The Daily - The Sunday Read: ‘What Does It Mean to Save a Neighborhood?’
Episode Date: December 19, 2021Nearly a decade after the devastation of Hurricane Sandy, which destroyed piers and damaged riverside social housing projects, residents of Lower Manhattan are still vulnerable to floods.Michael Kimme...lman, The Times’s architecture critic, explores the nine-year effort to redesign Lower Manhattan in the wake of the hurricane, and the design and planning challenges that have made progress incremental. He goes inside a fight over how to protect the neighborhood in the future — revealing why renewal in the face of climate disaster is so complicated.This story was narrated by Michael Kimmelman. To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.The Headway initiative is funded through grants from the Ford Foundation, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and the Stavros Niarchos Foundation (SNF), with Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors serving as a fiscal sponsor. The Woodcock Foundation is a funder of Headway’s public square.The New York Times works with philanthropic organizations that share its belief that editorial independence is crucial to the power and value of its journalism. Funders have no control over the selection, focus of stories or the editing process and do not review stories before publication. The Times retains full editorial control of the Headway initiative.
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I'm Michael Kimmelman.
I'm the architecture critic for The Times and the founder and editor-at-large for Headway.
Headway is a new initiative at The New York Times that I started, which is focused on global challenges and paths to progress.
on global challenges and paths to progress.
It's intended, really, to try to promote a kind of constructive conversation around big issues
to get away from some of the 24-hour news cycle
and focus, really, on how we, as a newspaper
and we, more broadly, as a society,
can think about these problems in the long term.
We can promote a conversation that looks across time
and not just about what's happening the next day.
The story is about a park in lower Manhattan called East River Park.
I see the park as a kind of parable about democracy
and how we make decisions today.
Very often, our system sort of grinds to a halt.
And with challenges like climate change,
where the scale and pace of them is so great,
I think the park is an example of the problem we face.
How can we begin to think differently?
And how can we examine some of these systems we have in place?
We have to begin by seeing how the system works or doesn't,
and this is, I hope, what the park helps to show.
So East River Park was built in the 1930s by Robert Moses. Much of New York City as we now
know it was created by Robert Moses. Not all of what Moses did was good. Much of it destroyed old
neighborhoods, especially poor black and brown neighborhoods. But one of the better things that
he did was to build parks like East River Park that would benefit one of the poorest parts of
the city. The park is essentially a ribbon, a kind of promenade, that runs along the highway.
And on the other side of the highway are the housing projects.
On a beautiful day or in the evening, it's just an astonishingly wonderful mix of New Yorkers from different communities who come together in that park.
It's one of the most beautiful places in Manhattan.
In 2012, the park flooded with Hurricane Sandy and the public housing projects next to the park
also flooded. So the federal government came up with a plan to hold a competition that would
come up with ideas to
protect the park. And at the heart of the competition was the idea that the community
would participate in this process and come up with a solution that would both work as flood
protection and benefit the neighborhood. And so what was supposed to be a sort of effort to combine
infrastructure with community development has ended up dividing the community, and we haven't still had the first shovel put in the ground nine years later.
So I grew up not so many blocks away from East River Park.
Embedded in my lifeblood was a feeling that architecture, urbanism, was the story of who we are. We are what
we build. So when I became architecture critic, my interest was really in trying to make sure that
the things that we wrote about respected architecture in all of its complexity, that it
wasn't just about making things that looked like, you know, giant sculptures, but also making neighborhoods, making communities, what kind of a society we wanted to have.
Because that really is, in a sense, the larger project of architecture for how we should think about building a society, building a larger world.
So here's my article.
What does it mean to Save a Neighborhood?
This story was written and narrated by Michael Kimmelman. To listen to more stories from The New York Times, The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, The Atlantic, and other publications on your smartphone,
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Visit autumn, that's A-U-D-M, dot com for details.
The day after the storm swallowed her neighborhood,
Nancy Ortiz woke before dawn to buy ice.
It was 2012, and Superstorm Sandy had reclaimed lower Manhattan from Mother Nature,
making landfall near Atlantic City, it swept north, ravaging the New Jersey coast, destroying thousands of homes, and inundating New York City with waves as high as 14 feet.
