Los Angeles Times - August 12, 2007
Why the rush to Manhattanize L.A.?
There seems to be little public debate about
the dramatic remaking of Los Angeles into a left-coast New York.
ast
week, the City Council voted 12 to 0 to approve a sweeping set of zoning
changes that will encourage larger and more dense development downtown.
The new rules are only the latest move toward the Manhattanization of
Los Angeles. There's also the renewed interest in extending the Red Line
subway to the ocean. And there's billionaire Phil Anschutz's plan to
create a Times Square for Los Angeles near Staples Center, as well as
billionaire Eli Broad's aim to duplicate New York's 5th Avenue along
Grand Avenue. There's even talk, in planning circles, of building
mini-condos and apartments at — what else? — Manhhattanite sizes of 250
to 350 square feet.
Los Angeles, the first great modern metropolis with multiple urban
cores, seems determined to remake its urban DNA — and fashion itself, to
one degree or another, in the image of New York City. Bruce B. Brugmann,
the populist publisher of the San Francisco Bay Guardian, coined the
term "Manhattanization" in the 1970s to describe just what we're seeing.
Broadly speaking, it refers to a vertical urbanism in which the entire
city serves as a bedroom for a dominant urban core that is chock-full of
cultural attractions. Density is a premium value in a successfully
Manhattanized city, producing economies of scale, extraordinary
concentrations of skills and an entertaining street scene. Human
activities are more important than sunlight, nature or individual
privacy.
Such development is peculiarly suited for Manhattan Island, a
geographically constrained and remarkably stable lump of rock on which
the city grew rapidly in the heyday of water and rail transportation.
It's not so clear, however, that L.A., which has been expanding outward
for more than 100 years and is famously sun drenched, car crazy, blessed
with natural beauty and earthquake prone, should follow a similar
course.
At the very least, such a dramatic change should be the topic of
serious debate among politicians, city officials and the public. But so
far, the debate about higher density in L.A. has been as contentious as
public discussions in the former Soviet Union.
Why is this happening? One reason for the city's apparent lock-step
march to Manhattanization is that big developers are increasingly
dominating and politicizing land-use decisions, much as they do in New
York City. The $4-billion "Atlantic Yards" project in New York is an
example. The proposal would add about 6,500 mixed-income residential
units to the generally low- and mid-rise environment of downtown
Brooklyn, making population density in the area among the nation's
highest. Despite intense grass-roots opposition, developer Bruce Ratner
and his ally, Mayor Michael Bloomberg, have won at least $500 million in
subsidies for the project.
"You can't stop [big developer] interests unless you have equally
powerful interests on your side," said urban historian Fred Siegel.
Similar developer-driven politics is becoming increasingly common in
Los Angeles as well. Land and politics have a long history in the city.
But many smaller builders — people who constructed tract housing or
apartments in the 1970s and 1980s — no longer can play today's complex
political game, involving government subsidies, "air rights" to allow
more high rises and inclusionary zoning that requires below-market units
in new projects. One retail developer told me that he and others like
him prefer to build in such places as San Fernando, Burbank and the
Inland Empire, where "the development game" is not as complex and
politically determined.
That leaves the field largely to big developers with deeper pockets,
more lawyers, better political connections and diversified interests
that enable them to wait out the city regulatory process. "A decade or
two ago," said Robert Scott, who served on the Los Angeles Planning
Commission from 1993 to 2003, "you could still build pretty much by the
existing code. But the process has become less and less accessible" to
smaller players.
In part, that's because city policies have promoted, at least in
principle, such social goals as affordable housing and "smart growth" —
building condos and apartments near commercial areas and transit lines.
But the side effect of these policies has been to make the development
process impenetrable to all but the most well-heeled, Scott says.
What opposition there is to Manhattanization is relatively isolated —
like the citizen recall effort against Westside City Councilman Jack
Weiss, who is considered by some of his constituents to be too friendly
with big developers. Weiss alienated them when he embraced construction
of two 47-story condominium towers in Century City, calling the project
a perfect example of smart growth. Homeowner groups strongly opposed the
development because they contended that it would add to already heavy
traffic congestion in the area. (Chicago-based JMB Realty, the project's
developer, eventually agreed to create a $5-million fund to soften the
environmental effects of the towers, and a dispute about who controls it
sparked the recall effort against Weiss.)
