Category Archives: Issues and Ideas

My take on the great debates of the urban policy world

Durham, The City As A Bull

I couldn’t talk about Raleigh without talking about Durham. Durham is known locally as the Bull City. Looking at the logic I applied to Raleigh, I found that Durham has community characteristics that resemble it’s nickname. These characteristics are not so much in how the city is shaped, but how the city has been shaped by it’s people.

First, the city has a lot of spunk. From the early days of being the Black Wall Street and a tobacco and textile capital, to the current start-up culture brewing downtown, Durham has been a trendsetter and a city of spunk.

Secondly, the city has a lot of fight. For years, especially after neighborhoods were destroyed to build the Durham Freeway, the city has had to fight to maintain a good image. Major crime activity and the image that created loomed over the city for years. Now, Durham is turning around, with neighborhoods all over the city regaining prominence and new companies looking to Durham as the place that the want to start.

Finally, the city has a heart. People wrote Durham off for years. However, it didn’t mean that people that loved the city didn’t stay and make it better. While there’s a lot of attention coming to the start-ups and business opportunities, historians such as John Hope Franklin were able to base their life’s work there and build pillars of history, along with the people of Hayti, who never stopped believing and organizing their communities.

And come to think of it, if you take a look at the map again. There is kind of a bull shape in there. Using the Durham Freeway as the arch of it’s back, RTP as a tail, Downtown as a heart and Duke and NC Central as horns(partially symbolizing brains too) along with Northgate, Ninth Street, Southpoint and South Square as legs, we have a rough bull shape in the geography.

But then again, it’s really what’s inside that makes Durham bullish and ready to seize the day.

Durhamians (I don’t like the other term, it sounds like we are parasites), new, old and somewhere in between. Tell me what you think. Be sure to join me on Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest. I’m also going to be in Chapel Hill on April 21st speaking on a panel on the reverse migration of African-Americans. Find out more about where I’m going and speaking this spring.

The Great Placemaking Thing About Starbucks

I know I have readers that are completely anti-Starbucks.  The vitriol is spewed along with  the hate of chain stores, fatty food, sprawl, cars and everything else a good Charter-believing New Urbanist is supposed to hate.

I used to be you. Then I found out the place sold really good tea and cold drinks. My dumb very young professional self thought the only thing Starbucks sold was gourmet coffee. This drove an ex boss of mine crazy. I was working in  start-up culture, why didn’t I like Starbucks?

Well, it’s been four years and as I type this in Starbucks, where I also meet with another boss of mine on certain mornings, I can’t help but think about what a salvation this place has been. Because of Starbucks, I feel ok going into other coffee shops, ordering other non-coffee drinks and getting work done. The Starbucks I regularly frequent is on the side of town that is mostly black and mostly low-income or solid middle class. Yet, thanks to a location near a highway, it’s both convenient for the farmers, the road-warriors, the Walmart shoppers and the “boys from the hood” nearby.

Starbucks is really a beacon in the sky in many neighborhoods without a coffee shop culture. In some places, the tipping point for local, green-oriented commerce has not swung back the other way. Starbucks serves a a greener version of McDonald’s for those of us who have to swing through multiple towns on a regular basis.

Yet, I know there are better options. However, sometimes you have to start at zero. Be happy there’s at least some place to go where you can grab a hot or cold beverage, a piece of cake and sit with a book vibing to soft jazz music. A place where we can just go talk to our neighbors without being chased out after three hours.

A town square, despite it’s shape and form.

Hate Starbucks? Want to tell me more about your favorite local coffee shop(I love those too!) Or just want to join in on the ongoing conversation? Follow me on Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest. Or join me in person at one of these upcoming events.

The Black Urbanist Spring 2012 Appearance Schedule and Reader Survey

As I promised in my last post on Thursday, I am now releasing my reader’s survey and also my event schedule for the spring. At the latter two events I am on the program and at the Urban Design Conference I’ll be in the crowd and liveblogging.

Also, if you want me to come speak on something or if you have something you want to share in this space, fill out the survey and let me know.