Sandy shuttered Wall Street, rattling global markets, and for a moment, the storm restored Manhattan's early 17th century coastline.
A brackish murk of waist-high water submerged all the landfill that humans had dredged, salvaged, and shipped to widen the island, and that now supported the Franklin D. Roosevelt Drive.
Drive. It also swamped a large cluster of public housing developments and a beloved but bedraggled ribbon of greenery built by Robert Moses during the 1930s called East River Park.
In the dark, Ms. Ortiz tiptoed through a shambles of overturned cars and shattered glass
to her Acura TSX. The storm had knocked out electricity to 250,000 people in the area,
including those in Vladek Houses,
the oldest public housing project on the Lower East Side.
As president of the Vladek Tenants Association,
Ms. Ortiz knew there were many diabetic residents
who would need to keep their insulin cold.
She figured help wasn't likely to come quickly.
For public housing residents, it rarely did.
So she got into her car and headed north some 15 miles,
all the way into the Bronx, before finding a store selling 10-pound bags of ice.
Into the night, she navigated Vladek's dark stairwells, knocking on doors.
Though Ms. Ortiz's neighborhood was one of the worst hit by Sandy,
the storm caused tens of billions of dollars in damage all across the region and killed more
than 100 people. It was a sign of things to come and begged for a federal response.
sign of things to come and begged for a federal response.
After surveying the wreckage, President Barack Obama turned to Sean Donovan, his Director of Housing and Urban Development, who came up with a novel federal competition called
Rebuild by Design.
Teams of architects and engineers were invited to conceive creative flood protection proposals in collaboration with members of the affected communities.
Several dozen proposals surfaced, and in 2014, seven winners were selected.
By far, the largest grant went to a segment of a wider Lower Manhattan Resiliency Plan called the Big U.
It aimed to protect residents in the public
housing developments, including Vladek. Officials named the segment the East Side Coastal Resiliency
Project. Borrowing ideas from the waterlogged Dutch, the plan imagined a redesigned East River
Park that could withstand flooding from future sandy-level events.
A grassy, reinforced hill, or berm, on the western edge of the park abutting the FDR
Drive would be built to act as a barrier, holding back floodwaters and protecting the
housing developments.
The plan went through years of public workshops, town hall meetings, and open houses, attended
by more than 1,000 community members.
Its estimated price tag was $760 million.
New York City taxpayers would pay for what the federal government's grant didn't cover.
I had followed Rebuild from the start.
As an architecture critic focused on public space, housing, and the environment,
I saw the effort as a genuine breakthrough.
The political stars looked as if they might align, federal, state, and city governments, as well as neighborhood groups all pulling in unison to tackle climate change on a meaningful scale in ways that prioritize design and the needs of vulnerable populations.
Rebuild, in spirit at least, harked back to the creative, can-do days of the New Deal and the space program.
I visited sites with Mr. Donovan, sat in on meetings,
and invited the plans architects to graduate classes I taught on climate change in global cities at Columbia University.
The architects told the students about the slow, incremental process of earning neighborhood support.
They came with glossy renderings of Photoshop joggers and parents pushing strollers in the reimagined park where floods came and went.
But then, in 2018, under Mayor Bill de Blasio, the mood changed.
Behind closed doors, city agencies did a constructability review.
That is, they calculated the proposal's costs and timeline and concluded that it was simply not feasible.
The city's parks department said it didn't have the money, workers, or expertise to maintain infrastructure in a park built to flood.
The Department of Transportation, prioritizing cars and trucks,
decided the berm's construction would be too disruptive to traffic on the FDR drive.
Con Edison said that the proposal would interfere with his underground power lines and that engineering the necessary tunnels to encase the lines
could add years, risks, and untold the necessary tunnels to encase the lines could add years,
risks, and untold costs to the project.
City Hall unveiled what it called an alternative design.
It would cost New Yorkers $1.45 billion.
It required raising not a portion of the park, like the earlier plan, but the entire park, and then covering nearly all its 50-odd acres with 8 to 10 feet of landfill while keeping Con Ed's power lines accessible.
would be built on top of the landfill with new areas for passive recreation.