But only a handful of local politicians — including, most notably,
Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky — seem to recognize that some Angelenos think
that adding density to our already crowded region won't necessarily
improve the quality of life. He recently told a gathering of
neighborhood councils that "the gulf" between City Hall and the
community over land use and development "gets wider every day."
The paucity of official opposition to Manhattanization reflects, in
part, changes in L.A. politics. As recently as the 1990s, the city's
political scene was a fractious game, with distinct voices representing
different neighborhoods, ethnic groups, labor and business associations.
Opposition to further high-density development was particularly strong
in the San Fernando Valley. There, such grass-roots-oriented City
Council members as Joel Wachs and Ernani Bernardi paid more attention to
the interests of their constituents than to those of developers and
unions. Bernardi, for instance, was a constant foe of the city's
redevelopment agency, which long promoted high-density growth, and he
and Wachs often challenged downtown development proposals tied to
taxpayer subsidies.
Today, small developers, who often had local supporters, are out, and
citywide and national players are in. Prime examples are New York-based
Related Cos. (Grand Avenue), Anschutz Entertainment Group (L.A. Live),
JMB Realty (condo towers in Century City), Astani Enterprises (downtown
condos), J.H. Snyder Co. (NoHo Commons), as well as the shopping-mall
giant Westfield, which has proposed building in the west Valley what
would be one of the largest malls in Southern California.
These companies, along with other developers, have become substantial
contributors to the campaigns and causes of local politicians. Mayor
Antonio Villaraigosa's campaign to control the L.A. Unified School
District, for instance, was a recent beneficiary. Because it was an
issue campaign (rather than a political race), there were no limits on
contributions, and many big developers with projects pending or already
underway in the city were generous in their giving.
For example, Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG) gave $125,000 to the
mayor's Committee for Government Excellence and Accountability, set up
to lobby for a bill that would have given him significant control over
L.A. Unified, and to Partnership for Better Schools, which spearheaded
Villaraigosa's successful drive to win a majority on the school board.
Other contributors to the two committees included developer J.H. Snyder
Co. ($100,000); AP Properties, a JMB Realty affiliate ($100,000); Astani
Enterprises ($100,000) and Westfield ($100,000).
Term limits also may encourage developer-driven politics. Before
voters limited their time in office to two consecutive four-year terms
in 1993, council members often represented their districts for decades
without having to worry much about challengers. Bernardi, for instance,
served 32 years on the City Council.
But in the era of term limits, ambitious council members facing the
end of their terms have to begin fundraising for their next race for
elected office almost immediately after election day. Given the high
cost of modern campaigns, they have no incentive to alienate wealthy
developers who could bankroll them. True, individual contributions to
political campaigns are capped. But big developers have subcontractors,
lobbyists and lawyers who can add even more dollars.
This may partly explain why the City Council — even those members who
represent the Valley and South Los Angeles and might logically be
skeptical about subsidies for downtown developers — has largely bought
into the mayor's vision of "elegant density" to keep pace with rising
demand for housing. For instance, not only did council members vote 12
to 0 on last week's zoning overhaul, but earlier this year, the vote to
lease public land and grant about $66 million in tax breaks over 20
years to the developer of the Grand Avenue project was 13 to 0 by the
City Council and 4 to 1 by the L.A. County Board of Supervisors. And in
2005, AEG received $270 million in financial help from the city for L.A.
Live. The vote: 14 to 0.
There is nothing necessarily wrong with unanimity. The problem is the
lack of rigorous debate or much public discussion. For instance, the
council's decision last week to change downtown's zoning rules involved
virtually no debate at all.
Ever higher density downtown — and in other parts of the city — may
be one answer for L.A.'s housing shortage. Although it's hard to see
studio or one-bedroom apartments as a big help for working- or
middle-class families.
But the current Manhattanization poses many risks. Traffic congestion
is likely to get worse before it gets better because the city's transit
system is not sufficient to get people out of their cars now or in the
immediate future. Too much construction of expensive high-density space,
particularly downtown, could create a glut, which could dampen prices
and force developers to seek renters rather than buyers. Already, the
trend is toward rentals, rather than sales, in the downtown market.
Ultimately, it comes down to whether Los Angeles will have a serious
debate about where it is headed. Jumping blindly on the Manhattan
express, without considering the implications for the city and its many
great neighborhoods, is not a promising first step.
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