Would the underground parking be joined with the underground parking in the adjoining Ratner building?  That's likely.

People should talk to the librarians to get the gossip about what isn't being said to public.  I have already written noting Michael Kimmelman's astute characterization that the poor souls in the library system that is being starved by the Bloomberg administration seem to be suffering from a form of Stockholm syndrome in assessing the choices with which they are being presented: They are starving now but if the deal goes through they could have a shiny new facility (albeit smaller).  At the same time librarians who do not now have private parking spaces are being told they will be given them if the plan goes through.  In New York City parking spaces are worth around a quarter of a million dollars apiece!: A few of them quickly add up to the cost of the repairs said to be currently needed.  Librarians may want to lawyer up so they can be told that a statement by Josh Nachowitz that they will be given a personal parking is not legally enforceable.
14-story Federal court house across Cadman Plaze challenged by community
One thing to note:  The building on the library site would be much taller than the Cesar Pelli & Associates-designed federal court house just across Cadman Plaza or even the height it might have been.  It wound up shorter than allowed and planned after it was was challenged in court by community residents and was scaled back to 14 stories from the 18 originally planned.  I've said that in that case I believe the building should have been built according to what was originally planned.  Looking at the zoning map above you'll see the zoning for the site is R7-1, less than for the library site. 

How tall a developer can build, however complicated the rules, can be a matter of right.  To build even taller and/or denser, say through zoning changes, requires getting discretionary government approvals, something that Forest City Ratner through political connections has been extremely good at.  Some might say that a building above a certain height on the edge of historic (and now wealthy) Brooklyn Heights would be preposterous and that the powerful Brooklyn Heights Association would be certainly oppose and defeat any discretionary government approvals necessary to achieve it.  (This issue will almost certainly be discussed at the Association's annual meeting next Monday, 7:30 PM, February 11, 2013 at St. Francis College, 180 Remsen Street, in Founders Hall, the auditorium) 

On the other hand, much of what Forest City Ratner has done in pushing the envelope has been preposterous and offensive to community standards, but Forest City Ratner has nevertheless been supported in these exploits by powerful organizations (organizations getting Ratner financing) like the Brooklyn Museum and the Brooklyn Academy of Music, thus canceling out community opposition.

Before moving on to what would happen if the site of the library system’s Pacific branch (1.2 miles away) were sold to Forest City Ratner, it should be noted that Josh Nachowitz has also served as spokesperson for the Brooklyn Library System with respect to that proposed sale as well.  Mr. Nachowitz came to work for the the library system only a year ago, moving into the library system to become a VP there, from the city’s real estate development agency the New York City Economic Development Corp. (EDC), where he handled community and political relations, a year ago in February of 2012.  (In 2011 he was the face of EDC in dealing with public complaints about noise from helicopter flights and in 2010 he was a representative of EDC in dealing with the condemnation of historic Duffield Street properties to create a park.)

Extension Of Forest City Ratner Atlantic Yards Mega-Monopoly To Include The Site Of Pacific Branch Library

On right, Pacific branch library proposed to be closed to for the sake of real estate deals.  This photo is from:  Reflecting Pictorially, And Otherwise, On The Un-Truth And Consequence Of BP Markowitz’s Assertion Arena Is In Business District, Not Brownstone Neighborhood 
If Forest City Ratner acquires the site of the Pacific branch library it can extend its contiguous multi-acre Atlantic Yards empire and cheaply obtain extra benefit by also acquiring and closing down a new section of Pacific Street so as to connect the former library site to its contiguous Atlantic Yards acreage.
Above, the green shows where within the currently extant 30+ acre Forest City Ratner mega-monopoly (outlined) once-public streets, avenues and sidewalks are now privately owned by Ratner, subject to Ratner rules
Close down another city street?  Why would the Ratner organization do that and how they be arguing that it makes sense?  Forest City Ratner has a long history of obtaining private ownership and closing down public streets.  It is one reason the traffic configurations around the Ratner Metrotech are so odd and difficult.  Most of the formerly public streets right around this section of Pacific Street are already closed down and privately owned by Forest City Ratner (see map above).  If all of Pacific Street between the Ratner-owned block on which you can find Modell's and the block on which the library now exists were shut down and given to Ratner by the city it would be roughly the equivalent of the length of Fort Greene Place also spoking off from the Ratner (Prokhorov) arena, in that case just to the north.

Above, the Pacific branch library site (A) where Pacific Street could be closed down to create a new superblock, shown next to existing Ratner-owned superblocks and privatized streets
Since Pacific Street no longer exists where it once did (where the “Barclays” arena has replaced it) there is a good argument that a public street leading up to the no longer existing street is not needed.  The philosophy expressed in the Atlantic Yards design is that superblocks are good.  This would extend that practice to create one more similarly sized adjacent superblock.  The privatization of the street could be accomplished exactly the same way that the streets in the Atlantic Yards footprint were privatized: The state’s Empire State Development agency ("ESD," formerly UDC) could condemn them and New York City could accept a token condemnation award that Ratner would pay it for the land, far less than the real value of the streets.

So that Ratner could get the maximum benefit, the entire length of Pacific Street between 4th Avenue and Flatbush would be privatized.  Since, for the time being, there are still private properties fronting on some of that length of Pacific Street the owners of those properties would be granted an easement for ingress and egress over the Ratner-owned street.  The advantage of all of this would be to give Ratner extra rights in terms of increasing the maximum density at which he can legally build within his 30+ acres of mega-monopoly.  ESD's involvement extending the boundaries of the Atlantic Yards district would also serve to override normal zoning protections.  If this sounds absurd remember that this is precisely what was done on a large scale when developer-formulated Atlantic Yards was assembled.  Do the boundaries of things like government urban renewal districts get adjusted after the fact to include properties developers set their sights on?:  That's exactly how the current boundaries of the Atlantic Yards footprint wound up being drawn to Forest City Ratner's specifications. 

What the expanded Ratner mega-monpoly would look like with more of Pacific Street privately owned by Ratner as indicated in green on left
Forest City Ratner should be giving back to the public the streets that were privatized and turned over to it.  So far public officials are not requiring this. . .   . If we are not having the conversations we should be having about why Ratner should be forced to give back the portions of Pacific Street he took before and even now is not making any real use of them, what is to stop Ratner from going on the offensive once again and seek the closing and private ownership of even more of Pacific Street?

Library in happier days when it was not under threat. . . Atlantic Yards Report used this image from library's web site
For instance, the current New York City Public Advocate, Bill de Blasio, who rose in Brooklyn politics as a local city council member (for the 39th District) and therefore ought to be sensitive to local community concerns, has now served almost his entire four year term as Public Advocate without ever lifting a finger to call for the restoration to the public of those parts of Pacific Street that the Ratner organization, having reneged on original representations, isn’t actually truly using and won’t be using for many years, probably decades.  Why not?  There is, after all, ample precedent for restoring privatized demapped streets to the public when they are part of vacant sites and it is realized that the original demapping was ill-conceived.

This does not bode well: Bill de Blasio is now running for mayor.  Since he is not taking the public’s side on this issue now as Public Advocate it is entirely conceivable that he would, as mayor, similarly turn over more of Pacific Street to Forest City Ratner.  (Mr. de Blasio has offered no indications of where he would split from real estate developers to support the interests of communities.)  Christine Quinn, who has been running the City Council as its speaker has been a straight down the line implementer of the Bloomberg administration's real estate policies so it can be expected that, by continuing them, she would wind up doing exactly the same thing in the future in terms of  Ratner's continued privatized ownership of streets.

Would Ratner be impeded, unable to grab control of the library sites, due to lack of funds having fallen on the financial ropes as a result of multiple bad decisions respecting Atlantic Yards and the community's wised-up opposition?  There won't be financial hurdles so long as Ratner can readily access mufti-millions from Chinese EB-5 investors buying green cards or Russian oligarch Mikhail Prokhorov.   

What I have written here may seem almost like no more than an improbable satire except that everything I have said might happen accords so closely with what politicians in this city have already participated in making happen, many examples of it involving Forest City Ratner’s pushing the envelope of politically connected developer privilege.  There is consequently absolutely no assurance that any of the possibilities I have spelled out here won’t materialize.  What would prevent it? A vigilant, demanding citizenry who we may hope can demand accountability and action from our politicians. . . The best test of what we can expect from our politicians in the future is what we can succeed in demanding from them today.

. .  A good starting demand?  A loud outcry to take the governmentally-assisted Brooklyn mega-monoply away from Forest City Ratner and end its current abuses.

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PS (added February 9, 2013): The following recent article (with links to others) that ends with a link to a petition to stop the defunding and skrinkage of the library system for the sake of creating real estate deals: Saturday, February 9, 2013, Libraries That Are Now Supposedly “Dilapidated” Were Just Renovated: And Are Developers’ Real Estate Deals More Important Than Bryant Park?

