Loving Worcester Action: Get Political

Remember why Melody Warnick advocates for us to fight for the little things in our cities and towns.  Getting political locally helps ground us in the places where we live.  Sit on a city advisory board. Testify at a Tuesday city council meeting on an issue you care about.  Speak out for more trees, better train service, more consistent trash collection. Attend a local rally. When we dare to take a stand on a Worcester issue, we place another stake in making our city a place where we want to live. 

Greenleaf Terrace Neighborhood Envy

I have to admit it. After my long visit, I left the little terrace with a tinge of envy.  I want to move to Greenleaf Terrace, sit on the porch and invite the neighbors over for a game of scrabble.  It's always amazing to observe how something so simple as the orientation of a building, the placement of a parking space or the use of a shared passageway could make such an impact on how people relate to each other face-to-face.  Design is key!

Loving Worcester Action: Say Hi To Neighbors

It is the quality and intensity of our real and lived social connections that can make or break our attachment to a particular place.  Neighbors sometimes pick up the slack for those of us movers who are far away from family, creating a neighborhood culture of caring that binds.  It only takes one or two residents to help spark a shift in a neighborhood.  Block parties, collective yard sales, book clubs, game nights, seed exchanges, barbecues are all ways to build neighborhood cohesion.  Melody Warnick describes a neighborhood that has had weekly Sunday night dinners for years.  This tradition started with five families and has since grown to over fifty families.  The host family is in charge of cooking, set up and clean-up.  People come within walking distance and share that one meal together each week.  If one is feeling a bit anti-social, one can just bring a Tupperware container and take the meal to go. 

The 5:30 AM Morning Walk Ritual

Sometimes I miss my entrance to the neighborhood on my early morning walks.  My son needs a snuggle or I roll back over to get some extra time to sleep.  Time passes.  On these lazy mornings when I just can't get out before 5:30, Maria will shout out to me when I reach the Pleasant Market, "You're late today!"  I don't even know George and Maria's last name.  I don't know the name of the man who reads the paper on his porch or the man who nods to me near Duffy field.  But somehow it mattered that I was not here to play my part.  "Overslept!" I might say to her and I smile inside.  My being an integral part of this dance makes me connected to them and to the streets in my neighborhood.  In that moment, I feel like I belong here.

Loving Worcester Action: Walk More

Do you remember the walking man on Salisbury Street?  More than five years ago when I brought my son to daycare at the Jewish Community Center, I saw him, a middle aged man who dressed in a starched business suit and swung his briefcase during his fast strides.  He carried an umbrella in the rain.  He wore heavy boots in the snow.  For two years of day care morning drop-offs, he was a regular fixture on the street, heading in the direction of downtown.  One morning, I slowed the car down, opened the window and called to him to ask about his story.  He confessed walking an hour each way to his downtown office and relished the fact that he didn’t need any gym membership.  He was in the best shape of his life and loved taking it hare-like down Salisbury as everyone else fast-pedaled.  Is he still walking now years later?  I no longer have a reason to go down Salisbury during rush hour.

Worcester: This Is Where You Belong!

If you go to the Sociology section of the “new release” shelves at the Worcester Public Library, you may find the book I just returned entitled This is Where You Belong:  The Art and Science of Loving the Place You Live.  Exploring the “lost art of staying put”, author Melody Warnick ponders how the place where we live can become a place where we are rooted to stay.  How do we feel connected to the towns and cities where we reside?  How do we shift from living in a particular place to making a commitment to staying?  Warnick is obsessed with these questions of “place attachment” because she herself never felt settled in any one city or town to want to make a permanent home.  There was always the hope in the next move for a better locale where the weather would be perfect, the cultural life rich, the nature abundantly lush and beautiful, the people fascinating and welcoming.  After all her moves to what she believed would be the “perfect place”, Warnick comes to think she was all wrong.  Maybe there is no perfect place but just maybe one can learn to stay still long enough to love the place where one is.

