城市规划中的住宅生态密度概念
Plans for
EcoDensity pretty thin on the ground,
URBAN PLANNING
TREVOR BODDY Globe
and Mail Update October 5, 2007 at 12:00 AM EDT
One of the most
tragic victims of the current civic strike — inching towards a settlement
after three months — might turn out to be an EcoDensity
policy with teeth.
To be sure, Mayor Sam
Sullivan is so associated with the slogan that he cannot fail to roll out
some set of policies under this rubric in late fall, when city staff are
back in their places with glum-looking faces. But whether these
announcements-to-come will kick Vancouver into international leadership on
sustainable urban development is very much in doubt.
The idealist in me
waits for a bold set of recommendations from Mayor Sullivan, but the student
of real-politik in me is doubtful.
My
skepticism has been stoked by two things:
Vancouver's political clock, and some dismal communications management from
city hall lately on urban density matters.
We are one year and
one month away from our next municipal election, and our civic political
machines are moving into high gear. Mayor Sullivan has expended enormous
political capital in backing up city manager Judy Rogers' quest for flexible
work and hiring conditions. This, and not wages and benefits, is what has
made the strike endure so long, and the mayor is being blamed. Spent
political capital in this area has left him much less room to stick his neck
out with an aggressive set of EcoDensity
policies.
Moreover, the mayor
and his Non-Partisan Association colleagues are in fund-raising mode, and
the development industry is getting uneasy about the
EcoDensity push. Sure, developers like density, but they like
predictability even more, and this is a fundamentally conservative industry
that has prospered by getting things done behind closed doors. As
demonstrated by significant development industry support for Vision
Vancouver's Jim Green in our last civic election, developers are less
interested in ideology than in getting someone they can work with in the
mayor and councillors' seats.
Complicating Mayor
Sullivan's diminishing options for an EcoDensity
policy is city hall's bungling of communications on proposed land use
changes in the Norquay neighbourhood, along
Kingsway on the far Eastside. Opponents have risen in noisy opposition to
mild proposals for slightly increased housing densities along their pleasant
streets, and the Norquay proposals have been
widely reported as the first public test of EcoDensity.
Clearly irritated,
planning director Brent Toderian rejects that
analysis, suggesting that it is simply the legacy of a neighbourhood
planning process that began years ago, under different managers.
But the unfortunate
Norquay flare-up is simply filling the vacuum of
what is now, 18 months after Mayor Sullivan first announced it, a near total
lack of specific planning policies on this crucial dossier. The civic strike
has meant that Mayor Sullivan and Mr. Toderian
have lost crucial months of staff time in preparing their package.
EcoDensity
discussions to date have brought the sausage-making process of city-building
into uncomfortable public scrutiny and raised profound questions. How did we
originally decide to make some neighbourhoods and streets denser than
others? Are we vaporizing our small remaining stock of rental accommodation
for yet more over-priced condos? Why have previous density experiments on
the Eastside gone ahead, while those on the Westside get delayed or
cancelled? Why have civic policies so concentrated poverty and social
housing in the Downtown Eastside?
EcoDensity was born
in the run-up to the 2005 civic elections in the regular dinners Sam
Sullivan hosted at the Opus Hotel for a mash-up of guests with different
backgrounds and points of view over red wine and tossed greens.
UBC ecologist William
Rees was invited to one of these dinners, the professor having gained an
international profile with his theory of "ecological footprints."
At about the same
time, one of Prefessor Rees' academic
colleagues, retired professor of architecture Abraham
Rogatnick, threw himself into the centre of Sam Sullivan's mayoral
campaign. Before the campaign even commenced, Professor
Rogatnick told me "I think Sam should run with density. What this
city needs is density, density, density."
The mayor's
brilliance was to conflate the two ideas into one marketing handle:
EcoDensity.
It's a great name,
but the crucial challenge of Mayor Sullivan's public life will be to flesh
out EcoDensity with tough, original and
politically sustainable policies.