Asked To Name Subway Station After Ed Koch MTA Says It Doesn’t Name Subway Stations After People. . . . Only Nefarious Banks Like Barclays

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 (click to enlarge) The poster we'd like to see in the Barclays subway stations
Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-Manhattan) is seeking to have the Lexington Avenue 77th Street Subway stop named after former mayor Ed Koch. . .

. . . Says the MTA:  “We do not rename subway stations after people.”   But the system does rename subway stations after corporations, no matter how disreputable they are, including the Barclays Bank.  (See Daily News on the Kock request and MTA response: MTA puts brakes on naming subway station after former Mayor Ed Koch,  ‘We do not rename subway stations after people,’ says MTA spokesman, by Ginger Otis, Peter Moskowitz and Pete Donohue, Monday, February 4, 2013.)

For more about renaming subway stations after corporations of not-so-resplendent reputation, including Barclays Bank, see:
•        Thursday, November 8, 2012, What’s In A Name?:The “Barclays” Name, As In “Barclays” Bank and “Barclays” Center Gets Some New Negative Associations

•        Friday, June 29, 2012, Government Gets Branded

•        Wednesday, September 26, 2012, Promoting Obfuscation of What Government Does and Doesn’t Do To Give The Private Sector (Including Ratner) More Credit

•        Thursday, September 27, 2012, Noticing New York Public Comment At Today’s MTA Board Meeting On the Subject Of MTA’s Devoting Public Assets To Advertising

•        Thursday, September 20, 2012, Embroiled In Embarrassment of Hosting Controversial Advertisement MTA Considers Banning “Issue Advertising”: What About Barclays LIBOR Scandal?
Here, hot off the presses, is the latest New York Times story about Barclays Bank misconduct in the selling of securities: Barclays Sets Aside $1.6 Billion More for Legal Costs, (Legal/Regulatory), by Merk Scott and Julia Werdiger, February 5, 2013.
Above (click to enlarge), the Barclays subway station as we'd like to see it, with a poster quoting a New York Times article

Libraries That Are Now Supposedly “Dilapidated” Were Just Renovated: And Are Developers’ Real Estate Deals More Important Than Bryant Park?

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Foreground: The lion Patience , of Patience and Fortitude fame, in front of 42nd Street Research Library whose research stacks will be sacrificed.  Background:  Mid-Manhattan Library that will be sold in system shrinkage plans
You may be aware that Noticing New York has run a series of articles (this will be another) about how the priorities of running a good city library system are playing second fiddle to a system-wide effort to create real estate deals for developers by selling off, closing, shrinking and consolidating libraries and divesting system assets.  It’s worse than that because to incentivize these divestitures there has been a system-wide strategy of mayoral defunding of the libraries at a time of escalating use by the public, city growth, and increased city wealth, with the public being told that libraries will not be adequately funded unless libraries are sold and the system shrunk.

Libraries “have experienced a 40 percent spike in the number of people attending programs and a 59 percent increase in circulation over the past decade”: That’s from a new report on New York City libraries from Center For An Urban Future:  Report - Branches of Opportunity, by David Giles, January 2013.  These figures for what are some of most important and well-used libraries in the country were achieved despite the fact that, as the report notes, New York is not even funding its libraries well enough to keep them open as many days as the troubled city of Detroit keeps its libraries open.

Part of the argument to sell off assets to create real estate deals is that system assets are “dilapidated” so there is no other feasible choice.  Aside from the fact that mayoral defunding of the libraries does stress the system, running assets into the ground (“demolition by neglect”), the assertions of dilapidation aren’t necessarily true even if library spokespersons are eager to make them.

“Dilapidation” of the Stacks Under the 42nd Street Research Library

Main library at 42nd Street the research collection of which would be be dispersed in city-wide shrinkage of library resources
The research stacks under the city’s main research library behind the lions, Patience and Fortitude, at 42nd Street are so dilapidated that they need to be done away with?  You can find people who will tell you the opposite, but how about this?. . .

. . . . I found the following hiding in plain sight, with just a quick reference to recent history, newspapers that I myself read on the way to work not so very long ago: Just 21 years ago the library completed a project costing over $25 million to bring the library’s research stacks up to the standard they needed to meet.  The project was supposed to be good for at least 30 years, at which time it might be time to, once again, add more stacks. That project, which addressed a backlog of need was actually designed take accommodate 55 years worth of the library's growth of its collection.  It involved building 84 miles of stacks two floors deep under Bryant Park.  (See: Library Starts Road to 84-Mile Shelves Under Park, by Susan Heller Anderson, Published: October 27, 1987.)

Under Bryant Park (skating rink in foreground) there are 84 miles of research volumes (two floors of them) integrated into the 42nd Street Library (in the background) 
The project was important enough to close down Bryant Park over a number of years, The original plan was for that to be two and half years, but there were delays and then more delays and  the park was not finally reopened until April of 1992, four and a half years after the October 1987 groundbreaking.  Part of the cost of the overall project involved restoration of the park, originally estimated to cost $5 million but coming in, instead, at $8.9 million.  It should be borne in mind that big construction projects have a way of taking longer and costing more than initially projected. (See: Shhh! Kids and Scholars at Work, by Bruce Weber, September 23, 1990 and $8.9 million restoration of the park, Architecture View; Bryant Park, An Out-of-Town Experience, by Paul Goldberger, May 03, 1992.)

According to the Times article that appeared in 1987, one reason the project was important enough to spend that money and to close down Bryant Park for so many years was, according to the Times, so that patrons researching in the library would not have to “wait one day for the volume to arrive” when volumes were not on the premises.

Not have to “wait one day for the volume to arrive”?  And now we are proposing to spend more than$300 million to rip out the stack system?  Which will mean exactly what?: That when anyone using the library is doing research there they will have to wait at least a day for volumes they will need to order to arrive.   A day’s worth of research could now be transmogrified into the work of weeks.

Hopefully, the plans to move the volumes for storage in New Jersey will not go worse than planned. . .  The New York City Opera company suffered a huge setback in 1985 when costumes for 69 of the company's productions were consumed in the fire where they were stored in Passaic, New Jersey.  The Metropolitan similarly lost millions of dollars of rarities and sets, costumes for 43 productions in 1973 when what it had stored in a Bronx warehouse burned.  Hopefully there will be no similar conflagration at the remote warehouse sites the library sends it collection off to or the metaphorical analogy to the incineration destroying the collected works of the Ancient World in the Ptolemy Dynasty’s Great Library of Alexandria will be complete.

Of course the best defense is a good offense so,  those selling the 42 Street development deal are conversely arguing the Rose Main Reading Room, that researchers use above the stacks built in 1911, is now in peril (after a hundred plus years) because the stacks below are not properly fireproofed.  (My, of my! What were people thinking during that stack renovation work that ended twenty-one years ago?)  

The Rose Main Reading Room, extolled by the New York Times in 2007, was completely renovated and restored, reopening in November 1998 with a gift of $15 million from Frederick P. Rose, the real estate developer, and his wife, a gift they made in honor of their children.  That’s nice, but it should be noted one problem when charitable non-profit institutions take money from real estate developers is that it gives them influence, sometimes seats on boards, and the real estate community has its own preoccupations and ways of thinking.

Mid-Manhattan Library, across from the 42nd Street Library, one of the many libraries the city library systems slated to sold off in real estate deals as part of city-wide shrinkage of the system
And why do we now theoretically want to spend more than $300 million to rip out the stack system?: So we can sell off the Mid-Manhattan library site across the street and the science library at 34th Street.  How much might these sell-offs net in terms of public benefit?  Sale of the Donnell Library grossed only $67.4 million.  That isn’t a net figure.  It costs money to demolish libraries and then rebuild what needs to replace them.  Developers get paid and make money on the entire package, including whatever portion is just the churn, but what it costs to stay or get back to the same place must be subtracted out in any argument that  attempts to measure cost and benefit to public.  (Also, when libraries are sold the money goes to the city, not to the library system.)

What the site of the Donnell Library closed and sold off in 2008 looked like last week.
Making way for condos and a high-end hotel
Site's future
Meanwhile, the public loses things.  The public has lost the Donnell library closed prematurely in 2008 (and not reopened).  Materials from Donnell was sent over to the Mid-Manhattan library and the developer-deal advocates are now asserting that one reason to do away with the Mid-Manhattan Library is that it is not sufficient to handle some of the functions, like a teen library that the Donnell once very adequately served.

Sale of the Donnell Library site was no doubt inspired by the MOMA Museum tower rising to great heights right across the street
Consider that the public now stands to loose the research stacks that it paid for partly with the closing of Bryant park for all those years. . .