Malden Rocks and Walks

Malden is one of the most diverse small cities in Massachusetts.  In the Indian restaurant where I ate home-cooked dal and rice, one of the patrons there told me that students at the local high school hail from over thirty different countries and speak over twenty different languages. Twenty percent of the population is Asian, primarily from China and Vietnam.  I passed by at least ten Asian restaurants and juice bars on my walk.  An Indian grocer directed me to that Indian restaurant around the corner.  I saw women walking down the streets in hijab.  I saw other women in saris.  

Jane Jacobs In The Woo Nominates Crompton Place in Worcester, Massachusetts for Strong Towns "Strongest Infrastructure Project"

In honor of urban theorist Jane Jacobs’ 100th birthday this past May,” Jane Jacobs in the Woo”[1] formed to inaugurate a full year of community conversations and actions about building a vibrant Worcester, Massachusetts.  Jane Jacobs in the Woo is pleased to nominate Crompton Place, a locally owned, mixed-use development in Worcester’s up-and-coming Canal District neighborhood for Strong Towns' Best Infrastructure Project. Listed on the national historic register in 1980, this property was the site of Crompton Loom Works famous for its textile and invention of an innovative power loom.

Sipping Iced Tea on Front Porches

So, if Putnam's research is correct, what does a decline in social capital have to do with front porches?  On my daily long walks in my Worcester neighborhood, I've been thinking of how this rise of individualism and fall of community ties and civic commitment is strongly correlated to the favoring of private back decks and side patios over the public life of front porches.  So, I am wondering if we could somehow shift back to kindness, neighborliness and trust if we returned to sit on front porches.  What if we slowed down, sat with chilled glasses of iced tea and a stack of books to greet the outside?  Could our streets where we live, the city, even the world become a gentler place?  What do you think?

From Slummerville to Somerville Sundays

But Somerville had all the basic bare bones to emerge someday as one of the most livable cities – 1) It is one of the most densely populated cities in the country with almost 79,000 people jammed tight into about 4 square miles.  (Compare that to our sprawling Worcester with 182,000 people spread out in about 39 square miles) 2) Its extensive public transportation network of subways, trains and buses, allow easy access to Boston, Cambridge and surrounding suburbs.  3) It’s incredibly walk-able with short blocks.  The housing stock of predominantly closely packed multiple family dwellings are within easy walking distance to commercial squares where one can find everything from restaurants to service businesses.  

The Skybridge to Nowhere Worcester

This past month, a Superior District court judge ordered our city to pay for the immediate construction of an elevated footbridge linking the Hilton Garden Inn, the Major Taylor Parking Garage and the DCU Worcester Convention Center.  The city made the commitment to build this bridge years ago and may very likely be legally bound to honor that obligation. Could we have had more foresight back then?

It’s true.  Pedestrians are at a disadvantage in walking this area. I’ve tried to cross Major Taylor Boulevard, waiting for the lights to change and then dashing across the “highway” of Major Taylor Boulevard to get to the other side.  It can be scary! The answer for pedestrian safety remains in the redesign of the main street not the overpriced construction of a skybridge.

If a tree falls in the forest and no person hears it, does it even make a sound?

If an outsider visits our city and never actually hits a Worcester sidewalk, was he or she really HERE?

Here are the consequences when we make it easy to escape our streets: lack of economic spin-off to surrounding businesses and continued deadened street life around this single-use mega project complex.

An elevated bridge will enable visitors to drive, park, stay at the hotel and go to the convention center without ever actually being here.  We missed a major opportunity this past summer during the resurfacing of Major Taylor Boulevard to make it a complete street, accessible to walkers, bicyclist as well as car drivers.  With some paint and planters, we could have made that street into something incredible for just a tiny fraction of the projected $10 million dollar cost to construct an elevated footbridge. 

