Future Cities
Historic cities, contemporary cities, and cities of the
future are about more than just built density. Buildings downtown simply set
the stage for action, interaction and the everyday life that creates a city.
Just as it is important to plan a city, it is important to
remember that the life can also be planned out of a city. The idea of
regulation of cities and public spaces still seems to excited planners, almost
18 years after the end of Apartheid. These planners are obsessed with the
creation of instant high streets, plazas and promenades - connecting no place
to nowhere. Authentic cities grow organically over time. This fixation with the
creation of over regulated plastic spaces has spurned “instant cities” -developments
like Montecasino, and Melrose
arch. These pastiche, stuck on ‘emblems of cities’, are void of authenticity or
evolved context - the urban ideal of the chronically dispossessed. We seem to
have forgotten that more important than merely how a city looks, is how it
works – a city cannot exist in the designed confines of an entrance and exit
boom gate!
While the suburban North of Johannesburg is increasingly
dominated by new buildings; housing projects, shopping malls and office parks -
each development outdoing its neighbor in the stakes for dullness, and
regimentality, old buildings downtown give the city energy, vibrancy and
authenticity. Old building stock also offers the opportunity for re
-exploration, adoption and re-use – key factors in future sustainable world
city development.
It’s frustrating that some architects and planners still see
the property boundary as the end of their design responsibility. This tendency
leads to the creation of buildings which contribute little or nothing to the
urban environment.
The renowned American Urbanist Jane Jacobs, said “Think of a city and what comes to mind? Its
streets”. A city is not simply a collection of buildings created in a void,
with streets as a left over space between – the city is a living organism, and
as its main public spaces, the streets, are its arteries. In the early 2000’s Urban Ocean,
the now jaded pioneers of downtown cool, used Jacob’s quote in a sales
brochure– ultimately, they were predicting their own demise. At that stage the
streets of Johannesburg
were empty, uninviting, and unsafe- the rebirth of a city starts on the street,
not the other way around.
When people say that a city is dangerous – perceived or
real, they mean that they don’t feel safe on their pavement.
Sandton Central, is a prime example of a collection of
buildings which do not create a city, even though some of the office blocks in
the district are architecturally interesting, they are created in an
unwalkable, unsustainable vacuum. You can’t force people to use streets that
they have no reason to use, and Sandton certainly has no street culture.
Even new Sandton Buildings, like the iconic 17 Alice lane, turn their
backs on the street. Instead of stairs to a lobby, this building is set back
from the street, behind a giant concrete car park. Considering the current
international trend toward sustainable, walkable urban environments, it seems
that Sandton Central is developing on a course towards obsoletion.
Johannesburg Central is a well connected, pedestrian
orientated node; the bustling city streets have brought life back to the CBD. Downtown
streets are social spaces, community nodes, explosions of colour, energy, and
daily interaction. A good example of a successful city retails area - Kerk Street, is a vibrant
padestrianised urban mall, here the formal and informal thrive alongside each
other – office workers, shoppers, school children and city residents walk,
browse, interact, and create a sustainable city.
Through narrowing the trafficable street area, the upgraded
Main Street Mall in the financial district now offers wide, New York-esque sidewalks.
Broad pavements provide space for pedestrians -this has in turn spurred the re emergence of
downtown café culture -office workers desk bound for decades, too afraid to walk
on their own pavements, now venture back into the city streets, creating a node
alive with daily activity and interaction. The opportunities for a regenerated city-
so far as streetlife goes – endless.
If streets are the arteries of the city, parks and urban
squares should be where the city comes alive. Beyers Naude Square, Johannesburgs’ premier
civic space, seems to have the makings of a successful urban oasis; it is well
located, in a mixed use node, with office, civic and residential buildings on
its periphery, which should ensure almost 24 hour usage, yet the space remains
empty and unused. Rather than stimulating visual and sensual delight, the
square exudes a feeling of dullness, emptiness and blankness. A park is like giant
green convenience store – it needs to offer goods in demand in order to attract
users and activity – Beyers Naude
Square certainly falls miles short in this respect.
Why create more parks in downtown Johannesburg
when the ones we already have are poorly planned, badly maintained and
underutilsed? There is tremendous possibility to ensure the sustainability and
renewed redevelopment of the city through the creation of successful urban
squares and parks. The city needs to tackle existing unsuccessful urban green
space, ensuring that this goal becomes a reality.
Johannesburg
needs to be seen as a living organism; it is difficult to chart the trajectory
of where the city is heading, but certainly the future of downtown is vibrant,
creative, dynamic and sustainable!
Johannesburg
embodies authenticity, grit, inclusivity, multicultural diverse democratic
flavor, rich historical context, unexplored experiences, new and authentic
environments, patina, history, reinvention, rebirth, exploration, and discovery.
How long will we continue to accept the fake, the copy, The Truman Show, the
commercially driven knock off, when the authentic original is right in front of
us and ripe for the taking? The city is finally transforming from a place for
people with nowhere else to go, into the destination for a generation with the
world on our doorstep!
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