Gone was the idea of periodic, acceptable flooding.
The new raised park, braced by a 1.2-mile flood wall and millions of tons of layered earth barged in by water,
would act as a levee to hold back the surging sea.
When the mayor announced the plan, I started to hear new voices. A group,
led by professors, artists, and other lower Manhattan residents, a number of whom didn't
live next to the park but used it, started organizing protests. They argued that the
city's new plan did not go far enough to address the effects of climate change,
and that demolishing the park with the shade of a thousand mature trees would leave the neighborhood without precious green
space for years.
They contested the city's experts, who said the park couldn't be maintained as a gigantic
sponge.
I saw pictures of them chaining themselves to trees and noticed they enlisted a lawyer
who had opposed other city initiatives, including rapid bus lanes on 14th Street.
Ms. Ortiz and some of her neighbors in the subsidized housing projects
were no less appalled by the mayor's sudden change of plans.
We felt betrayed like we didn't exist, was how Ms. Ortiz put it to me.
But they also wanted something, anything, built as soon as possible to protect them from the flooding of future Sandys.
They started to accept the merits of the city's plan.
As they did so, they began to see its opponents as interlopers, more than a few of them wealthier white people living in apartments that were not on the front lines. A project devised to build community trust and overcome political gridlock
seemed to be fracturing the community instead.
Now, nearly a decade after Sandy, the Lower East Side is still vulnerable.
Across the country, there are similar daunting challenges
that demand big, robust, and swift responses.
There's climate change, of course,
which brings extreme weather and rising seas, but also a dearth of affordable housing,
an electric grid in disrepair, a lack of broadband access, failing public transit systems.
The list goes on and on. The recent passage of a $1.2 trillion federal infrastructure bill
is a big step toward tackling some of those problems.
But, as East River Park shows, even when money is at hand, our convoluted systems often make it difficult or impossible to find consensus and work at the speed and scale required.
A process of participatory planning rightly evolved to represent interests other than government technocrats and wealthy developers has also created in some places a culture of nimbyism that thwarts even modest proposals.
Our conversations seem increasingly cramped, mean, and small.
Is our society just too frayed to come together around basic material needs?
In the debate over what is officially called John V. Lindsay East River Park,
I sensed there might be some useful lessons about how we got here and how we might try to think differently.
The park saga is not a conflict between bad versus good actors,
but a confluence of different interests, different areas of expertise, different notions of community. It is a parable of progress.
Construction on enormous flood walls north of the park has begun. The city had planned to start
reconstruction in the park itself by late November until a judge granted opponents a temporary stay. The stay has just
been lifted, and park construction is supposed to take five years. If completed, the new park
certainly won't be the best thing that we could achieve. Far from it. And it may need to be
rebuilt to cope with even more extreme weather in the future. But nor is it a certain calamity.
It's a hefty public investment to benefit thousands of underserved New Yorkers
that should provide some protection from flooding for a time.
An incremental step, in other words.
Incrementalism is how we think about progress today.
The question is, are there other ways to think about it?
In 1939, George Gallup's American Institute of Public Opinion conducted a national poll.
With the country coming out of the Depression, pollsters asked Americans to name both the Roosevelt administration's greatest accomplishment and lowest point.
The New Deal had by then established Social Security
and federal bank deposit insurance, but what became known as the Work Projects Administration
was arguably its most ambitious program. A vast menu of public works coordinated with local and
state authorities, the WPA employed millions of Americans. Across the nation,
it produced new schools, hospitals, sewers, and hydroelectric power plants, as well as murals,
sculptures, libraries, LaGuardia Airport in Queens, and some 650,000 miles of roads
and 8,000 parks. It transformed America.
and 8,000 parks. It transformed America. As the historian Jason Scott Smith tells it, in the Gallup survey, the WPA was ranked as both the best and worst thing the administration had
done. Change, big change especially, always profits some and troubles others. Among the roads funded by the WPA was a section of the FDR Drive,
then called East River Drive. To city leaders nearly a century ago, New York's economic future
hinged on suburban commuters and automobiles. Car dependence now seems spectacularly wrongheaded to
urban planners, ecologists, and transit advocates, with all we know about sprawl,
carbon emissions, and the way highways divided and segregated city neighborhoods.