. . . Same-day immediate access to a complete research collection was important enough to close Bryant Park for more than four years, but selling off public libraries to generate real estate deals is more important than same-day immediate access to a complete research collection?  That makes generation of real estate deals more important than keeping our public parks open to the public!  Is the next step going to be to suggest the selling off of the park for real deals?

For those for whom visual assistance in solving this logic puzzle is helpful, see the following visual:


Does selling off parks for real estate deals sound foolish?  I just wrote about William F. R. Ballard, who was New York City Planning Commissioner from 1963 to 1966, and I noted how the Times obituary for Mr. Ballard cited as a highlight of his tenure that he fended off  “a proposal to build public housing in Central Park,” saying it was “patently absurd.”  You see the development industry is actually capable of proposing such sell-offs of the public realm.  Things change and pendulums swing back.  We had once done a lot to addess income inequality in this country.  Just as the country has swung back to a new Guilded Age where wealth inequality is even greater now than in the late 1800s, so too are we having to fend off again the policies of those seeking to rehabilitate Robert Moses and his real estate churning policies, something else I wrote about in that article about events in 1963.

We are about to move on to discussion of a contrastingly different library, a local branch in Brooklyn.

This article is about how those arguing for the sale of system libraries for development are using every conceivable argument they can make and not necessarily honestly.  Arguing for the dismantling of the research stacks at 42nd Street, they are making the case that the research library is, in essence, elitist.  It is an argument to which Michael Kimmelman, architectural critic for the Times, gave a hearty, well-deserved lambasting. 

Kimmelemn acknowledged that “inconveniencing of researchers who might have to wait an extra day for books to arrive at 42nd Street from New Jersey” might be portrayed as a “snobbish-sounding” objection that fuels “the library’s public relations offensive, which has advertised the plan as democratizing a building that many New Yorkers find intimidating” and then went on to make the point:   
But the library, free and open, is already an exemplar of democracy at its healthiest and best, of society making its finest things available to all. Climbing the library steps, passing the lions, rising up to the reading room where anyone can ask for books, enshrines, architecturally, the pursuit of enlightenment. Inspiring more people to reach those heights is the library’s loftiest mission. Peddling “democracy” as if it were a popularity contest is what “American Idol” does.
What galls most about the charges of elitism used to support these sell-offs is that the elitism truly in play here involves the small privileged club that gets to benefit from these real state deals at everyone else’s expense. That will become even more clear as we next move on to discuss the branch library in Brooklyn where it is impossible to accuse those wanting it to stay open of elitism. Quite the reverse.  While the argument of elitism is out of bounds, the familiar argument of “dilapidation” is, however, still being made.

“Dilapidation” of A Local Library In Brooklyn: Pacific Branch

Pacific Branch Library 25 4th Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11217, on Pacific Street right near the "Barclays" arena
The following is from Community Board 6's Resource Directory:
BROOKLYN PUBLIC LIBRARY - PACIFIC BRANCH  
Pacific Branch was the first Carnegie library to open in Brooklyn. The building won praise for its 'dignified' design and its first-of-its-kind children's room
Here’s more continuing from the library’s website where the above appears to have been taken from:

Describing the second-floor children's room, the Tribune's writer went on to write that Pacific is the most completely equipped room for children in the country, with tables and chairs built especially for children. Other features included a rotunda with interior semi-circular iron balcony, fine wood work on the banisters, doors, doorways and arches, a tiled fireplace and wood panelling.
The Pacific Branch Library is one of the Brooklyn libraries that the Brooklyn Public Library system has announced is at the head of the line of those it wants to sell because they are “dilapidated.”  See this story in the Daily News about these two dilapidated  branches where a Brooklyn Public Library official, apparently Josh Nachowitz, said, “are in need of crippling repair costs the system can’t afford.”

The other now receiving prominent attention is the Brooklyn Heights Library on the border of Brooklyn Heights and Downtown Brooklyn’s central business district.  The 62,000 square foot Brooklyn Heights library, constructed in 1963, is actually two libraries housed together, the Brooklyn Business Library and a local branch library.  The Brooklyn Public Library system plans to reduce that space to 16,000 square feet.  I won’t go into the details in this article (this also involves shrinkage of facilities at the Main Brooklyn library at Grand Army Plaza), but I would personally say that the Brooklyn Heights library is actually in pretty good shape given the city’s withholding of adequate funding in the Bloomberg years.

The Pacific Branch Library is the library with respect to which the public has been given the following message: The public can expect to get the library back in a new location if the public tolerates zoning changes to allow a Walentas-developed building into which it wouldbe put to be nearly double the size permitted as of right.

When a similar previous scheme concerning putting a library into a Walentas building fell through in 2008 a skeptical “Steve from Fort Greene” commented on The Brooklyn Paper article about the lack of necessity for such a new library because “there is already one at Pacific Street!” (Referring to the Pacific Street branch.)  (See: June 21, 2008, Kiss the glass library goodbye, by Mike McLaughlin, The Brooklyn Paper.)

Too bad for “Steve from Fort Greene”: This time the system has him headed off at the pass (as they say in Westerns) since the system has announced it is closing and selling the Pacific Branch.

“Steve” was outflanked in another way even earlier.  Preparatory to everything that is going on now the library system “quietly cut branch hours by an unprecedented amount” in the fall of 2010 for this and 25 other locations, “nearly half of the system’s 60 locations,” closing them “for both weekend days”   See: September 22, 2010, Unhappy ending at library as branches are slashed on weekends, by Joe Anuta.
  
The problem is that the Pacific Branch may not be as dilapidated as you might think when you hear library spokesmen calling it that.  A community activist who lives on the block where the library is located and pays astute attention to matters like this pointed out to me that the library was renovated two years ago.  “It’s tight as a drum,” my activist friend commented.

A constant stream of people are going in and coming out of the library
I wanted to include a link in this article that you could click on to read documentation of the library’s recent renovation.  When I experienced difficulty in finding what I wanted I called the Pacific branch and explained I wanted help with the research I was doing.  The librarian I talked to immediately became exceptionally skittish and told me no librarians there could help me research the information I wanted (I said I was hoping to find, for instance a collection of newsletters that would talk about the renovation) because the librarians had all been directed not to speak to anyone about the renovations: All they could do was give me the name of a marketing person to whom I should direct questions.

I was nevertheless able to verify in my conversation that the librarian had been around when a year’s worth of recent renovations were done.  The marketing person I was directed to call for information on the subject did not call me back.

In the vestibule of Pacific Library:  Library purposes of providing information and community centers
I called Community Board 6 to see if I could get information about the renovations but what I got was a complaint that the library system had shared virtually no information with the board about things it was doing.  I was assured it would not be worth my while to review the on-line minutes of the community board or any of its committees (such as Landmarks/Land Use or Parks/Recreation/Cultural Affairs) because I wouldn’t find anything there.

One thing to note: If the Pacific branch is closed and a new library is opened in a double-size Walentas building, the new library will then be within the boundaries of Community Board 2, not 6.  Overall, I got the impression the library had been rather furtive about letting the community in on its plans.

It seemed that the the best way for me to verify that the library was in good shape as represented by my friend was to go visit it.

Main reading room in Pacific Street
There are those who when they look at a building or a neighborhood to assess what kind of shape it is in will be less inclined to see the actual infrastructure they are looking at than the people who are filling that space.  If the people in that space are of the same socio-economic strata as themselves, or above, they may be more inclined to include that the neighborhood or the buildings they are assessing are in good shape and quite serviceable to their purpose.  But if the people inhabiting that environment have less wealth (or are of a different race) that conclusion might not be so quickly reached.
Reading on balcony overlooking the rest of the main reading room
Andrew Carnegie who donated the library believed in enabling people to help themselves. “nothing for nothing. Youths must acquire knowledge themselves.”
Library Chess
Computers throughout the library are well-used by the public
That's pretty much how it turned out that neighborhoods were slated for demolition under urban renewal in the past.  Neighborhoods that didn't get demolished and were then reoccupied by wealthier people were suddenly better regraded as a result.  When Brooklyn Heights was less wealthy even it was in danger of demolition and some of it was torn down.  Now it's regarded as a premier historic neighborhood.

One resource available at Pacific: A collection of video DVDs
My own experience of the Pacific branch is that it is a hardy building that is getting hard use and standing up well to that hard use to stay in good shape.  Its main room has a linoleum floor that appears to have been put down on rock solid, level concrete.   All around there was evidence of intense use.  The place was filled.  As with any space getting a lot of use there was a reasonable amout of superficial scuffing as a result.  I didn’t see any evidence of prettifying financial expenditures but the building didn’t seem to need them to be durably functional.

