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07/07/2020 Queens Museum showcases Buckminster Fuller’s unbuilt Harlem plan - Curbed NY

NEW YORK

LONGFORM

A ‘futuristic vision for Harlem’


What happens when a poet and an architect reimagine a Manhattan neighborhood?
By James Nevius Jan 10, 2018, 8:00am EST

Buckminster Fuller’s vision for Harlem, that first appeared in a 1965 essay in Esquire magazine. | Courtesy, The Estate of R. Buckminster Fuller

Deep dives on cities, architecture, design, real estate, and urban planning.

I
magine standing at 116th Street and Morningside Drive and looking out at the
great sweep of Harlem spreading forth below you. Everywhere you turn there
are “cultural centers… concert halls, theatres, workshops… dancing pavilions,
and athletic fields….” Instead of dilapidated brownstones, there are “pathways for
strolling under trees” and “contemporary sculpture” enriching the open spaces.

This all sounds lovely, but you can’t actually see any of it.

Instead, from your vantage point, what you see is a “radical landscape: vast cleared ranges
of spaces with fifteen peaks rising into the sky. These fifteen widely separated conical
structures” are each 100 stories high. They resemble gargantuan nuclear power plants.
Highways run below them and through them, zipping traffic across the island at breakneck
speed.

This futuristic vision for Harlem, credited to architect R. Buckminster Fuller, best known
for his embrace of the geodesic dome, first appeared in a 1965 essay in Esquire magazine
titled “Instant Slum Clearance.”

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on for Harlem, that first appeared in a 1965 essay in Esquire magazine. | Courtesy, The Estate of R. Buckminster Fuller

It was the sort of grandiose idea that big-name modernist architects and planners often put
forward to solve thorny problems, and the accompanying illustrations by Fuller’s longtime
collaborator, Shoji Sadao, show a sci-fi landscape that simultaneously embraced and
destroyed Manhattan’s century and a half of rigid adherence to its famous street grid.
Reading the story, it is easy to assume that Fuller was yet another white man with a plan, a
part of what author Teju Cole has dubbed “the white-savior industrial complex.”

Esquire readers who noticed the story’s byline were likely unfamiliar with its author, June
Meyer, and perhaps assumed she was a member of the magazine’s staff. In truth, Meyer was
the married name of June Jordan, the black poet, author, essayist, urban thinker, and
Harlem resident. What the story never mentioned was that the genesis of the entire project,
dubbed “Skyrise for Harlem,” had been hers.

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To understand “Skyrise for Harlem”—and debates about housing and development that
continue in the neighborhood today, most recently as part of the East Harlem Rezoning—
it’s crucial to look at how the area came to be what Alain Locke called in 1925 the “race
capital” of black America, and what that meant for the area’s economic life.

Harlem was settled by Dutch and Walloon farmers in 1637-39; 20 years later, under the
direction of Peter Stuyvesant, the Dutch West India Company created the formal village of
Nieuw Haarlem. During British rule, the town nominally came under the governmental
control of New York City, but continued to be a remote enclave dotted with farms, estates,
inns, and taverns.

That changed with the coming of the Ninth Avenue Elevated IRT in 1879. Soon, real estate
developers began to snatch up large swaths of property, and by 1904, when the IRT subway
reached the neighborhood along Broadway, most streets were lined with townhouses. Too
many townhouses, it turned out. A sharp real estate downturn in the early 1890s left many
developers holding on to a glut of housing stock.

While “Skyrise for Harlem” was never more than an idea, you can see it brought to life at the Queens Museum’s
exhibition “Never Built New York,” which runs through February 18. In addition to the Esquire illustrations, model-
makers at the museum have built four of Jordan and Fuller’s abstract, stylized Christmas trees and placed them
over Harlem in the museum’s famous panorama, giving a glimpse—at 1:1200 scale—of what a radically different
Harlem might have looked like if Jordan and Fuller had seen their dream come to fruition.