For those of you on mobile devices, the plain text of my schedule and the survey questions is below, followed by the Google plugins for those of you on slightly more powerful devices. You can either leave your answers in the comments or email me at theblackurbanist(at)gmail.com

Thanks in advance for filling out the survey and I hope to see you at one of these upcoming events.

Schedule of Events
March 17th- NCSU Urban Design Conference in Raleigh- liveblogging and networking
April 20th- UNC Global South Conference- Speaking on the reverse migration of African-Americans
May 9-12- CNU 20 in West Palm Beach- Speaking on Killing the Urban Inferiority Complex and live blogging on Next American City

Survey Questions
-How do you interact with the Black Urbanist?(Facebook, Twitter, in-person,RSS, website, mobile devices, laptop/desktop)
-What types of content do you enjoy the most?
-What would you like for me to talk more about(specific issues, initiatives, personal stories, etc.)?
-Would you like to be featured via a 5 Questions Segment on the blog?
-Would you like to guest post on the blog?
-Would you like for me to speak at your event?
-Would you be willing to donate to keep the Black Urbanist going?

The Next Steps- Moving Past Black History Month in My Planning Practice

Sankofa Bird Image

I originally planed to re-post my entire series on Black History Month. However, as the month progressed, I’ve been inspired to take things a step further.

When I started this project in October 2010, I was looking to give a voice to African-Americans who have technical and professional backgrounds in urban planning. I also wanted to marry that voice with that of the members of the community who have been tireless fighters for environmental justice and equity.

I never imagined that I would meet and interact with so many leaders all stripes and colors, committed to making the world a better place. We have a long way to go to make sure all neighborhoods are safe, multi-modal and complete. However, I have no doubts that the people I have met and will meet are committed to making this happen in our planning departments, architecture firms, civil engineering firms, universities and out in the streets, homes, places of worship, schools, and shopping centers where it needs to happen the most.

With that thought in mind, I couldn’t just re-post my limited scope of what’s next and who’s making waves this year. While this may not name people by name, the goal is to continue to honor the work of people on a daily basis. I like many scholars and commentators believe that Black History Month is limiting. We should call it Black Heritage Month and use it to charge up our communities to enact change.

So how am I moving forward in my practice? First of all, I am embracing the fact that the only label I have on it is what sits on top of this page. Even then, that label only states the obvious. I count as part of my circle those who see form-based, economic, political, faith and educational solutions to community problems. I believe that we fail when only look at our communities through one lens. While I’ll continue to talk about technical issues such as transit oriented development, I will also be highlighting here and on Facebook and Twitter more “inferiority complex” beaters such as communities who turn their schools around and suburban neighbors who turn their front yards into community gardens.

Secondly, I’ll also be answering questions you have. Be on the lookout for my first ever reader survey. I want to know who my community really is. I have some idea from Google Analytics and from the likes and re-tweets, but I know that we are so much stronger. I’ll be releasing my Spring 2012 event schedule as well, so we can meet in person if we haven’t already.

Lastly, I am working on a vision I have of creating my own third space and creating third spaces for others. For those unfamiliar with the term, a third space is a place outside of home and work where people can gather for social opportunities. Coffee shops, churches and community centers serve this purpose in many communities. However, with the loss of Borders and smaller bookstores continuing to close, we are losing a good deal of these spaces. I want to help create another and replicate the model in a sustainable and just manner.

I want to end with the principle of Sankofa, which states that it is not taboo to go back and reach for what you have in order to move forward. I just finished reaching back and  I am ready to go forward.

This is a post of the Black Urbanist, a project of grassroots planner and writer Kristen Jeffers to create real community. If you enjoyed what you read, please follow The Black Urbanist on Facebook(www.facebook.com/theblackurbanist) or Twitter(www.twitter.com/blackurbanist) and share with your friends, family and colleagues.

The Beginings of the Black Experience in Community Development

For Black History Month, I am reposting my series on the Black Experience in Community Development, as well as my motivation for writing this blog. Also, I am celebrating leaders in community development on my Facebook page This is post one, a brief history.