150 seat capacity public second-floor auditorium
The building also has some beautiful community meeting space that anyone can arrange to use so long as it isn’t for profit.  Downstairs there is a room that will accommodate up to fifty.  Upstairs there is a gracious second floor auditorium that will accommodate a larger group of up to 150.  I am thinking of arranging to use space there to host a meeting to discuss community change.  I asked and was told that everything works perfectly, there’d be no problem with heat, air conditioning (window units in the summer), electricity, or the movie screen.

Public community room available gatherings with a capacity of up to 50
Kids are us!  Library has a children's reading room so you have to handle strollers.
I've spoken to some other people I know who are active in community affairs and they told me they love using the community space for meetings.  They then joked about the idea that if the space weren’t there that  “community space” might have to be found in the deeply subsidized “Barclays” arena a short block away, privately owned by Bruce Ratner’s Forest City Ratner company and Russian Oligarch Mikhail Prokhorov.  Under the bogus provisions of the “Community Benefits Agreement” applicable to the Atlantic Yards mega-monopoly, now being largely unenforced, the arena owners were supposed to provide a form of community space: a “meditation room.”  That has turned out to be pretty much a joke.

Library on right, receiving shallow city funding.  On left, just a few feet down the block the "Barclays" arena is receiving incredibly deep subsidies on the order of perhaps $20.00 a ticket 
The library system is painfully underfunded by Bloomberg and it hurts libraries like the Pacific branch. But at the same time tickets to attend Barbra Streisand or Jay-Z concerts at the "Barclays" arena only a short block away are deeply subsidized to the tune of perhaps $20 a ticket.  Imagine if library patrons could come to the library depositing into the library's till a $20 bill (furnished by the city periodically) to assist operations. . .   the libraries would be strong in their own right and there would be little excuse for Bloomberg's development deals.

One individual in the community fighting to keep the Pacific branch open commented in a communication forwarded to me that as between the Brooklyn Heights library being sold and shrunk (built as part of urban renewal in 1963) and the Pacific branch being closed: “The Pacific street branch building has more historic significance and its closing blatantly discriminates against people of color, the main users of the library.”

Another activist I spoke with told me that there was significant worry in the community that, if the Pacific branch is closed and a new library is opened in the enlarged Walentas building in Community Board 2's district, those in the community now using the Pacific branch would not feel welcome in the new space.

In the vestibule: The tale of the library's previous savoir by community activities when the library system was not working with them, not against them and for real estate deals
There happen to be activists in the community who are old enough to have participated in saving the library once before in the first half of the 70's.  The following is from the library's website.  It is almost the same as what can be read in the vestibule upon entering (see image above):
Problems soon beset the fine new library. In 1914 construction of the BMT subway system caused structural damage, and in 1917 all of the children's books and one third of the adult books were ruined by the water used to control a fire. In the 1930s W.P.A. workers created a large second-floor mural which has unfortunately not survived. After another fire in 1973, the building was slated for demolition, but community activists and the Brooklyn Public Library worked together to save it from the wrecker's ball.

After extensive renovation, the Pacific Branch reopened to the public in 1975. For almost 100 years the Pacific Branch has served a changing community. The branch, which boasts an active Friend's group, looks forward to serving the people of this busy crossroads neighborhood for generations to come through its wide range of information and recreational resources, its video collection and its innovative events and programs.
. . .  “the building was slated for demolition, but community activists and the Brooklyn Public Library worked together to save it from the wrecker's ball” and it was reopened in 1975.  Now community activists are working to save the building, but the Brooklyn Public Library is working against them to create real estate deals.

Historical photo of library in the vestibule
I was told that activists have tried to have the building landmarked in the past but the commissioner of the landmarks Commission refused to put the building up for consideration.  That is an indication that the real estate community wanted the building to remain in play.  I don’t know dates.  I don't know how far back this matter was first being pushed by the community, who was commissioner at the time, or what particular mayor’s bidding the demurring commissioner was doing when not proposing the building for consideration.

Library in happier days when it was not under threat. . . Atlantic Yards Report used this image from library's web site
The effort is ongoing.   The Historic Districts Council is pushing to save the Pacific library, the first Carnegie library to open in Brooklyn, as part of its “Campaign to Preserve the Carnegie Libraries.”  According to HDC’s site:
New York City’s collection of Carnegie libraries is the largest of any city in the country. Of the 67 built, 57 branches are still standing. The 54 that remain in operation make up one quarter of the city’s public library branches. . . . 13 branches have been designated New York City individual landmarks

The suspicion is that when the library closes the city will also close and sell the adjoining parcel housing the Boerum Hill Medicaid Office and offices of the Human Resources administration.

The adjacent two-story building providing city services that people think will be sold and leveled when the library goes to a developer
Perhaps not so coincidentally given arrival of the "Barclays" arena, the community is also struggling to preserve and prevent destruction of the1866 Gothic Revival Church of the Redeemer that is kitty-corner to the library across the intersecting street and avenue.  The church is very like the several churches that have been preserved just west of the Gramercy Park area, helping to give that area its character.  Not surprisingly those eager to make a profit on a tear-down of the church are asserting that the church, like the library, is too decrepit to preserve. 

The essential point to remember here is just one thing: When library system representatives tell you that libraries are being closed and sold off and the system shrunk because they are dilapidated and no longer serving their function, that isn’t true. . .  They are being sold off to create real estate deals for developers.  What make this worse, is that to make these stories more plausible, to provoke these sales that will shrink the system, Bloomberg is withholding funding from the library system at a time when the city is growing, getting wealthier, and library usage is up.

There is now a petition available to sign and pass around demanding that these priorities be rearranged and that the city start funding the library system properly, that real estate deals take a back seat to the needs of the library system.  I will soon write more about it in a coming post.

The petition, with more background on the website where it can be signed is:
Save New York City Libraries From Bloomberg Developer Destruction (click on the hyper-link to get to it)
The petition text: 
 We demand that Mayor Bloomberg stop defunding New York libraries at a time of increasing public use, population growth and increased city wealth.  Shrinking our library system to create real estate deals for the wealthy at a time of cutbacks in education and escalating disparities in opportunity is not only unjust, it is a shortsighted plan that will ultimately hurt New York City’s economy and competitiveness. 
Reiterating: Here are prior Noticing New York articles in this series followed by three other articles of relevance:
•    New City-Wide Policy Makes Generation Of Real Estate Deals The Library System’s Primary Purpose, (January 31, 2013)

•    City Strategy Of Withholding Basic City Services To Blackmail Public Into Accepting Bigger Development (Friday, February 1, 2013)

•    What Could We Expect Forest City Ratner Would Do With Two Library Sites On Sale For The Sake Of Creating Real Estate Deals? (Sunday, February 3, 2013)

•    New York Times:Critic’s Notebook- In Renderings for a Library Landmark, Stacks of Questions, by Michael Kimmelman, January 29, 2013.

•    Wall Street Journal:Undertaking Its Destruction, by Ada Louise Huxtable, December 3, 2012.

•    Center For An Urban Future:  Report - Branches of Opportunity, by David Giles, January 2013

One-Stop Petition Shopping: Report On The Brooklyn Heights Association Annual Meeting, LICH and Libraries

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Sent in by a NNY reader: The morning crowd waiting for the Brooklyn Heights downtown library to open
The Brooklyn Heights Association Annual Meeting was held Monday night and the big news of the night concerned two items of significant concern that are remarkably similar in theme and associated suspicions about underlying mischief on the part of theoretically charitable institutions misconducting themselves.

Each concern is the subject of online petitions furnished at the end of this article for one-stop shopping purposes.  You can scroll down and click on each link to sign the petition and amplify the voice of the Brooklyn community.  (You don't have to be from Brooklyn to sign though!)

One of these two events involves, the selling of Brooklyn Heights’ downtown library as part of a city-wide mayoral program of defunding New York City libraries and shrinking the library system at a time of increasing public use, city growth and increased city wealth.  The new priority of the library system has apparently become the creation of real estate deals for real estate developers.

The other event involves the selling off of Long Island College Hospital (LICH), the only hospital for the community in the immediate vicinity, once again, because there are those who are salivating to create real estate deals.

Theme For An Entire Evening

The guest speaker of the evening was Congresswoman Nydia Velazquez who spoke concerning the importance of President Obama’s pitted battles with Republicans who are right now intent on restructuring the federal budget for the plutocratic benefit of a few at the expense of the rest of us.  In other words she was speaking about matters on a federal level quite parallel to the principal local concerns of most of those attending the meeting.