But what is regarded as progress at one moment often comes to be seen as the problem later.
As Eric Kleinenberg, a sociology professor at New York University, puts it,
science is based on the premise that we will
inevitably be wrong and find better ways to make sense of things. Social reformers in the 1930s
seized on the highway's construction to lobby for the creation of new forms of public housing
next to the new East River Drive. Vladeck Houses, the first of these developments, opened in 1940, a complex of 20 six-story brick apartment blocks featuring modern conveniences like self-operating elevators, as one news report noted.
the turn-of-the-century Lower East Side, notorious for overcrowding and outbreaks of cholera and other diseases, flat-X boxy buildings in wide open spaces represented progressive ideals about
humane living and public health. More than 19,000 New Yorkers applied for 1,771 subsidized
departments before officials had to put a halt to applications.
Robert Moses, then New York's parks commissioner, saw another opportunity in the highway's
construction. The East River, down to the Battery, had once formed the heart of one of the mightiest
and most prosperous ports in the world. By the 1930s, however, maritime traffic had shifted across town to the deeper
channels of the Hudson River. In 1937, Moses persuaded city officials to add acres of landfill
along the East River waterfront, expanding Manhattan's shoreline and creating a slender,
gracious park with wading pools,
baseball fields, shuffleboard courts, an open-air dance floor, and an amphitheater,
where, among other things, Shakespeare in the Park would make its debut.
Shaded by London plains and pin oak trees,
the park was sandwiched between the new highway and a riverside promenade.
One of Moses' less heralded triumphs, East River Park opened in 1939.
Three years later, Nancy Ortiz's recently widowed grandmother left Puerto Rico and settled into a
tenement on Delancey Street in the heart of the Lower East Side with her seven children.
The youngest, Nancy's future father, was 12-year-old Diego, who was called Willie, though no one can recall why.
East River Park, a couple of blocks away, became Willie's backyard.
Years later, after returning from the Korean War, Willie moved a little closer to the park,
into a development called Laavinburg Homes.
Nancy grew up there.
As a little girl, Ms. Ortiz recalls,
she would accompany her father to the park on summer weekends.
Willie and other men from the neighborhood
would play softball in guayaberas and dress shoes
while she played tag with her friends.
Kids who skipped school, she remembers,
would hide from truant officers behind the amphitheater. For Moses, the 1940s and 50s were
years of peak authority as the city's planning czar. Among other things, he oversaw the addition
of more public housing developments along the East River. But the 1960s brought new thinking.
Rachel Carson, the marine biologist and author,
challenged the authority of pesticide-making chemical companies
and inspired the environmental movement.
Jane Jacobs took on the urban planning establishment.
The highways Moses built had demolished and physically split neighborhoods,
displacing or isolating thousands of black and brown residents and fouling the air with car
exhaust. Jacobs argued that ordinary residents who saw the city from the sidewalk level,
not planners like Moses looking down on maps like demigods or developers focused on profits,
looking down on maps like demigods or developers focused on profits, knew best what ought to be saved or built in their own neighborhoods. Community members were the true experts.
Moses's power waned. By the early 1970s, when Ms. Ortiz and her parents moved from
Lavinburg into one of the newer Moses developments on Delancey Street, an idea called Westway started to take shape across town.
The West Side piers, which had replaced those on the East River,
had by then become obsolete too,
and Westway was a plan to reimagine that waterfront.
A new interstate would be tunneled below the Hudson River,
removing cars and trucks from city streets.
Disused warehouses and docks would make way for apartments and commercial development.
As with East River Park, acres of landfill would be added to create a vast green esplanade.
Over the next decade and a half, Westway secured endorsements from New York's governors and mayors,
and President Ronald Reagan's administration agreed to pay to move the highway.
But it wasn't to be.
The culture had shifted.
As more Black and Hispanic tenants moved into public housing,
federal and local authorities lost interest in its upkeep.