David H. King, the contractor who built the Washington Square Arch and the pedestal of
the Statue of Liberty, invested heavily in four blocks of housing along West 138th and 139th
streets between Seventh and Eighth avenues. (Today, those streets are known as Adam
Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard and Frederick Douglass Boulevard.) King hired three well-
known architects—James Brown Lord, Bruce Price, and Stanford White—to create terraces
of elegant homes, the King Model Houses, better known today as Striver’s Row. However,
by 1895, only nine of the 146 buildings in King’s development had sold and his mortgager
was desperate to find buyers and renters.

At the same time that King’s project was falling apart, Manhattan’s largest African-
American neighborhood, the Tenderloin, faced its own dilemma: Starting in 1901, agents of
the Pennsylvania Railroad had been buying up properties in the area for a massive railroad
station. Soon, they began evicting residents, many of whom fled to Harlem. In 1910,
Hutchens Bishop, the rector of St. Philip’s Episcopal Church on West 25th Street in the
Tenderloin—America’s second-oldest black Episcopal parish—began purchasing property
for a new church on West 134th Street, along with 10 apartment buildings nearby, so that
his congregation could move, wholesale, to the new neighborhood.

By the end of World War I, Harlem was well on its way to becoming New York’s largest
black neighborhood. The relative prosperity of the 1920s, combined with shifting social and
cultural norms during Prohibition, meant that in the era of the Harlem Renaissance, the
neighborhood was celebrated, but exoticized. As Langston Hughes wrote in his
autobiography, The Big Sea, this was the period when “the Negro was in Vogue”; historian
Irving Lewis Allen concurs: “White New Yorkers saw all of Harlem as a jungle of wild
parties, hot jazz, and primitive passions.”

Harlem residents lived in relatively new housing stock. As sociologist Ira De Reid pointed
out, they “inherited the homes and tenements of people more economically secure than
they.” But beneath this outward curb appeal, those inherited homes were “congested and
unsafe,” and residents paid “excessively high rents.” As George Schuyler, an African-
American columnist for the Pittsburgh Courier, wrote in 1940:

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the rents are criminally exorbitant, usually the highest in town.... Considering that there is
proportionally 100% more unemployment among Negroes and that when they work they hold largely
the lowest paid jobs, overcrowding is inevitable…. Rarely does a Negro get to move into a new
dwelling. Usually we take over the outworn houses of white people, just as we get their leftover
clothing, victuals, religion, and educational fictions.

Throughout the Depression, with many Harlemites struggling to find work, tensions grew.
On March 19, 1935, a riot broke out after an employee at the S&H Kress store allegedly
threatened to “beat the hell out of” a black youth, Lino Rivera, who’d been caught
shoplifting. Following the riot, Mayor La Guardia commissioned a panel—members
included labor leader A. Philip Randolph and poet Countee Cullen—to investigate. The
commission’s report concluded:

While it is true that the present economic crisis has been responsible for the appalling amount of
unemployment and dependency in Harlem… the main social factor which is responsible for this
condition is racial discrimination in employment…. In view of the Negro’s impoverished condition, it is
not surprising to find him living in the often dilapidated and dangerous living quarters which whites
have abandoned.... The health agencies, as in the case of housing, were designed for a community
with a different pattern of life and a different set of problems. There has been no systematic and
comprehensive effort to modify these agencies to serve the needs of the present community….

Many of the panel’s recommendations were swiftly put into action, including “an Advisory
Committee on Negro Problems, a new Central Harlem Health Center” and a new wing for
Harlem Hospital. “Within a year of the riots, the city budget included 4 new school
buildings and the Harlem River Houses, the first black public housing project, opened in
1937.”

Like Jordan and Fuller’s “Skyrise for Harlem” three decades later, the Harlem River Houses
—today a seemingly modest enterprise in a city of 347 sprawling public housing projects—
was a remarkable attempt to use architecture to address Harlem’s housing and economic
problems.

In the 19th century, the concept of government-funded public housing didn’t exist in New
York. Instead, a series of laws were passed to regulate (often ineffectually) private housing
stock. The city’s minority and immigrant working class was mostly confined to tenements,
and laws sought to address basic health and safety issues, such as mandating fire escapes
(1867), windows in every room (1879), and bathrooms for every apartment (1901).