Connecting LICH With The Libraries: Jane Jacobs And The Drive For Real Estate Deals

Brooklyn Heights Board President Jane Carroll McGroarty, was the one who, connecting the issues of concern, spoke to the assembled gathering about the LICH and library matters.  She did so, making a link I think she was brilliant to recognize, to precepts renowned urbanist Jane Jacobs explored in one of her least-read books:  “Systems of Survival: A Dialogue on the Moral Foundations of Commerce and Politics,” (1992).*

I’ve written about those precepts here: Sunday, June 24, 2012, Sports Glummery.
(* There are those of you who may find this article on the wonky side, long and detailed in terms of law, public policy and urban planning.  That's because much of the evening's content was wonky and because this kind of analysis is what is necessary to protect the public interest when others with power are conniving against it.  You can also, if you wish, just skip down to the bottom of this article to sign the petitions without further reading.)
What Jane Jacobs wrote about in "Sytems of Survival" has very on-target application to the LICH and Library situations where those who should be protecting the public wind up not doing so because they get distracted, when they shouldn’t, by lucre.  The only problem is that, if you haven’t yet spent some time with them, the concepts in that book could be a little abstruse for an auditorium crowd.  At one point Jacobs uses the word “immiscible,” which is a way of describing things like oil and water that don’t properly mix.

Here’s what I said before:
The book, which as its title indicates, is about the morality of systems, convincingly argues the flaws of trying to mix things that should not be mixed, particularly mixing business enterprises with government and politics, because the moral systems that apply to each must necessarily remain different and incompatible (so much for the current fashionability of today’s “private-public partnerships” like Atlantic Yards).

    * * * *

Jacobs’ book is full of other examples of what happens when realms that should remain distinct (together with their associated moralities) improperly intermix, so that one gets what she calls “monstrous hybrids.” Most typically the examples she gives involve an improper mixing of business and government (but there are also examples of improperly mixing charity and business). [I went on to cite examples.]
BHA Board President's Remarks On LICH And Library

Here is what BHA Board President McGroarty said:
In closing, I want to comment on two new and very troubling events that are affecting our neighborhood.

The first is the likely closing of the Brooklyn Heights branch library because, according to the spokesperson for the Brooklyn Public Library, the facility needs millions of dollars of repairs and upgrading.*  The plan would be to turn over the site to a developer who would demolish the existing structure, build a new branch library in the new building while the business library would be removed to Grand Army Plaza.

[Polite shouts of  “No” from the audience]
[* The cost of the repairs may be the subject of exaggeration by library with a pattern of exaggerating reports of decrepitude.  The main cited repairs being talked involve the HVAC system that at one point I understand was estimated to cost $700,000, and is now estimated to cost $3 million.  Other repairs library officials say they have been able to identify might bring the total for repairs up to $9 million.  The Brooklyn Paper somehow misreported that the HVAC repairs alone would cost $9 million, implying that total costs would be millions more. $12 million? $15 million?]
The second event is the decision by Downstate and the SUNY board to close Long Island College Hospital . . .

[Polite shouts of  “No” from the audience]

 . . . which will leave a giant hole in the health care needs of residents of Northwest Brooklyn.  

SUNY claims it’s losing money operating LICH, but a letter from Carl McCall, president of SUNY, to our elected officials details the financial problems with the SUNY University Hospital, not LICH.

Many people feel that the underlying agenda is to allow SUNY to sell off the valuable real estate at LICH for development.  The final decision about LICH will be made by the New York Department of Health and, ultimately, by Governor Cuomo.  There’s information outside with the contact information for both of those individuals if you want to write or email the Department of Health or the Governor.

In light of these two institutional closings, I am reminded of the late Jane Jacobs, who wrote about two basic systems which have been developed to foster human achievement and success. One is the commercial or the entrepreneurial system, including fields like trading, business and  science.  The other is the guardian system, such as government, education and the military.  Both are necessary and both work best separate from one another.  (emphasis supplied)

It seems to me, using Jacobs’ construct, that there’s an imbalance today between the two systems, fueled by the notion that every property ought to be put to its highest and best use, in spite of any common needs that a society might have.  This imbalance has put the caretakers and guardians such as City Planning. Community boards, Landmarks, other nonprofit institutions, at a financial disadvantage as they struggle to perform their mission in society.

In the case of LICH, no one is asking how we can maintain this important and viable hospital.  But, instead, there is ample evidence that the facts are being skewed in order to accomplish the entrepreneurial goal, not the caretaker goal.  In the case of the library there appears to be an intention to continue its mission by building a more centrally located* business library.
[* What “centrally located” would mean is relative.  The proposed new location of the library, in a residential neighborhood would be a lot less central to the borough’s “CBD,” (“Central” Business District), one of the largest in the country, less central to Brooklyn’s main transportation hub and less central to the universities now near it.]
I would hope that any deal would include a healthy sum from a developer for the Brooklyn Public Library’s endowment.  We shouldn’t be in such a hurry to sell off assets so cheaply.

This concludes my report and I will be happy to take questions after our community awards and our guest speaker.
As I will get to in a moment, and as you can well imagine, many in the audience who had come to address the LICH and library issues that evening were very eager to ask those questions, particularly to ask about the stance the BHA will be taking to protect the community.

The Hazards Of Developer-driven Partnerships and Mixed Agendas (Per J. Jacobs)

First, let me comment that the reference President McGroarty made to Jane Jacobs’ “Systems of Survival,” although it may possibly be regarded as somewhat abstruse, is very apt to make the point that the infiltration of entrepreneurial greed is not good when it is allowed to reset the priorities of what should be “charitable” institutions.  Those institutions are supposed to be looking out for the general public welfare.  Jacobs' analysis cautions us about how the danger of that not happening is extraordinarily accentuated when one risks mixing the “immiscible” with so-called “private-public partnerships” where government functions get taken over and driven by private developer agendas.

So my first assumption (which I wanted to confirm in the ensuing questions I expected Ms. McGroarty would answer at the end of the meeting) was that the BHA would object to any developer-driven “public/private” partnerships if the library site gets redeveloped.  The library system has actually stated that it is interested in such a partnership and that it is not ruling out that such a partnership would be with Forest City Ratner, a development firm renowned for its expertise in manipulatingly abusing such setups for their own agenda.  As the Brooklyn Heights library property (as is another in Brooklyn) is immediately adjacent to existing Ratner government-assisted property, I have noted that the library and its demolition may be in Ratner’s sights.  During the cocktails that followed the meeting I was informed by people who have dealings with the library that the secretiveness of the library's management about what is going on gives a vibe that there is already a handshake deal for the city to give the property to Ratner (likely on a no-bid basis).

Frustrating Public's Purpose When The Public Gives Money To Charities: Money Exits Out The Back Door Via Accounting Gimmicks 

The other thing I wanted to address with President McGroarty in the open meeting was the possibility that the BHA might be tempted to think it would be smart to negotiate to have money from a library sale put into the library system’s endowment, something that would be an absolutely meaningless tactic.  (Ms. McGroarty had said: “I would hope that any deal would include a healthy sum from a developer for the Brooklyn Public Library’s endowment.”)

One of the huge frustrations in dealing with these “charities” that depend so much on taxpayer-funded cash flow to operate is how much we are ultimately at the mercy of those elected officials in control of the bigger picture, Mayor Bloomberg in the case of the libraries and Governor Cuomo in the case of LICH.

Mayor Bloomberg is underfunding the city library system at a time when usage is up, 40% programmatically and 59% in terms of circulation.  This intentional underfunding helps make the real estate deals the Bloomberg administration is looking to hand out plausibly defensible.  If members of the broader public wanted to thwart this tactic by collectively donating extra funds to the libraries it wouldn’t work, because Bloomberg has already decided at what level he wants the libraries funded and he can simply subtract out a dollar of city funding for every dollar the public donates to try to close the gap between supplied and desired services.  If you understand accounting and how money is fungible you will understand that putting money into a library endowment fund is meaningless.  The only thing the public can meaningfully negotiate for is that full, proper and complete funding for the library system resume.

One way we will know when this has happened is when, like the (bankrupt) city of Detroit, the (wealthy) city of New York is keeping its libraries open longer hours, not closing on weekends, and staff is rehired.

LICH is similarly frustrating.  Many will remember a remarkable story that unfolded at the end of the 1990s.  An unostentatious Brooklyn Heights couple, who few guessed to be wealthy, died possessed of enormous wealth.  They were the Othmers, Donald and Mildred.  He was a chemical engineering professor.  She was a former teacher and a buyer for her mother's dress stores and a charitable volunteer.  They had invested their savings with Warren E. Buffett, an old family friend.  When Mrs. Othmer died she left $340 million to five institutions serving the community in Brooklyn:
    •    Polytechnic
    •    Long Island College Hospital
    •    The Brooklyn Historical Society
    •    Plymouth Church of the Pilgrims, and
    •    The Brooklyn Botanic Garden
Long Island College Hospital had already received a large sum of money when Mr. Othmer died four years before his wife.  (See: $340 Million Windfall in Brooklyn; 5 Institutions' Happy Problem: How to Spend the Money, by Jim Yardley, February 04, 1999 and Staggering Bequests by Unassuming Couple, by Karen W. Arenson, July 13, 1998.)