Developments like Vladek, once advertised as bucolic and equitable
alternatives to dense city living, came to represent urban decline. With Westway, newly
energized urban activists seized on the proposal as an outmoded emblem of Moses-style, top-down
arrogance, though it wasn't Moses' idea. They said it prioritized drivers, not public transit users,
developers, not blue-collar New Yorkers. Environmentalists focused on its potential
to disrupt the mating patterns of striped bass in the Hudson River.
A coalition of wildlife advocates, architectural preservationists, and subway riders capitalizing
on new Nixon-era ecological regulations challenged government experts in court, and they won.
Whether, in retrospect, Westway's defeat was a victory for the city or not, in effect,
environmentalists derailed what would have been a greenway roughly twice the size of East River Park,
it was definitely a triumph for grassroots organizers,
signaling a new era in participatory democracy.
The powers that be had begun to yield,
however reluctantly and performatively, to people power.
When Rebuild for Design endorsed the Eastside Coastal Resiliency Project,
the big idea was that it would be radically inclusive.
The flood-proofing of East River Park would do more than protect the neighborhood from storm surges, its organizers said.
It would marry elite architecture and urban planning with meaningful public engagement.
People power would join up with expertise.
In 2013, Lower East Siders began to meet with representatives from One Architecture and Urbanism
and the Bjarke Ingels Group, better known as BIG, the high-profile Danish architecture firm.
This group had come up with the multi-part plan, called the Big U, for protecting all of
lower Manhattan. Jeremy Siegel, one of Big's architects, remembers lugging models and maps
to community centers and public schools to show residents what the park could look like.
He enjoyed the back and forth, he told me, and described the rounds of meetings as,
me and described the rounds of meetings as, quote, a slow, iterative process.
Matthijs Bou, the Dutch founder of One Architecture and a co-leader of the big team, recalls that community members at first expressed fear about displacement along with a good dose
of distrust.
For him, a key moment was when a local organizer, who had been skeptical of the plan, stood up and said that, quote, this was the first time residents were treated like partners.
Ms. Ortiz, who became a co-chair of a community board task force, recalls seniors lobbying for benches and tables where they could play cards and families petitioning for outdoor movie screenings.
People from the neighborhood wanted to see themselves in the process, she told me.
Over time, we felt we were being heard. That is the goal of participatory decision-making,
after all. To borrow a phrase from Malcolm Arouse, a graduate student at New York University
who is writing his dissertation about the park,
public trust requires participants to, quote, continuously recognize their inputs
reflected in the evolution, close quote, of a project. So, when Mayor Bill de Blasio's
administration, which had not raised insuperable objections during nearly five years of community
consultation,
suddenly swapped the plan for what officials decided was a more technically sound one,
the switch did more than infuriate residents. It caused a legitimacy crisis.
Residents felt bamboozled. The whole consulting process suddenly seemed like a sham.
And if that were the case, opponents asked,
why should anyone believe city officials who said the engineering, construction, and maintenance costs made the earlier plan impossible?
Expertise itself was now up for debate.
We understand the frustration, said Jamie Torres Springer,
who was first deputy commissioner of the city's Department of Design and Construction,
when the new plan was announced.
In retrospect, he told me it would have been better to explain more clearly the city's perspective to residents in community meetings
before announcing it as a done deal.
But, quote,
But, quote, we were facing a deadline to spend the federal funds and wanted to get the project built as quickly as possible to get the flood protection in place, he added.
We really didn't consider the new design to be a radical change from the original one.
Except, of course, that a central goal of the whole process to build trust had been undermined. I met recently with a half-dozen members of East
River Park Action, the most vociferous of the opposition groups that arose in response to the
new plan. Months earlier, the group's alerts started dropping in my inbox, announcing a court
hearing or inviting people to join a protest march.
We gathered around a table at Café Mogador, an old Middle Eastern standby in the East Village.
The group included Pat Arnau, a photographer, Billy Cohen, a landscape designer, and Eileen Miles, a poet and the author of Chelsea Girls. Their distrust of the mayor's plan has been exacerbated by the city's refusal
to turn over documents about its constructability study.
Quote, we had to do a freedom of information law request and the city finally released a heavily
redacted version of the study, Ms. Arnau said. Why should we believe anything the city says
if it keeps hiding the truth?