As Nicholas Dagen Bloom and Matthew Gordon Lasner point out in Affordable Housing in
New York, the first real attempt to impose more direct government control came in 1920,
with the passage of New York State’s initial rent control law. At the same time, the newly
created State Reconstruction Commission recommended the creation of “a state housing
agency empowered to make loans, and local housing boards permitted to buy land and
build housing….” As the commission pointed out, “low-interest loans for housing had ‘been
developed by almost every other civilized country, excepting America.’” In 1926, the state
passed the Limited Dividend Housing Companies Act, granting the city the right of eminent
domain to build housing and offering 20 years of tax exemptions to qualifying developers.

However, the first housing project to come to Harlem was not a public work, but instead
part of John D. Rockefeller Jr.’s private philanthropic network of low-cost housing.
Designed by Andrew Jackson Thomas—who gained some renown for his apartments in the
planned community of Jackson Heights, Queens—the Paul Laurence Dunbar Apartments at
Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard and West 149th Street were built as a limited-equity co-
op that Rockefeller hoped would prove that government intervention was unnecessary in

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the housing market. (For that reason, he refused the newly created tax exemptions being
offered by the state.)

Harlem Landmark, Dunbar Apartments on corner of 150th Street and Adam Powell Blvd. | NY Daily News via Getty Images

The Dunbar Apartments’ 511 units were divided over six buildings built in Thomas’s
“garden apartment” style: Fortress-like facades faced the street, obscuring the fact that the
building entrances were inside landscaped, semi-private courtyards that resembled “a
college quadrangle” or a cathedral close. Many prominent Harlem residents moved to the
Dunbar Apartments early on, including W.E.B. DuBois, Bill “Bojangles” Robinson, and A.
Philip Randolph, who would join the mayor’s commission after the 1935 riot, by which time
the Dunbar Apartments had fallen victim to the Depression. Rockefeller was forced to
eliminate the largest apartments in the complex, breaking them into smaller units, and by
1936, the co-op had been converted to rentals, many of them still rent controlled or rent
stabilized to this day. Rockefeller soon sold the complex.

Meanwhile, in 1934, New York State authorized the creation of the New York City Housing
Authority (NYCHA), the first such agency anywhere in the country. Given sweeping reform
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powers, NYCHA began enforcing the city’s lax building codes, especially in the tenements,
which caused 40,000 owners to walk away from their properties “rather than comply with
the law.” As these abandoned buildings were condemned, NYCHA began creating the first
wave of public housing, beginning with First Houses on Avenue A in 1936. In part spurred
by the 1935 riot, the Harlem River Houses, built by NYCHA using Public Works
Administration (PWA) federal funds, followed in 1937. (One reason the Harlem River
Houses were prioritized was that Harold Ickes, secretary of the interior and head of the
PWA, “refused to integrate” housing projects, so black residents of Harlem had no
opportunity to move to First Houses or other federally funded projects.)

The lead architect on the Harlem River Houses was Archibald Manning Brown, who worked
in conjunction with a team that included John Louis Wilson, the first black person to
graduate from Columbia University’s prestigious architecture program. The architects
spread the project’s 577 apartments over low-rise buildings that cover just 28 percent of the
9-acre site (which is bounded by West 151st and West 153rd streets, Macombs Place, and
the Harlem River Drive). In contrast to the isolated feel of the nearby Dunbar Apartments,
the Harlem River Houses had “eyes on the street” (to borrow Jane Jacobs’s famous phrase),
and the mix of rental units and ground-floor retail was at least as successful at creating a
real sense of community as Thomas’s more private, interior courtyards. In a rare show of
support for public housing, architecture critic Lewis Mumford praised them, “citing their
access to natural light, safe courtyards, and modern amenities in kitchens and bathrooms as
the key to ‘decent living.’” As Wilson later noted, “We tried to create a humane
architecture.”

