Conservative New Urbanism
by Paul M. Weyrich
Many conservatives dislike cities, for reasons I understand and sympathize
with. Sin and the city is an old, old story; you can find it in the
Confessions of Blessed Augustine.
But cities are also the birthplace and necessary home for high culture.
Without living cities, we will not have symphony orchestras and great music,
classic theater, art museums, serious public libraries or any of the other
venues high culture requires. Nor will we have the good used bookstores,
artistic and literary cafes, salons or other informal but important places
where ideas can be exchanged and culture can grow. No, the Internet is not a
substitute; there can be no full replacement for people talking
face-to-face.
Just as the next conservatism needs to make the culture its centerpiece, it
needs to include high culture. Conservatism ought not be indifferent to
whether future generations get to see Shakespeare’s plays, hear Mozart’s
music or see Dürer’s engravings. And if conservatives want that to happen,
we need cities. God knows we dare not entrust culture to the universities.
That brings us to the problem we face: America’s cities are in bad shape,
most of them anyway. First the upper class, then the middle class, then
anyone who could afford to moved out (busing, which wrecked the public
schools, played a central role in the exodus). Cities cannot live if no one
but the underclass lives in them. Nor can they survive if we continue to
export our industries, to the point where cities offer no manufacturing or
business jobs.
Over the past several decades, a movement has arisen to restore our cities
and even to build new urban communities, towns, as an alternative to
suburbs. It is called “new urbanism.” As a conservative, I think new
urbanism needs to be part of the next conservatism. But I also think we need
a conservative new urbanism, which differs from much of what now goes under
the new urbanist label.
The difference is this. Much of present-day new urbanism is statist. It
envisions using the power of government to force people to adopt new
urbanist ideas. An example is Portland, Oregon’s “urban growth boundary,” a
line drawn on a map by government bureaucrats that tries to stop sprawl by
decree. Guess what? It doesn’t work. Not only does it violate property
rights, if you actually go to Portland and look what has been built inside
the boundary, most of it is still sprawl.
Let me say that I am not necessarily against sprawl. Suburbs are great
places for families to raise kids. What we need is suburbs, farms and
living, thriving cities, not one or the other.
Here is where conservative new urbanism comes in. Conservative new urbanism
should be built on property rights. Its basis would be dual codes. At
present, virtually every building code in the country mandates sprawl. One
developer told me that in order to build a traditional town (something most
conservatives like), he had to get 150 variances at immense expense and
delay.
The next conservatism should call for dual codes all over the nation. Under
one code, a developer would be perfectly free to build a sprawling suburb.
But he could also choose to build under a new urbanist code, which would be
consistent with the way towns and cities were traditionally designed and
built. Obviously, developers would make their choice based on demand in a
free market. They would build suburbs where the market wanted suburbs, and
towns or even small cities (or redevelopment in existing cities) where the
market wanted that.
Good new urbanism should welcome a dual-code approach. Why? Because good new
urbanism sells. Sometime when you are in Washington, go look at the
architect Andres Duany’s Kentlands development in Montgomery County,
Maryland. It is a beautiful traditional town. And houses there are selling
for tens of thousands of dollars more than houses with the same floor space
in surrounding suburbs.
Here as so often elsewhere, the problem is government interference in the
marketplace. The next conservatism should end the monopoly government
building codes give to suburban sprawl and allow the free market to restore
our cities. That is conservative new urbanism, and I think it needs to be
part of the next conservative agenda.
Paul M. Weyrich is Chairman and CEO of the Free Congress Foundation.
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