Ms. Arnau's group supported the original berm idea that had been developed with the community and imagined the East River waterfront gradually transforming into wetlands.
As sea levels rise, Ms. Arnau foresaw East River Park evolving into eco-friendly marshes,
managed by the Parks Department.
The group suggested that a truly enlightened response to climate change
would be to build a green roof over the FDR Drive,
an idea the big team had floated at the very start
before city officials asked that it be withdrawn
because, as Amy Chester, the managing director of Rebuild, recalls,
City Hall didn't want to, quote, overpromise.
A roof, according to the East River Park Action Group, would create a protective barrier for the housing developments
while also muffling traffic noise and providing additional parkland.
In essence, they said, bury the highway, not the park.
It's not a comprehensive plan, is how Ms. Cohen
summed up criticism of the city's proposal. It made no sense, the group argued, to cut down
mature trees that provide shade, hold carbon, and act as a stopover for migratory birds,
and replace them with saplings. Instead, they urged, focus on increasing the city's sewer capacity,
upgrading public housing campuses, and reducing car emissions.
I found it hard to argue in principle with their desires.
I also love the existing park,
a shambolic retreat and slice of mid-century New York,
which had some recent, costly upgrades like a riverfront esplanade
that will now need to be undone. It's painful to imagine demolishing all those flower gardens,
WPA-era buildings, and playing fields. New York's drainage and sewer systems are indeed rickety and
ancient, a fact driven home in September when a downpour from Tropical Storm
Ida flooded city streets and killed dozens of people in the region. But constructing thousands
of miles of new sewers, not to mention rerouting highways and other Herculean long-term measures,
was never rebuilds remit. And at a certain point, making such lofty goals a prerequisite
for urgently needed flood protection
only ensures that nothing will get done.
After meeting with Ms. Arnau
and the other East River Park Action representatives,
I visited Ms. Ortiz.
She has become a frequently cited supporter of the city's plan.
In January, after stepping down as Vladeck's tenant president, she started working as a special assistant at the New York City Housing Authority, or NYCHA.
We arranged a post-work late lunch at El Castillo de Aguados, a Dominican restaurant near the Vladek houses, where she kissed the waitress and waved to customers.
Frank Avila-Goldman, a leader of the residence committee at Gouverneur Gardens, a development next to Vladek, joined us.
Unlike Vladek, which sits on higher ground, Gouverneur Gardens was badly flooded during Sandy.
When she first heard on the TV news that the city had discarded the original plan,
Ms. Ortiz said, she was every bit as angry as Ms. Arnault and the other East River Park Action members.
The city scrambled to make up for its botched rollout by holding meetings with NYCHA.
Carlina Rivera, a city council member representing the
district, helped organize some of these meetings and noticed a gradual thaw among public housing
residents. They were upset by how the new plan had been announced, Ms. Rivera said, but at the
end of the day, they wanted protection and wanted to know there would be a park for their grandchildren.
They wanted protection and wanted to know there would be a park for their grandchildren.
The obstacle to that aim, some of those NYCHA tenants came to believe,
were now the members of East River Park Action and other such groups.
Over the last several years, among the hundreds of thousands of residents in the area, a few thousand people signed petitions against the city's plan.
What percentage of the roughly 30,000 public housing residents objected to it isn't clear.
But people like Ms. Ortiz and Mr. Avila Goldman began to zero in on how many of the most outspoken opponents
seemed to them to be white people not living in subsidized housing.
For tenants in my building and the people I know
in NYCHA who were slammed by Sandy, we need flood protection yesterday, Mr. Avila Goldman told me.
The opponents who came late to the party talk about saving trees and squirrels. I have been
to so many meetings where I felt talked down to, as if only white people are the ones who care about the environment.
If I had a magic wand, I would also deck over the FDR drive, because when I open my windows,
I find soot on my walls from all the traffic. I'm on the front line. But covering the highway
is a pipe dream these people are using to derail a plan that is about saving our lives and our park.
As Ms. Ortiz put it, the new plan didn't blow up the community.
It revealed that there isn't a community.
People like to throw around that word.
It's not coincidental that the rise of community activism and the use of the word expertise
occurred around the same time.