It is absolutely clear that the Othmers intended to benefit the community interests in Brooklyn they cared about, but in a story that is much too long and complicated to recount here the money they left to LICH was raided, siphoned off by Continuum Health Partners.

The community has complained how subsequent infusions of cash for LICH seem to have vanished.  One minute LICH is reported to be operating in the black and the next it is supposedly in the red.

Hospital accounting is far too mysteriously malleable and complicated.  I’ve written about this before when writing about St. Vincent’s Hospital, another example where people running a hospital took their eye off the ball, salivating over a shell-game real estate deal: The hospital went bankrupt and what survived was the real estate deal.  When I was a lawyer in government one of the things I used to do was finance hospitals.  In fact, I worked on the financing of LICH.  I was involved in the negotiations and policy review that applied when the community gave up parkland (there was a swap involved) so that LICH could have a new parking garage.*  At the BHA meeting one audience member astutely suggested that the parkland be given back to the community (rather than used for high-end condos) if LICH is ultimately closed.
(* This is remarkably parallel to the situation with the 42nd Street Library: Bryant Park was sacrificed, closed for over 4 years, in order to have a functioning research library, but the library’s research stacks are now being sacrificed for the sake of a big-bucks real estate deal.) 
The New York State Department of Health regulates hospitals and seeks to ensure that good health care is delivered throughout the state. At the same time, DOH also does everything it can to hold down the cost of health care. Here is what Noticing New York observed when talking about St. Vincent’s:
Hospital accounting in New York State is far from easy, counterintuitive and, at best, can only be understood by experienced insiders. Regulations involving highly complex reimbursement formulae force hospitals to operate constantly on the brink of artificially narrow and rather manipulable profit margins.
(See: Wednesday, October 8, 2008, The Subsidy Ball: The Rudin/St. Vincent’s Proposal.)

The net, net of all of this is that, just as with libraries, it is not sufficient for the community to pump money into an institution to save it because that money can be made to disappear with accounting tricks.  The only thing that works is to demand government’s commitment to making the institutions work.

What's Required From BHA To Protect The Community Respecting The Library 

I was never able to ask President McGroarty the questions I wanted to ask about how the BHA plans to protect the Brooklyn Heights community in the face of the proposed sale of the library because after Nydia Velazquez spoke, Ms. McGroarty, announcing the meeting was over, did not take questions as many of us thought was supposed to happen. (It would not have made sense to speak to Congresswoman Velazquez on the subject because the federal government has little involvement in the running of local libraries.)

Here is what I was prepared to ask questions about although I likely would have gotten only as far as protecting against a developer-driven project, barring Ratner from participation and limiting the size of the replacement building.  If the list of bullet points below appears detailed I guess that flows from the many years I spent in public service as a government lawyer negotiating to protect the public interest.  (When I was around that was the policy.)

I was going to ask whether the Brooklyn Heights Association was planning to insist on the following:
    •    No developer-driven “public/private” partnerships to build a new library to replace the existing one.  (That’s only if it is ultimately determined that it is a good idea to tear down the existing library to redevelop the site.)  In shorthand terms that means that the replacement building, particularly the library would be fully designed before it is bid.  Among other things this would curtail possibilities for bait and switching.

    •    Forest City Ratner, a developer who has a proven track record of abusing the so-called “public/private” partnerships, should be blackballed and barred from bidding on the property.  Other developers with a bad record can be similarly barred form bidding.  (Barring Ratner from bidding also has the public policy benefit of no further government promotion of the government-sponsored Ratner mega-monopoly.  Besides, Forest City Ratner should not undertake anything new in the city until Atlantic Yards is either turned over to other developers or finished.)

    •    There should be multiple developer bids for the property, at least six or more.  (The city should not be telling other developers not to bid via behind-the-scenes messages and absurdly short bid-response time frames.  In a truly open bid environment you will get lost of bids.)

    •    The library should not be shrunk in size to something less than exists now.  As any redevelopment would be part of an ongoing increasing in density in Brooklyn Heights and the surrounding area, thought should be given to specifying that any replacement library should be larger in size commensurate with neighborhood growth.

    •    The Business and Career library should not be moved from its Downtown Brooklyn site in the Central Business District, a hub of transportation, and location near the universities.

    •    There should be no selling off of any real estate used for libraries until appropriate funding to the library system has been restored.  This should be an absolute precondition and by taking this position it will put the Brooklyn Heights Association where its should be in terms of providing a united front of communities around the city, not just looking out for an enclave of a neighborhood.

    •      The library should be sold with a deed that specifies:
    •      The existing zoning cannot be changed to permit a bigger building, for instance greater density than presently permitted.  Similarly, the ability to seek variances to do the same sort of thing should also be hemmed in.
    •        Notwithstanding any imports or transfers of development rights the building will not be taller/bigger than the Brooklyn Heights Association thinks it should be, perhaps the 40 stories that have apparently been the subject of some discussion internally amongst library personnel, maybe something less, 35 stories or 28, whatever.

    •        That provision would be enforceable by the city (meaning more money would have to be paid if it was ever waived) and, for insurance purposes, would also be enforceable by the Brooklyn Heights Association.
    •    Any temporary transition library would have to be open at least as soon as the existing library were to close.  It would have to be substantially as good, not smaller and not have less staff.  So long as this is assured, assurance that the new library will open within the predicted time frame will be relatively unimportant.  It should be recognized that any additional costs of having the temporary transition library reduce the benefit of the transaction and should therefore be identified in advance.  The proceeds from the sale of the property should exceed these costs.  In addition, if the new library is not in place by the agreed upon date then all of those additional costs should be borne by the developer from that date on.  That will also amount to an incentive to complete the reconstruction on time.

    •    Normal construction rules should apply (not like the Atlantic Yards Ratner/Prokhorov “Barclays” arena).  There shouldn’t be special permissions for the developer to engage in loud and brightly illuminated construction 24/7.   The Brooklyn Heights Association should be able to enforce compliance.
Accountability of  Elected Officials To The Public And The BHA

Could the Brooklyn Heights Association demand all of the above?  Absolutely, and they should demand each and every one of the above.  That’s what a neighborhood association is for.  Was the Brooklyn Heights Association once able to demand that the neighborhood not be bulldozed for urban renewal?  Indeed, it once did and it largely (thoughnot completely) succeeded.

This is not the same thing as a private developer looking to build a project as of right where the only restrictions would be the zoning code.  These are public assets that are being dealt with, the land underneath the library and the library itself.

The real estate belongs to the city.  As such the mayor and the City Council need to decide how and whether it is appropriate to dispose of the property, and specify, as they regularly do, what deed and other restrictions should apply.  The mayor and the city council are accountable to the public (which includes the Brooklyn Heights Association) in this process and will be subject to a ULURP review so that the public can make all of these recommendations.

The library system (this part of it being the Brooklyn Public Library sub-system) owns the library assets other than the real estate.  For all intents and purposes the current library "boss" is the current mayor, who appoints almost a third of the system trustees.  The same number are appointed by the current Brooklyn Borough President, whose entertainment charities are funded by the mayor’s personal private Bloomberg L.P. “charities” and by the Mayor’s Fund of The City of New York which the mayor controls.  And the library depends on the mayor for its operating funds.  The public, including the Brooklyn Heights Association, is entitled to demand accountability.

If there is a planned no-bid crony-capitalist deal with Ratner now in the works it might actually die on the vine when made subject to the above standards.  That, however, would not be a bad thing.  It would be a god thing.  If there is a deal to be made that wold actually generate enough benefit to make it genuinely worthwhile to the community it would survive these tests.

More information and links respecting what is happening with the libraries can be found here:
    •    Saturday, February 9, 2013, Libraries That Are Now Supposedly “Dilapidated” Were Just Renovated: And Are Developers’ Real Estate Deals More Important Than Bryant Park?
The Petitions

Here are the two petitions concerning keeping LICH open and preserving the libraries I recommend everyone sign.  I would think that because the essential issues are intrinsically the same anyone interested in signing and passing around one of the petitions would also be interested in signing and passing around the other.
    •    Save New York City Libraries From Bloomberg Developer Destruction

    •    Governor Andrew Cuomo and NYS Health Department Commissioner Dr. Nirav Shah : Keep University Hospital Brooklyn at Long Island College Hospital open, by  Assemblywoman Joan Millman

Atlantic Yards Report Fine Tunes Calculation Of Mounting Land Subsidies For “Barclays” Arena

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Bloomberg arriving to give his State of the City Address at the "Barclay" arena
Mayor $25 Billion-and-counting-in-personal-wealth-since-entering-politics Bloomberg is visiting the piled-up pirate plunder of the so-called “Barclays” arena today to deliver his (last?) State of the City Address.  Norman Oder’s Atlantic Yards Report today has new calculations posted about the freebies handed out to Ratner for that Ratner/Prokhorov arena just in terms of land: $124 million?  See: Thursday, February 14, 2013, Uncounted savings on the Barclays Center: perhaps $124 million in free land for developer Forest City Ratner.