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Harlem River Houses. | Getty Images

Like every affordable housing lottery today, the Harlem River Houses were instantly
popular—11,000 applicants vied for 577 units. Some were lured by the amenities, including
“playgrounds and wading pools,” along with a “nursery school, health clinic, library, and
social rooms.”

However, the main draw was surely the rent. As Bloom points out in Affordable Housing in
New York, “generous federal subsidies, which absorbed 45 percent of the construction
costs, yielded apartments renting at an average of $7 per room per month ($1,200 in 2013
dollars for a five-room unit).” An extensive screening process and restrictive covenants (no
lodgers, for example) meant that those accepted into the Harlem River Houses were
economically more stable than many in Harlem. The median annual income for a black
family in New York at the time was $837; for residents of the Harlem River Houses, it was
$1,312. These were public housing projects, but were they truly serving the public?

Over the next two decades, numerous other projects—sponsored both by NYCHA and
private developers—were built in Harlem, including the East River Houses (1939-41),
James Weldon Johnson Houses (1942-48), Riverton Houses (1944-48), Jefferson Houses
(1950-59), General Grant Houses (1952-57), Morningside Gardens (1952-58),

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Manhattanville Houses (1954-61), and Franklin Plaza (1954-62). Together, these buildings
contained over 11,000 units of housing for Harlem’s low- and middle-income residents.
However, restrictions placed on federal housing funds meant that with each successive
iteration, public housing was more generic and less well constructed, while at the same time
becoming more densely populated.

n, a housing community running between 135th Street and 5th Avenue to 138th Street and from 5th Avenue to the lip of the Harlem River, 1963. | Bettmann Archive

For example, the General Grant Houses, completed in 1957, featured 21-story towers, the
biggest NYCHA had ever constructed. With the car-loving Robert Moses in charge of a wide
swath of city agencies by this point, including the Mayor’s Committee on Slum Clearance,
it’s not surprising that one of the features was ample off-street parking. Today, about 16 to
25 percent of Harlem households have cars; that number certainly can’t have been larger
then. Were the parking spaces supposed to be aspirational—or were Moses and NYCHA that
out of touch?

Meanwhile, the housing stock in the rest of Harlem continued to age poorly. As Kenneth B.
Clark points out in his controversial 1965 study Dark Ghetto: Dilemmas of Social Power,
Harlem housed “232,792 people within its three and one half square miles,” a population
density of “100 people per acre.” He goes on to note that:

The condition of all but the newest buildings is poor. Eleven percent are classified as dilapidated by
the 1960 census; that is, they do “not provide safe and adequate shelter,” and thirty-three percent are

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deteriorating (i.e., “need more repair than would be provided in the course of regular maintenance”).
There are more people in fewer rooms than elsewhere in the city. Yet the rents and profits from
Harlem are often high, as many landlords deliberately crowd more people into buildings in slum
areas, knowing that the poor have few alternatives…. Cruel in the extreme is the landlord who, like the
store owner who charges Negroes more for shoddy merchandise, exploits the powerlessness of the
poor.

When Clark wrote this, nearly three decades had passed since the 1935 riots that sparked
the building of the Harlem River Houses. Nearly one-fifth of Harlem’s population had
moved into public housing in the intervening years. Yet overall economic and housing
conditions had barely changed. Throughout the Depression and World War II, discontent
simmered in Harlem, occasionally rising to the surface, as it did in August 1943 in the two
days of riots that inspired the culminating scenes in Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man.

While writing that novel, in 1948, Ellison penned an essay, “Harlem Is Nowhere.” It was
published by Harper’s in August 1964—immediately following another week-long bloody
conflict in Harlem that July. In the essay, Ellison writes that:

Harlem is a ruin—many of its ordinary aspects (its crimes, its casual violence, its crumbling buildings
with littered areaways, ill-smelling halls, and vermin-invaded rooms) are indistinguishable from the
distorted images that appear in dreams and, like muggers haunting a lonely hall, quiver in the waking
mind with hidden and threatening significance.