Quote, expertise started to be commonly used only during the 1960s and 70s because there were
suddenly conflicts over who should call themselves experts, says Gil Eyal, author of The Crisis of
Expertise. Quote, nuclear energy was a big issue at the time. Nuclear physicists
were the experts on nuclear energy, but opponents of nuclear power began to argue that nuclear
physicists weren't expert when it came to public health or the consequences of a potential meltdown
or when it came to environmental issues and environmental racism. Government organizations started to include
experts of different stripes to contend with big problems. Of course, the more expertise you have,
the more entangled you probably are, meaning your neutrality is questionable, Mr. Eyal said.
So, the answer to that problem was to add yet more stakeholders, advocates, members of the public, which made consensus even harder to achieve.
In essence, Mr. Eyal argues, a participatory system designed to build public trust causes people to lose faith in the system.
The remedy, he says, is time.
he says, is time. Researchers have a term, inclusion friction, he told me, for how bringing more voices into a process inevitably slows it down. Conflicts arise among different stakeholders
and public discussions require explanations and careful conversations. To do inclusion right,
you have to take your time, Mr. Eyal says. You can't present
people with a fait accompli because they'll understand the inclusion to have been a sham.
The problem is that some crises don't afford the luxury of time. A deadly virus racing around the
world, for example. Operation Warp Speed, the federal COVID-19 vaccine development program,
saved countless lives, but it also, quote, moved faster than public consensus, as Mr. Eyal points
out, exacerbating skepticism. Some environmentalists argue that climate change is a crisis simply too
big and fast-moving for the snail's pace of participatory democracy.
big and fast-moving for the snail's pace of participatory democracy.
The Dutch have resolved this conflict on the side of expertise. With fully a third of the country below sea level, the Dutch have lived in a state of existential crisis for as long as they
have occupied what is essentially the gutter of Europe, where major rivers drain into the sea.
When he was tasked by President Obama with Sandy recovery, Mr. Donovan, the Housing and Urban Development Secretary,
hopped a plane for the Netherlands and got a crash course in Dutch water management.
Dutch water management. During the 12th century, medieval Netherlanders established water boards,
regional councils, in charge of overseeing canals, rivers, and everything else water-related.
Today, Dutch water boards, in tandem with ecologists and engineers, still help determine national flood protection policies, including where people can or can't live and what needs
to be built or unbuilt to safeguard against flooding. Elected politicians come and go.
Water boards are there to listen to science and take the long view. This doesn't mean Dutch
experts always get things right. Scientific understanding evolves. In 1953, a huge winter storm in the North
Sea breached dikes and flooded much of western Netherlands. Nearly 2,000 people were killed.
The Dutch still call it the disaster. In response, officials undertook the Delta Works,
a massive nationwide system of levees, sluices, dikes, dams, and sea gates.
But even while the Delta Works were under construction, ecologists began to realize that some of those barriers were killing flora and fauna and disrupting tidal flows.
So, simultaneously, Dutch water managers attempted a new approach. Rather than
just try to subjugate nature, they would also seed targeted areas to the rivers and sea.
At huge cost, the Dutch deconstructed some major dams. They built water parks that doubled as
reservoirs and designed plazas with sunken gardens and basketball courts that collected runoff when nearby canals overflowed.
They ordered farmers to move from properties that, based on engineers' calculations, would be needed as retention pools to prevent bigger cities downstream from flooding.
Farmers weren't happy.
bigger cities downstream from flooding. Farmers weren't happy. But the lesson of the Delta works was that progress is not an end point. It's a process. In the Netherlands, citizens give up
a measure of autonomy in return for safety. Prevention is the priority there. In the United
States, a different ethos reigns. Private property owners whose homes flood or burn down receive federal emergency relief funds to rebuild, and only recently have insurance companies begun to refuse or to charge exponentially higher premiums to insure some especially flood-prone and fire-prone homes.
A nation steeped in individual liberty and manifest destiny is not accustomed to thinking about prevention or retreating
from places too unsafe to occupy or too costly to save.
This is New York, not New Amsterdam, as Mr. Eyal puts it.
You can't impose a method here, he says, that is the result of, quote, collective learning handed down in big and small ways over centuries.