As planning and architecture in their modern notions did not come into being into well into the late 19th and early 20th century, many of the modern terminology for neighborhoods, architecture and neighborhoods did not exist. Therefore, I’m going to use a few major historical periods to describe how black families interacted in their built environment.

Slavery

Before slavery, those who would become African-Americans lived in close-knit villages, where they farmed,hunted, educated themselves, worshiped and built community. Everyone knew everyone and everyone helped each other as much as possible,pending no ethnic or tribal conflict. Slavery uprooted this institution, but only temporarily.  Although plantations in themselves are an example of self-sustain enterprise, Blacks were forced to maintain this structure, for no pay and substandard housing and accommodations. However, they recreated their own family structures on the plantations and eventually helped themselves escape and be freed.

Segregation

During the Jim Crow years, African-Americans had limited opportunities to patronize mainstream (read: white-owned) businesses. If the business served them at all, it was at the back door or on one side, but not the other. For this purpose a whole network of black owned service businesses existed. These businesses were often nearby residences, churches and schools, such that a walkable community was formed. This dense community also provided a return to the village concept of African villages.  In addition, blacks, along with huge chunks of the general population at this time rode buses in high numbers. Because of the reliance on public transportation, the Montgomery Bus Boycott was a major economic, as well as social and political statement.

Urban Renewal

After World War II, the FHA funding patterns, Interstate Highway funding and building and other urban renewal policies picked up steam. However, these policies supported growth into the suburbs, where often, due to the policy of redlining, blacks were kept out of certain neighborhoods. In addition to being kept from going to the suburbs, black neighborhoods were often seen as slums, blighted or just inferior due to already evident prejudices. Thousands of neighborhoods were shut off or destroyed thanks to suburban highway projects and mass teardowns, which in some cases remained as vacant fields or empty storefronts.  Money or support moved to the suburbs, which were seen as the future of development. Whites fled inner-city neighborhoods aided by Federal Housing Administration mortgages with low rates and restrictive covenants, preventing Blacks from moving along with the white families. Blacks left behind were ignored and once clean and safe neighborhoods declined. Many Blacks were forced into government housing when displaced by “urban renewal” projects. Over the years, “the projects” became synonymous with drug activity, welfare queens and over-all laziness. When Blacks were allowed to move into suburbs, it was to those that were all Black or in the process of becoming all Black. The flight to the suburbs of professional Blacks was the death knell of many neighborhoods.

However in recent years, glimmers of hope have appeared in traditionally black neighborhoods, as well as a number of significant green-living movements. Stay tuned to find out more about those movements, as well as steps we can take to completely include blacks and other people of color into beneficial sustainable community measures.

Five Ways to Kill the Inferiority Complex in Community Building

Loser

I think a major layer of community building is the inferiority complex. I’m seeing it again as we are preparing to welcome Trader Joes into our community. We spend too much time thinking we need to spend money on expensive stadiums and art centers to be more urbane. If we are over that demon, we bemoan not having an H&M, Shake Shack, Trader Joes or whatever chain store, restaurant or “hot new establishment” that likes to over-hype themselves and make us think we are less than as a city without them.

I like to break down the battle within our civic psyches as the recognition of the setting and the unknown lights. I define the setting as the physical, cultural and emotional space of our cities, that other people compare and judge. It’s what already exists, but we see as being mundane or even demeaning. The unknown lights can also be mundane for some, but they are more positive activities. They are also activities that would be celebrated, if they were in a different form or from a different place.