By 1965, did Harlem need a much more radical solution than what NYCHA could provide?

June Jordan was born in Harlem in 1936, the daughter of immigrants from the West Indies.
Raised in Bedford-Stuyvesant, she became reacquainted with the neighborhood as a student
at Barnard College in the 1950s, where she developed interests in both sociology and
architecture. As a budding journalist in the early 1960s, she traveled to Mississippi to report
on—and engage in—the civil rights struggle. She worked on the Shirley Clarke film The Cool
World, a docudrama about gangs in Harlem, and as a freelancer, she “met and interacted
with Malcolm X… activist James Farmer, who was the National Director of the Congress of
Racial Equality (CORE), and a slew of news reporters, writers, editors, and political
figures.”

“If man is to have not only a future but a destiny, it must


consciously and deliberately be designed.”—June Jordan
When the riots broke out in Harlem in 1964—the result of a police officer shooting and
killing an unarmed black teenager—Jordan “hurried to the scene and spent the night
‘running on the streets of Harlem,’ administering first aid, and ‘trying to avoid being killed’
in the ‘unbelievable, horrifying siege.’” As Daniel Matlin reports in “‘A New Reality of
Harlem’: Imagining the African American Urban Future during the 1960s,” it was the
“agony of that moment” that spurred Jordan, as she later recalled, “into a collaborative
architectural redesign of Harlem, as my initial, deliberated move away from the hateful, the
divisive.” Jordan’s interest in architecture had led her to the work of R. Buckminster Fuller,
who was famous for championing not only the geodesic dome but also the even-more-
futuristic Dymaxion House. Jordan wrote to propose a collaboration.

In the essay “Place, Emotion, and Environmental Justice in Harlem: June Jordan and
Buckminster Fuller’s 1965 ‘Architextual’ Collaboration,” Cheryl Fish points out that when
Jordan corresponded with Fuller, she made certain to emphasize that their plan must
embrace “radical reconstruction rather than mere improvement into the middle-class
physical chaos prized by the rest of the city.”
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That plan, as detailed in Esquire, was certainly radical. As Jordan herself writes:

Harlem is life dying inside a closet, an excrescence beginning where a green park ends, a self-
perpetuating disintegration of walls, ceilings, doorways, lives…. Redevelopment generally means the
removal of slum residents while land is cleared for new buildings and new purposes. In fact,
“redevelopment” is frequently a pretext for the permanent expulsion of Negro populations. Fuller’s
design permits all residents to remain on site while new and vastly improved dwelling facilities rise
directly over the old. No one will move anywhere but up.

The idea was that Fuller’s fireproof, cylindrical towers would be flown in via helicopter and
assembled over the top of the preexisting landscape. Once these 15 “abstract, stylized
Christmas trees” were completed—with room for 500,000 people—the older Harlem below
them would be razed to be replaced by green space.

The towers themselves—“great wheels of life”—would be encircled by a “parking system of


ramps that never cross.” Each apartment would be 1,200 square feet (not including the
balcony or the private parking space outside each unit’s door), but the towers would also
include “shops, supermarkets, game rooms and workshops on every deck….”

Shoji Sadao with June Jordan, Harlem Skyrise Project, c. 1960. | Courtesy Columbia University GSAPP

In place of sidewalks, the towers would be connected by “wide walkways entirely separate
from the cloverleaf ribbonry that will divide the high-speed through traffic from local
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traffic.” Meanwhile, that high-speed vehicular traffic would be “separately routed over an
arterial system similar to that of the Pulaski Skyway in New Jersey…. Now it becomes
possible to travel from the Triborough nonstop over Manhattan Island and onto a newly
created Riverspan Bridge at 125th Street into New Jersey.”