What we can learn from the Dutch, he suggests, is that some of our truisms are not as stable as we think.
Participation and transparency are not an absolute good.
And then we have to figure out our own way. In the meantime, we remain mired in processes
that can take much too long to resolve urgent challenges, with neighbors battling neighbors,
experts battling experts, and no one with a mandate to take the long view.
battling experts, and no one with a mandate to take the long view. Van C. Tran, a sociologist at the City University of New York's Graduate Center, who specializes in community relations,
has also been following the East River Park story. Mr. Tran distinguishes between technical planning,
the architecture, engineering, cost calculations, and social planning. Technical
planning is the realm of experts. Social planning, in this case how the park should be used,
is where the community should have the most input, he says. But in reality, there are many communities.
He believes much of the opposition, quote, comes from more educated, organized factions in the neighborhood, which raises the larger question of voice and equality.
Whose voice is most essential and should be heard in the community process, Mr. Tran says.
My first priority always goes to the voiceless.
Mr. Arauz, the New York University graduate student, told me he believes finding common ground has to start long before a crisis arises.
The solution can't just be more meetings or more community voice.
This doesn't work by itself, he said.
The answer involves strengthening investments in public institutions so that neighborhoods are better prepared to deal collectively
with existential threats like climate change or a pandemic.
At the time of planning a huge public work, like in East River Park, he continued,
the relationships we build through institutions like local schools or libraries
can be the building blocks of civic trust, cohesion, and respect.
Back in September, I met Mr. Bau, the Dutch architect who helped design the Big U,
at the 34th Street ferry landing on the East River for a walk along the riverfront so he could explain the mayor's plan.
We passed an elevated section of the FDR Drive, not far from Bellevue Hospital,
where floodgates as thick as bank vault doors
will be installed. Across a decrepit pedestrian bridge over the highway, we reached the park,
passing an old playground with concrete chess tables, where Ms. Ortiz told me she used to take
her children to ride the seesaws. The new East River Park is expected to take at least five years to build, and it is
conceived to keep Lower East Siders dry during sandy-like storms until 2050. By then, continued
sea level rise could mean an upgrade will already be required. I asked Carrie Grassi from the Mayor's
Office of Climate Resiliency whether a neighborhood park, whose renovation
will cost taxpayers more than $1 billion, should offer residents longer protection than that.
Ms. Grassi said the new park will be engineered to support an additional two feet of landfill
should more extreme weather make that necessary. You have to start somewhere, she offered.
You have to start somewhere, she offered.
Mr. Bao basically agreed.
The park is an incremental step, he said.
From an engineering and landscape design perspective, the new plan is an improvement.
Is it perfect? No.
Did the city handle this well? No.
Is it everything that ought to happen? No.
But we don't have time to wait for the perfect.
Or, as Mr. Tran phrased it, the process worked in the imperfect ways local government works.
I left Mr. Bao and headed back north to watch workers installing the first riverfront fortifications. Around 23rd Street, a crew in yellow vests and hardhats removed old sewer pipes
and assembled new drains. A different crew maneuvered concrete molds on either side of a
new 10-foot-high flood wall along the riverfront. That's where I found Ahmed Ibrahim, Senior
Construction Manager for the fortifications north of 15th Street.
This is a special project, he told me.
Quote, I live in Staten Island and saw how desperate people there were during Sandy.
Their houses flooded. Some of them lost everything and moved away.
This project is special because nothing like it has been done here.
But it's also special because it shows we can build flood walls and new
parks. Maybe. When the federal government chose to subsidize the Big U, the park was projected to
be fortified by now. When the mayor announced the new design, the completion date was set for 2023.
Then community members objected to closing the whole park at once, so a phasing plan
was adopted for construction that pushed the completion date to 2025. Then came COVID and
various lawsuits. Now, the city says, barring further legal or other delays, East River Park should be done in 2026. Whenever it is finished,
Ms. Ortiz told me, she plans to sit with her daughter by the river
in the shade of a new amphitheater and watch the boats sail by.
To be continued... smartphone, download Autumn on the App Store or the Play Store. Visit autumn.com for details.