Mr. Oder carefully adds updates, just with respect to city land giveaways for the arena, the cost-of-subsidy-to-Ratner calculations Noticing New York has addressed on previous occasions: See: Wednesday, October 10, 2012, Weighing The Change In Brooklyn: The True Cost Of “Barclays” Center Glitter, The Cost Of “Barclays” Center Tickets and Monday, February 8, 2010, Award of No-Bid Mega-Monopoly Means Forest City Ratner Hopes To Claim an Awful Lot of Housing Subsidy, ALSO Without Bid.

The total cost of subsidies to Ratner with respect to just 22 acres out of the 30+ contiguous acres of the Ratner Atlantic Yards mega-monopoly is in the billions ($2 to $3 billion).  No one has yet tried to aggregate the cost of the Ratner subsidies for the entire 30+ contiguous acres, not Noticing New York, not Atlantic Yards Report, not the New York City Independent Budget Office, (IBO).
                               
In other words, if the money flowing into “Barclays” arena for land giveaways were redirected into the city libraries it would make all the Bloomberg-manufacturedfinancial problems of the libraries evaporate.  (Manufactured to create real estate deals.)

It would not be nearly as important to pay attention to the almost obsessively fine-tuned calculations Mr. Oder presents with respect to the arena land giveaways if this heap of “uncounted” subsidies had not been given to Ratner without competitive bid.  More than once, the MTA, the city, and ESDC made it very clear they did not want an effective bid process bringing in alternative bidders to compete with Forest City Ratner. . .

. . . This was important on Day One when the deal was intentionally structured as a “private-public” partnership with Forest City Ratner, where the priority was to set up and then protect a Ratner monopoly on the development opportunity of all those multiple acres and it was subsequently important as the terms of the deal with Ratner have been continually and malleably shifted to confer even greater benefit on Ratner.

Taking such a careful look at the actual amount of these subsidies would hardly matter if Atlantic Yards, like the properly-managed Battery Park City, was carved into multiple building sites and bid out to multiple developers.  That’s just what the community is demanding and it can still be done with the rest of the enormous site.  And if that is done we can start paying for essential city services like libraries.

Instead, it looks like Bloomberg wants the city to sell off city libraries, including the Brooklyn Heights branch and downtown business library, and the Pacific Street library, likely enough to Forest City Ratner, in a “private-public partnership” so that we can be faced with all sorts of other deep, hidden subsidies to the likes of Ratner that are a challenge to ferret out and properly count.

Last Night’s Community Meeting To Save Long Island College Hospital- Pictures And The Big Picture

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One segment of last night's crowd convened to save LICH
Last night’s “Community Forum on the Future of Long Island College Hospital” (LICH), really a rally in support of saving the hospital with the dissemination of some strategy, was very well attended.  (It was held at the Kane Street Synagogue, 236 Kane Street in Cobble Hill, Brooklyn.)

I am going to let the images here speak for themselves about that.

What I heard at the meeting was this:
    •    The community needs its hospital.
    •    The doctors and financial staff affiliated with the hospital are pretty well convinced they won’t have problems operating the hospital in the financial black if SUNY Downstate would just leave them alone to do it, thank you very much.
    •    That the integration of LICH into the SUNY Downstate system, which was ostensibly for the purpose of ensuring the future of LICH, has had the opposite effect.
    •    That instead of a good faith effort to run LICH as a successful hospital, a plan of asset stripping was being implemented almost immediately.  That meant, among other things, that no money was invested in the hospital with any significant expenditures being made (theoretically for the hospital) directed exclusively to portable assets that could easily be removed from the site when the secretly envisioned closure that was being worked toward takes effect.
    •    That to those in power pursuing this course of action, the attraction of shutting the hospital down  is to create a real estate deal, a sell-off, that will strip the real estate as the final asset out of the health care resources available in the surrounding neighborhood.   This doesn’t recognize that, when used for a necessary community hospital, the real estate has greater value to Brooklyn’s Northwest communities than the construction of more high-end condos.  (Elsewhere in Brooklyn, including at the other end of Brooklyn Heights, - with sort of a bookending effect- public property is similarly being sold off to shrink the library system for the purpose of creating real estate deals.)
More analysis and a petition to prevent the closure of the hospital is available here: Wednesday, February 13, 2013, One-Stop Petition Shopping: Report On The Brooklyn Heights Association Annual Meeting, LICH and Libraries.
The crowd standing to chant "Save LICH"
State Assembly Member Joan Millman, whose petition is available to sign to save LICH, addressing the crowd
Panoramic collage of those Millman is addressing  (click to enlarge)
 
Senator Daniel Squadron
At the very back from the viewpoint of Lincoln Restler
Briefing press
Filled to the back
Middle
Front
Signs at the ready to be raised

If Our Besieged Libraries Could Speak For Themselves: Maybe They Do! A Petition And Efforts To Save New York’s Libraries From Developer Deals

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Wall of Brooklyn Heights Library reading: All that come here to seek treasure will not take away gold but the seeker after truth and instruction will find that which will enrich the mind and heart
Breaking news!  The Brooklyn Public Library has announced that (like the New York Public Library system administrating suchservices in Manhattan, the Bronx and Staten Island) it's got libraries to sell!. .

. . . the libraries for sale we have been officially informed about (at this time- there are more we haven't been told about) are the local branch library and Career and Business library in its Brooklyn Heights building on the border of Brooklyn’s Downtown Central Business District, and the Pacific branch library at Pacific Street and 4th Avenue just yards away from the new deeply subsidized “Barclays” arena.

These two Brooklyn library sites both happen to be next to what are now Forest City Ratner-owned properties (acquired with government assistance and no bids).   Through its spokesperson, the BPL has asserted, in absolute terms, that it envisions it may sell the library property to Forest City Ratner in what it would foresee to be a “public-private partnership,” notwithstanding that Forest City Ratner has notorious expertise in abusing such relationships that are actually better described as developer-driven private-public partnerships where the private developers take over and privately exercise government functions.

Not disqualifying and then actuallygoing into such a partnership with Forest City Ratner, of all possible choices, would be a curious choice to initiate (and model) what the Brooklyn Public Library describes in its (top-down designed) strategic plan as the future program for all its real estate: The BPL: “will leverage its over one million square feet of real estate by launching partnerships . . .”

“Leverage” is a clever, banker-ish sounding term, used here to mean nothing more than “sell,” even if it strives for the promising ring of being something more.  That's because system libraries are owned by the city (not the BPL), which takes any money whenever property is sold off.  It can't be helped (see "fungibility").  For the last several years Mayor Bloomberg has established a pretty good record of withholding city funds from the libraries even as usage is way up.  Some would say Bloomberg just doesn’t care about libraries.  Others would say he consciously decided to starve the system into submission, the kind that forces the sort of  “creative” thinking that results in sale of library real estate and shrinkage.

Chart from Center From Urban Future report showing sharp decline in funding against escalating use.   That bump in funding? Read on.
Those suspecting the latter would be inclined to observe (see chart) how the decline of city funding for libraries coincided with the adoption of the strategic plan to "leverage/sell" them even while usage was going way up.  In other words, a strategy of "demolition by neglect" with library system officials racing to allege that buildings are more deteriorated than is really true.  The greatest shame of such a plan is that it, even if it shakes loose a few real estate deals, maybe a few every year, it is a travesty to continually drive all libraries and the entire system into the ground financially.

If library real estate gets sold, some juicy real estate deals can get handed out to the always influential real estate industry, with profits that can be particularly sweet if those deals are handed out in the form of developer-driven private-public partnerships that preclude effective competitive bids to protect the public.           

The lure of sweet deals. . . Can libraries protect themselves?

If they could, they would no doubt do so with words.

There is something about the physicalization of words.  We associate it with libraries.

Libraries are not places like a politician’s rally where spoken words just wash over us, soon to disappear into the ether of broken and forgotten promises.  Words exist solidly in libraries with a sense of permanence and history.

We also associate the physicality of words with magic, with faith, commitment and with binding moral oaths, like the phylacteries worn by observant Jews during weekday morning prayers, containing parchment with verses from the Torah, or the carefully phrased inscriptions inside rings and lockets, the Bibles we swear upon before delivering legal testimony in court. . . . In much the same way we often inscribe our buildings with words, much as if those carved words will serve as talismans consecrating our hopes of how a space, a place or building will be used.