Robert Moses had nothing to do with “Skyrise for Harlem,” but those familiar with his work
—in particular, the ill-fated LOMEX expressway downtown, which was still on the drawing
board in 1965—will see the influence of his type of urban thinking. Jordan and Fuller’s
plans claim to save Harlem, but it is hard not to see their “radical reconstruction” as
anything other than annihilation. Although Jordan was wary of the “expulsion” of people,
she had no qualms about destroying the architectural remnants of the old neighborhood. As
Fuller would later comment, the project would both accommodate those who already lived
in Harlem and “an equal number who would ‘come from the rest of the world’ because ‘it
would be such a wonderful place.’ Harlem would be ‘inviting to all races and all colors, so
that there would be spontaneous integration occurring.’”

While “Skyrise for Harlem” may have been the most radical response to Harlem’s housing
needs, it was certainly not the only solution put forward during the era. In 1964, the
Architects’ Renewal Committee in Harlem (ARCH) was founded to serve, in the words of
architectural historian Brian D. Goldstein, as a “community design center” but then
transformed—as the influence of black nationalism became more prominent in Harlem’s
political life—into a way to “resist and revise official urban development plans.” In contrast
to “Skyrise,” the plans put forward by ARCH often dovetailed with the ideals of Jane Jacobs
—whose 1961 book The Death and Life of Great American Cities advocated preservation
over radical new construction—though certainly not in all regards.

Take, for example, the ARCH proposal for the East Harlem Triangle redevelopment. As
Matlin notes, “In 1961, the City’s Planning Commission had declared this mixed-use area
blighted and unsuitable for housing, and specified that it should be rebuilt exclusively for
industrial and commercial uses. Mid-decade estimates put the area’s population at 4,500
residents, 70 percent of them African American, 20 percent Puerto Rican, and 10 percent
white.” The city’s plan was to turn the area—the triangle bounded by Madison Avenue,
125th Street, and the Harlem River—into an industrial zone. Pushback from the newly
formed Community Association of the East Harlem Triangle (CAEHT) convinced the city to
consider alternate proposals. Working with CAEHT, the planners at ARCH, led by its
director, African-American architect J. Max Bond Jr., produced a plan that would not only
radically transform the East Harlem Triangle, but would create a “distinctively black and
democratic urban space.”

“Fuller’s design permits all residents to remain on site while


new and vastly improved dwelling facilities rise directly over
the old. No one will move anywhere but up.”—June Jordan
As opposed to “Skyrise for Harlem,” the East Harlem Triangle plan advocated the
preservation of newer townhouses and tenements, while new construction would preserve
“positive features of the present living patterns.” Like Jacobs, Bond and his ARCH team saw
the street as the central commons of the community, and the plan’s drawings reflected that.
On a reconfigured 125th Street, most of the traffic is eliminated in favor of wide sidewalks
and tree-lined medians with bench seating. Typical examples from the urban planning
wishlist are present, like a dedicated lane for bus traffic, while very specific symbols of
Harlem abound: the bus boasts an ad for Muhammad Speaks, the newspaper of the Nation
of Islam. A man in a dashiki stands in the median, while a woman on the sidewalk raises a
black power salute.

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Unlike the “spontaneous integration” Fuller envisioned for Harlem, this was architecture
and urban planning as a specific embodiment of black pride. Jane Jacobs always saw the
“slum” as a place where “advancement and self-diversification in a population” would
ultimately lead to “unslumming.” Certainly, the ARCH plans were dedicated to the
advancement of a black middle class in Harlem; however, as Goldstein points out, Jacobs’s
nebulous idea of “self-diversification” can be interpreted as requiring “desegregation as a
prerequisite for ‘unslumming.’” The ARCH plan envisioned no such desegregation, but
instead “proposed the radical idea that Harlem did not need class transformation, whether
from within or without, to succeed as a community but could flourish by housing and
serving its existing residents.”

Fuller and Jordan’s “Skyrise” never made it off the pages of Esquire. The ARCH plan for the
East Harlem Triangle was never adopted, though Goldstein argues that it did lead the way
for residents to build “a social service center and hundreds of affordable housing units in
the following years.” Without any radical reconstruction, most of Harlem foundered, the
area’s real estate prices plummeting in the 1970s as in so many other economically
disadvantaged neighborhoods across the five boroughs. In the 1980s, gentrification
tentatively arrived in Harlem, mostly by way of middle-class black residents who, as
Monique M. Taylor writes in “Can You Go Home Again? Black Gentrification and the
Dilemma of Difference,” were looking for “real estate bargains” while also being “strongly
motivated by a desire to participate in the rituals that define daily life in this (in)famous and
historically black community.”