 

Major Taylor Boulevard: A Wasted Opportunity

These days, we practically live at the orthodontist's office on MLK Boulevard or at least that's what it seems to me.  There are broken brackets to be fixed, sanitizing mouthwashes to be picked up, frequent adjustments to be made.  Consequently, I'm driving my teenager there fairly often and have had a chance to experience personally the street changes on Major Taylor Boulevard in the past couple of months.  When the pavement was stripped of its top, we had the bone chilling, bumpy rides on the way to and from home.  Sometime in August though, the road sported its new asphalt.  If I really, really wanted to and if no one were looking and if the road as it sometimes is, were free of other moving vehicles, I could now gun my Toyota RAV4 SUV up to 50 miles per hour as only a cool suburban mama can do!  Shh... Don't tell anyone.  That road is so smooth and just so enticing that I yearn to put the pedal to the metal.

A Cuppa with... Andre Leroux

It's a hot, sunny August morning and I've dragged my children out of the house early to take the heart-to-hub 8 am train to Boston.  Less than a ten minute walk away from South Station, we arrive at the offices of the Massachusetts Smart Growth Alliance.  We're here to have an in-depth discussion with  the Executive Director, Andre Leroux about the recent changes in Massachusetts zoning laws, new economic development legislation, the importance of mixed income neighborhoods and ways we can create vibrant urban spaces.  As a Worcester native who spent his formative years in our city, Andre especially has some keen insights for us.  

What's Next For Jane Jacobs In The Woo?

It's been four months since Jane Jacobs' 100th birthday celebration on May 4th and the inauguration of this blog.  Jane Jacobs in the Woo has envisioned the sixteen weeks as an intensive online community-based urban studies seminar.  We have turned to a variety of disciplines -- history, sociology, urban design, planning -- to understand why Worcester has emerged as an auto-centric, sprawling suburbanized city. If you missed them, you can re-read and share the most important, enlightening, revolutionary posts.

The Battle Over the Directional Heart of the Canal

The writer of this blog has no vested interest in the Canal District.  This writer does not live there, does not run a business there and does not own property there.  Jane Jacobs in the Woo sees what is happening though and sees how huge mega-box developments with adjacent parking complexes have served to deaden our streets and sidewalks especially in our downtown.  A big hope for a different path has been in the Canal District. So when Jane Jacobs in the Woo sees the encroachment happening there, she gets mad.  An outsider will scratch her head, “Why does Worcester make the same mistake over and over and over again?”  Wake up! We need to prioritize the kind of mixed use, high density, home grown successful development projects that are being showcased so beautifully by Dino Lorusso at Crompton Place.

Ode to the Worcester Parking Garage

We have already demonstrated in this blog how our emphasis on building "park and enter" mega projects cum parking garages has resulted in a deadened street life.  It's time for some real soul searching here.  Do we want to continue to be an auto-centric, sprawling suburbanized city or do we want to stop, rethink and envision a different path?  

Report Card on 50 Years Worcester Urban Development: It's Robert Moses Time

 In the post World War II suburban and automobile age, cities had a choice between two urban development paradigms. From the very first groundbreaking of the Salem Square Development and the Worcester Galleria Mall, Worcester chose the urban renewal path of automobile-centric, single use, low density mega-projects cum parking garages.  We chose an urban landscape designed for cars and not for people.  Therefore, fifty years later, it should come as no surprise that our streets are filled with cars, our sidewalks demonstrate little "street ballet" and foot traffic and our residents hunger for open, spontaneous public meeting spaces that are lacking.  The question is: can we learn from these past development mistakes? Can we turn this around?

On Kindness and Blogging

So, here are some questions:  Could real kindness draw a growing audience?  And can we disagree with our fellow Worcester neighbors and still be present in respectful conversation and debate?  Jane Jacobs in the Woo is pointing out the mistakes in Worcester’s urban development agenda for the past fifty years but she will never yell or denigrate.  Indeed, there may be two competing paradigms for what makes a thriving Worcester.  Even though we may have different methods and visions, we can all come together on the same goal.  We all want Worcester to be a vibrant, healthy and active community to live.