For my hometown of Greensboro, the setting is:
-A mid sized city (270,000) in the traditional United States South (North Carolina)
-Economic devastation, brought on by the loss of textile manufacturing, something that established Greensboro as a worldwide leader.
-Racial polarization, from key incidents in 1960, 1979 and as city residents have lost jobs and look for explanations
-A shifting center of wealth to the northwest quadrant and outside of the city limits into townships that now serve as bedroom community suburbs.
-A lack of vision for many poor and middle class inner-city neighborhoods, including residential downtown
-An airport that is only a connector and not a hub

And our unknown lights are:
-A school system that is graduating 83% of its students and 100% of those that attend its alternative schools, which are run much like magnet schools in other districts.
-A very vibrant and equal local food market. Co-ops, farmers markets, community gardens and gourmet grocery continues to grow. Communities are mobilizing to provide links to fresh food and necessities.
-A vibrant arts community, with city funded arts classes, an award-winning regional theater company, a unique museum project funded by the Andy Warhol Foundation,neighborhood street festivals and independent handmade markets
-Low-cost downtown living
-Highway connections to larger cities and the entire nation
-Halfway(3 hours each way) to the beach and to the mountains

While some of the setting and the unknown lights are subjective, they are often based on objective notions of how cities run or people think they should be run and built. Killing this complex will help us all appreciate the homegrown elements of community and urbanism we already have. We also may save time and money by not running out to build just to be politically correct or keep up with the Jones’.

So I leave you with your weapons to destroy your city’s inferiority complex.

-Identify your setting and your unknown lights
-Take one part of the setting, gather a group and work on fixing it
-Take one unknown light and work on making it known
-Stop over-comparing your community to the point of disrepair and accidental destruction
-Be creative and repeat the other steps often to fix problems and encourage your community.

What is your setting? What are your unknown lights? What will it take to get rid of the inferiority complex in your city?

Image credit: Flickr user Gary Junglingunder a
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0) license

Raleigh: The City as an Oak Tree

Shimmer Wall

I spent my New Years weekend in my adopted hometown of Raleigh. I watched as they dropped an acorn to ring in the New Year, a nod to the city’s designation of the “City of Oaks”. I hung around for a couple of extra days as well to chill out. As part of my vacation, I was banned from using my computer or tablet and ordered to go window-shop and relax.While on that 24 hour sabbatical from my most trusted device, I begin to think about how Raleigh itself has the planning structure of a tree.

Downtown literally is at the bottom of the city, forming the roots. Then, the universities and the older suburbs inside of the beltline(I-440) make up the trunk of the tree. All of the suburban roads that start at the beltline (Glenwood Ave. Extension(US 70), Wake Forest, Six Forks, Capital, Falls of Neuse, New Bern, etc.) make up the branches.  Occasionally, you have a Milbrook or a Lynn Rd as cross branches and the branches are sort of framed between the beltlines(I-540 is the outer beltline).

With this pattern in mind, other parts of Raleigh’s sprawl come into play. Each branch has a lot of flowers(flowers being grocery, service retail, schools, churches and occasionally a mall). Branches also have many, many leaves (residential space). Yet, just like a real tree, some branches connect, but others never will meet. Branches will fall, but they return to life. I think of both downtown and North Hills as examples. 12-13 years ago, both were almost dead, now they are the center of a new energy. The universities and their innovations, as well as the laws made at the General Assembly water the roots and seeds that fall from the branches fuel nearby areas (RTP, Cary, Durham).

What do you think? What implications does this idea have on planning for the future in Raleigh? Does this bring some sense into the chaos that Raleigh seems to be sometimes?

Photo Above of the Shimmer Wall of the Raleigh Convention Center. Credit: Flickr user JeffreylCohen via a CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 license.

My Four Wishes for the Urban Fabric, 2012 Edition

Stars!!!

Last year, I wrote a list of wishes for 2011. Looking back, a number of those wishes have come true. The Nussbaum Center for Entrepreneurship, a beloved start-up incubator, is set to get remodeled and become bigger and better.We have the promise of HondaJet expanding in Greensboro. I witnessed the Greensboro City Council get better from the front lines.  Trader Joe’s and Whole Foods are set to arrive. More apartments are getting built downtown. My car is paid off.

With some of my wishes fulfilled, now I look ahead to my 2012 wishes for the urban fabric. These wishes are a bit more personal, as I see myself as having a greater responsibility for advocating for an urban future.