What began as a trickle of black families soon became a larger number of whites. In the
New York Times in 2016, Michael Henry Adams wrote of the “End of Black Harlem,” noting
that while wealth and not race may be a primary factor in gentrification, that’s a “distinction
without a difference.”

Unfortunately, this is often the price of attempting to maintain the sort of streetscape
favored by Jane Jacobs. Where she was trying to “unslum” neighborhoods to create
cohesive, working-class communities with the schools, churches, corner stores, and stoop-
sitting she saw as crucial to an area’s lifeblood, the gentrifiers turn old schools into housing,
replace corner stores with Whole Foods, and do their people-watching at Starbucks. A
bodega is not ethically superior to a Whole Foods, but as Adams points out, for “so many
privileged New Yorkers… Whole Foods is just the corner store. But among the black and
working-class residents of Harlem, who have withstood red-lining and neglect, it might as
well be Fortnum and Mason. To us, our Harlem is being remade, upgraded and
transformed, just for them, for wealthier white people.”

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the sidewalk on 125th St. in Harlem between street vendors and a Whole Foods market on November 17, 2017 in New York. | AFP/Getty Images

Would things be better if Jordan and Fuller had been given the opportunity to fly in 15
gargantuan towers and drop them down on Harlem? Common sense says no, but looking at
the success of large-scale planned urban communities, like Battery Park City, should at least
make one pause to consider the possibility.

Residents of Battery Park City liken their neighborhood—large residential towers knitted
together by a ribbon of parkland with a self-contained ecosystem of shops and
entertainment—to living in a kind of urban village. Could “Skyrise for Harlem” have ever
achieved the same success?

In Affordable Housing in New York, one resident of Rockefeller’s Dunbar Apartments told
an interviewer: “The design of the building is phenomenal. We live in a two bedroom that
has light, exposure on all sides.” Another concurs: “this building has far more of a hold on
people than your average apartment building… The greatest thing is that you do know your
neighbors and you do stop to chat in the courtyard.”

With the designs in “Skyrise for Harlem” emphasizing light-filled apartments, communal
spaces within the towers, and green grass in place of Ralph Ellison’s “crumbling buildings

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with littered areaways,” could Jordan and Fuller’s mega-project truly have created a New
Harlem that held onto the area’s unique sense of place?

On November 30, 2017, the City Council approved a new East Harlem Rezoning. The plan
covers everything from affordable housing (including 3,500 units of new housing, “a
substantial proportion of which” are supposed to be affordable), 122,000 square feet of
retail and restaurants, and 275,000 square feet of office and industrial space. Using such
preferred zoning techniques as Mandatory Inclusionary Housing, the proposal shifts much
of the burden of development onto the private sector, while controlling for open space,
building heights, and providing “incentives for the creation of visual and performing arts
space and enhance the area’s role as a major arts, entertainment and cultural destination.”

The Harlem that emerges from this zoning resolution over the next two decades is anyone’s
guess. Will this blueprint serve to help preserve Harlem’s vital ethnic and cultural mix? Or
will it become just another enclave filled with faceless housing and retail corridors of CVS,
Target, and Home Depot? And, from an architectural point of view, will there be any
unifying program or just a hodgepodge of unregulated and incoherent styles?

At the conclusion of “Instant Slum Clearance,” Jordan writes that there is “no evading
architecture, no meaningful denial of our position.” Architecture has the power to “protect”
and “illuminate” the human condition, but only if we refuse to build “merely in spasmodic
response to past and present crises, for then crisis, like the poor, will be with us always. If
man is to have not only a future but a destiny, it must consciously and deliberately be
designed.” ■

Editor: Sara Polsky

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