The Brooklyn Heights library, now so greedily eyed for a lucrative developer partnership that would shrink it, is inscribed (see picture above) with a pointed warning that seems as if it was presciently worded to ward off any ill-motivated real estate developer with the building in its sights:
All that come here to seek treasure will not take away gold but the seeker after truth and instruction will find that which will enrich the mind and heart
Foreground: The lion Patience , of Patience and Fortitude fame, in front of 42nd Street Research Library whose research stacks will be sacrificed.  Background:  Mid-Manhattan Library that will be sold in system shrinkage plans
In Manhattan, the Central Library Plan involving a consolidating shrinkage and sell-off of important Manhattan libraries is further along than the plan to sell the Brooklyn Heights libraries into a developer-driven private-public partnership.  Two of the four Manhattan libraries involved in that (never fully publicly revealed or discussed ) plan for consolidation, shrinkage and library real estate sell-off are the library's landmark main building at Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street.and the Mid-Manhattan circulation and branch library across Fifth Avenue. . .

. . .As it so happens those libraries too might gain protection from the aspirational physical words surrounding them, so much so that a petition (now with more than 7000 signatures in less than two weeks) incorporates some of those words in making its case to protect the libraries:
“The knowledge of different literature frees one from the tyranny of a few”
          -Jose Marti
The quote is just one of many on a series of plaques on 41st Street’s Library Walk (the local street sign proclaims the street to be “Library Way”) that leads to the libraries from the east.

The library petition (click on link to go to the page where you can sign) is:
I should disclose that the petition was posted by wife when she became passionate about doing something about these library sales after attending the meeting where plans to sell off the Brooklyn Heights library site were described to the community for the first time.

There are many other plaques along Library Walk, including multiple others with quotes that are similarly appropriate in defending the value of libraries and providing the reasons they should be spared and protectedfrom this attack by those who put other interests ahead of them.  (Click to enlarge any image below- And there is more of this article following the quotes and images.)
 
“Books are the treasured wealth of the world and the fit inheritance of generations and nations.”
    Henry David Thoreau

“Information is light.  Information, itself, about anything, is light.”
    Tom Stoppard (Night and Day)
“Where the press is free and everyman able to read, all is safe.”
    Thomas Jefferson
“I want everyone to be smart.  As smart as they can be.   A world of ignorant people is just too dangerous to live in.”
    Garson Kanin (Born Yesterday)
“There are words like Freedom
Sweet and wonderful to say,
On my heartstrings freedom sings
All day every day.

There are words like Liberty
That almost makes me cry,
If you had known what I know
You would know why.”
    Langston Hughes
“Truth exists. Only falsehood has to be invented.”
    George Braque
“If you do not tell the truth about yourself, you cannot tell it about other people.”
    Virginia Woolf
“...the reading of good books is like a conversation with the best men of past centuries—“
    René Descartes

“In the reading room in the New York Public Library
All sorts of souls were bent over silence reading the past,
Or the present, or maybe it was the future, patrons
Devoted to silence and the flowering of the imagination...”
    Richard Eberhart, (“Reading Room: The New York Public Library”)

Plaques like this are at the end and the beginning of Library Walk
Another brass insert into the sidewalk of Library Walk, a notice defending the line between private and public property, in this case for the private property owner's sake.
Just in case the libraries can’t actually speak with sufficient eloquence on their own behalf in this fashion, there are others have been speaking up for them.

Ada Louise Huxtable, famously the first architectural critic for the New York Times for whom that job was created, and Michael Kimmelman, who holds that Times position now, both wrote excoriations of the Central Library plan.   It was Ada Lousie Huxtable’s very last column, written for the Wall Street Journal, just weeks before her death:
•    Wall Street Journal:Undertaking Its Destruction, by Ada Louise Huxtable, December 3, 2012.
“There is no more important landmark building in New York than the New York Public Library, known to New Yorkers simply as the 42nd Street Library, one of the world's greatest research institutions. Completed in 1911 . . . . it is an architectural masterpiece. Yet it is about to undertake its own destruction. The library is on a fast track to demolish the seven floors of stacks just below the magnificent, two-block-long Rose Reading Room for a $300 million restructuring referred to as the Central Library Plan.”
•    New York Times:Critic’s Notebook- In Renderings for a Library Landmark, Stacks of Questions, by Michael Kimmelman, January 29, 2013.
“this potential Alamo of engineering, architecture and finance would be irresponsible. . . a not-uncommon phenomenon among cultural boards, a form of architectural Stockholm syndrome.”
There is another separate petition (currently over 1300 signatures) by the Committee to Save the New York Public Library that has been up for some time that specifically opposes the Central Library Plan against which Huxtable and Kimmelman directed ire:

    Anthony W. Marx: Reconsider the $350 million plan to remake NYC's landmark central library

A new Center For An Urban Future report just out this January makes clear how usage of the city’s libraries is way up even as they are being defunded and having to keep shorter hours.
•    Center For An Urban Future:  Report - Branches of Opportunity, by David Giles, January 2013
[Libraries] “have experienced a 40 percent spike in the number of people attending programs and a 59 percent increase in circulation over the past decade”
The report, which eloquently describes in detail why New Yorkers are flocking to libraries, tells us that despite cutbacks “New York’s three systems all experienced higher program attendance levels than any other system except Toronto.”   It also tells us that we fund our libraries at a level where we keep our libraries open less than Detroit- Detroit is nearly bankrupt; we are a wealthy, growing city.
Chart from the Independent Budget Office- Adjustments for inflation (per the Urban Future report) show downturn in starkest relief.  The 2009 bump?  Keep reading
The New York City Independent Budget Office (IBO) pointed out how underfunding by Mayor Bloomberg is jeopardizing the system’s libraries.
•    New York City Independent Budget Office:  Funding Cuts Could Shelve Many Library Branches, by Kate Maher and Doug Turetsky, April 13, 2011 
“The funding fall-off is already taking a toll on the city’s three library systems, particularly the systems in Brooklyn and Queens.” . . .“more than three dozen branch libraries may be closed.”
The IBO warned that Mayor Bloomberg was on a course to bring the already waning city funding for New York’s three library systems to its “lowest level since the 1990s.”

Aside from the kudos Bloomberg may get from real estate developer friends, our powerful mayor has struck out on a lonely course in his agenda to defund the libraries: The IBO pointed out that the city’s 59 community boards ranked library services their “third highest budget concern” (rising up from number seven in the face of the Bloomberg cuts and “Brooklyn’s community boards ranked libraries their top priority.”

The bump up in that graph?  Remember that 2009 was a city election year. . . In fact, 2009 was that same election year when Bloomberg spent more than $105 million of his personal funds in direct campaign expenditures to overturn City Charter term limits and run for his third term as mayor.  (That’s not to mention more than a half billion Bloomberg spent from his personal fortune to exert his influence and win the election in other ways.)  Both the mayor and City Council members were running for new and extended terms in that election.

Libraries are not expensive either in absolute terms or relative to other things or their substantial benefit to communities.  Information coming from The Albert Shanker Institute about libraries across the U.S. makes this clear.
•    The Albert Shanker Institute:  The High Cost Of Closing Public Libraries, by Matthew Di Carlo, April 18, 2011
In fiscal year 2008 (again, according to the U.S. Census Bureau), there were roughly 9,300 public libraries in the U.S., with a total cost of around 10.7 billion dollars. That figure represents roughly 0.4 percent – four tenths of one percent – of all state and local government expenditures. On a per capita basis, this is about 35 dollars per person.
Look at the figures in the Center For An Urban Future report: $274 million for operations?  That’s far less than Bloomberg gave out of his personal funds to Johns Hopkins in January.  Overall, he has now given $1.1 billion to Johns Hopkins as of this year.

That Shanker Institute article also makes the point that state- and local-level analyses “have found that for every dollar we spent on public libraries, the public realizes about 3-5 dollars in benefits.”

NYC’s budget is over $50 billion a year.  The Donnell Library one-shot sale, with all its disruptions to the system and the community, grossed only $67.4 million in July 2011 (for which you don’t see a bump up in spending).  As a percentage of the city’s budget that involves decimal places of a single percentage point (.235%).

From the Center For an Urban Future Report: More people visited public libraries in New York than every major sports team and every major cultural institution combined.  But we are subsidizing those other institutions, (including glaring examples like Yankee Stadium and the “Barclays” arena) much more deeply!

To sum up and to restate the reason for the petition to save the libraries, ensuring that libraries be properly funded rather than sold off for development:
Mayor Bloomberg is defunding New York libraries at a time of increasing public use, population growth and increased city wealth, shrinking our library system to create real estate deals for wealthy real estate developers at a time of cutbacks in education and escalating disparities in opportunity.  It’s an unjust and shortsighted plan that will ultimately hurt New York City’s economy and competitiveness.
Once again, here is that petition you can sign:
Save New York City Libraries From Bloomberg Developer Destruction 
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