Walking and Biking More (Even When It’s Cold and Rainy)

I got better about walking last year. When I am downtown, I make it a point to only park once. I attempted to purchase a bike, but it was just the wrong time and the wrong price to do so. This year, I’m just going to walk. I may live in a suburban area, but it will not stop me from walking the quiet streets. I’ll park farther from the door of my office. I’ll use airport shuttles and public transport when I visit places that have great systems. And I’ll keep calling for places that don’t to get their act together.

Becoming More Integrated Into the Better Places Movement (Formerly known as New Urbanism, Smart Growth, Third Spaces, Sustainable Communities and Community Development)

I was happy to see that the New Urban Network has become the Better!Cities and Towns site. If you are reading this on the site, you’ll notice I changed my tagline. If not, the tagline is now “A young black woman’s attempt to create real community.”  I also am working to broaden my own voice. Last year it was great to ride the novelty of being the Black Urbanist, however, this year I am working to add even more meat and raise awareness of more community issues. Accessibility and shared community need to be something all income levels enjoy. While people love having larger homes, they also like having options to walk to corner stores with fresh fruit and safe places to gather that aren’t geared to commercialism or privatized to the point of no entry. That’s my crusade for this year and I will be taking it to a number of venues, to be announced,  as we continue into 2012. Also, enough with all the different labels. Community is community and we all know what it looks like when done right.

Reducing My Dependence on Chain Retail

This one is hard. I am a mall rat. Also, if I fail to support my local mall, we will lose some of the good remaining retail near my home. However, I realize more and more that the possessions I have do not matter as much as the people I have and that I share said possessions with. I think that I can make the most of being in a suburban area, by reducing my car trips to shopping areas and taking up more DIY projects. Also, when I can, I want to carpool. My belly will love it when I stop going to Bojangles as much and I’ll begin to use the things I already have more and save for travel.

Becoming More Competitive In a Glocal Market

Yes, I used the word Glocal. I am hoping to become location-independent in the next few years. This way, I could pick areas that are walkable/bikeable, but reasonably priced. Many bastions of walkability area are  too affluent and pricey for the space provided. However, a nice small town with a lot of downtown stock (Sanford, NC and many New England towns come to mind), would be perfect. I could even set up a more permanent shop such as a coffee shop or fruit stand if I wanted, because I have an income stream that allows me to contribute to an area that needs it.  I am still open to being somewhere large and already vibrant, but without commuting expenses. I would like to start a family. Unfortunately, there is a great fight for urbanist and family friendly areas that are affordable. I want to set roots so that I can help ease that transition for myself and others.

My 2012 wishes are so big,  some will not come true in 2012. My goal is that I plant the seeds for all four of these activities and then watch them grow in the coming years. I was inspired by meeting so many different people in 2011 who have different approaches to placemaking. I feel like we all have a responsibility to let people know how we can all live better and to find incremental ways to repair the sprawl in our own lives. And that, is a major wish granted.

Photo credit above Flickr user: karusimionato under a CC BY-NC 2.0 licence

Smaller Retail for a Smaller Buying and Consuming Era

Reusable shopping bags

Image Credit: Flickr user Luca Penati

Are we still building our retail outlets for a bygone era? One where everyone piles up big at Walmart on a regular basis? Where gas makes going long distances just to shop at regional centers easy as pie? Where houses are unlimited equity lines of credit? Where people have the kinds of jobs that just let them shop at will?

Big boxes lay empty. More homes are  built in downtown areas that encourage a more urban lifestyle. Gas prices are insane. Home foreclosures are at numbers not seen in nearly a century. Yet, I still hear stories of retailers who build for all of these market conditions. Yet, this is not what I would consider neighborhood retail. Neighborhood retail is where our present needs to be and our near future needs to go.

What currently passes as neighborhood retail looks one of three ways. First, is the Wal-Mart on one side of a six lane highway from a Home Depot. Second is the rapidly decaying strip mall that was the first replacement of  a downtown retail spot. Third is the new “lifestyle center” that attempts to look like downtown and provide a walkable experience, but still has miles and miles of parking that only gets used during Christmastime.

There is a smaller version of traditional village style retail, but it’s still few and far between. The areas are either extremely poor or extremely rich and not reaching the middle class, who seem to be disappearing from the retail conversation too.

In addition, despite all their market research, department stores and the supermarkets themselves are getting it wrong. Yes, people are coming to the stores and spending millions. However, it’s not for the factors that you think.

It all boils down to customer service and price. Customer service is the hallmark of true neighborhood retail. It adds experience and loyalty. Price will get people in the store, but customer service will keep them coming back.

I know a number of people who hate going to the malls, the Wal-Marts, even the supermarket because it’s so big. Yes, it’s great to have all those objects, but we as a nation should think long and hard about how our retail can better serve our communities. Developers like the million dollar payoffs of big stores, but more chains are understanding the value of small.

The smaller these chains are, the more small fish that can jump into the pond and that can work together to provide good livelihoods and a more variable shopping experience. These smaller stores also cost less to staff, heat and cool. Even though staffing is reduced, there are more opportunities for more companies, bringing back the argument of the market.

When I began writing this post, I had in mind stores that were doing things right and wrong. However, I felt it best to let everyone else sound off as we speed into 2012. Which stores are getting neighborhood retail right? How can the ones that are getting it wrong get right?

This post is a part of a Blog-Off on Neighborhood Retail Check out more information about it here.

 

The American Expat, In America

Luggage

Like this luggage, sometimes I linger in the sunset at the crossroads of whether or not it’s worth picking up the baggage and moving on. (Credit: Flickr user: C.M. Keiner)

Lately, I’ve been thinking a lot about my post graduate school place of residence. There are days that I would like to spend that time in Greensboro around my many friends. However, on other days I feel like my talents could be better used elsewhere. I would set sail on the high seas and I’ll never look back here save visiting family. But many other days I’m in the middle. Should stay in Greensboro and keep working with the system to make changes or leave Greensboro and go be an ambassador for the cause of building Greensboro?

This last sentence is an idea that’s been bandied around by Aaron Renn and several others. Renn’s version is the cultivation, sometimes by the original city’s chamber of commerce, of alumni groups for cities. The idea goes something like this. Say I went to DC. I would get together with the Greensboro Former Residents Group. We would dine on Stamey’s Barbecue, fight over Tobbaco Road bragging rights and take special trips home for the Wyndham Championship golf tournament. We would get tickets for the ACC tournament at the Verizon Center. Most importantly, we would have a special fund for scholarships for Greensboro resident high school students to go to college in DC and we would help recruit businesses to Greensboro. With this being a DC club, we’d probably have political sway too.Your alumni group would and should look and feel different.

I brought this idea of American expats up to say that its ok. Boosterism only goes so far if you can’t get a job in your hometown. Right now, I have my schooling and a nice job with a nonprofit to hold on to. However, if things change or a better offer comes somewhere else, I’ll once again leave my hometown and go to where that opportunity is.

I asked my Twitter and Facebook friends about this idea and got a lot of shout outs along with couple of serious answers.

Asa Yoel(@asayoel) is a student at UNC-Charlotte, but reps Staten Island. He told me via a DM that he felt he couldn’t do what he was doing in Charlotte in Jersey. That something being studying transportation and urban affairs at UNC-Charlotte. Fortunately, Whitney Muse (@arieswym) gave me lots of positive answers about her hometown. Originally from Philly, she moved to Jersey to Rutgers for college, home for a while to work with the Obama campaign, and is now doing grad school in DC and hoping to do international affairs. She has nothing but love from Philly and believes she could have achieved her dreams there. However, with a full-ride to Rutgers, she was taking that and running with it.

The Pew American Mobility report has stated that 50% of Americans do not live in their hometown.  I say this to caution anyone who wants to slam their hometown, either for no opportunities or slam others for not staying in a place. I find that entrepreneurs can make it anywhere, while those who need the structure of an office are at the whim of where the jobs are.

I am not sure where I am on that yet. Meanwhile, if I ever decide or get an opportunity to leave, I would. However, I’ll be proudly carrying a case of Natty Greene’s beer and talking to anyone who will listen about the opportunity to go to a wonderful city in NC with five universities, cheap office space and nice homes and history.