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SPRAWL: A Compact History Published in the journal 'Science', 2006. This book focuses on urban sprawl low density, scattered,
urban development without systematic large-scale or regional public land-use
planning. It is a lively book about why our current preoccupation with sprawl
is unnecessary and the policy recommendations that have arisen to address it
are misguided. His argument as well as the structure of the book can be
rehearsed as follows: sprawl has always been with us; various attempts to cast
sprawl in a negative light are wrong-headed and belied by the evidence; remedies
for sprawl have not produced intended effects; and toying with urbanization
patterns created by the collective impact of millions of individual decisions
is a risky business. A compelling, wonderfully written little book, it debunks
some widely accepted myths about urban development, and for the first time,
lays out a cogent argument in defense of sprawl as the largely beneficial
expression of deeply held human desires that transcend space and time. As such
it is a welcome tonic to pervasive anti-sprawl advocacy, forcing us to think
about its received wisdom and underlying assumptions. And because it attacks so
many sacred cows, it is destined to be widely read and debated by professional planners
and architects, academic urban theorists, geographers and historians, and
college students in classrooms throughout the It is therefore all the more unfortunate then, that so much
of the books argument is wrong. It avoids key questions of definition, confuses
urban form with urban process, skates over large bodies of evidence, and when
all else fails reverts to questioning science. These deficiencies are not the
result of any lack of due diligence. Indeed, the scope of Bruegmanns research
is often impressive, albeit conducted (as expected from a professor of art
history) more in the style of the humanities than as rigorous, quantitative
social science. But just like the anti-sprawl campaigners he takes to task
Bruegmann hides behind aggregate and supposedly transhistorical trends, deploys
evidence selectively, and claims lack of scientific knowledge in his quest to
create a libertarian defense of sprawl and avoid policy remedies. This is bad
science, which inevitably means bad public policy solutions. Where exactly does Bruegmann go wrong? One fatal flaw is his
attempt to avoid altogether a big part of the sprawl problem by simply defining
it away. Bruegmann correctly argues that categories such as city, suburb and
exurb tend to be fluid over time. What one generation decries as sprawl
ticky tacky boxes all the same the next may see as a target for historic
preservation. But he claims that while in any one time period the latest wave
of suburbanization has typically been seen as sprawl, exurbs are different. He
concedes that such periurban regions are increasing much faster in land area
that in population as lot sizes continue to rise. By some estimates, over half
of the new land used for residential purposes in the United States between 1970
and 2000 was in lots over ten acres, and over 90 percent was in lots of one
acre and over (p.80). But then in an astonishing sleight of hand, he proceeds
to ask (p.81) [I]s exurbia sprawl? and quickly concludes that the answer is
no. What is his evidence? Allowing that most people would call a subdivision
of two-acre ranchettes with mowed front lawns an example of sprawl, he
declares that an old farmhouse on two acres where the husband commutes to a
job in the central city but the family farms the land themselves as hobby
farmers or by contracting the work out, is not. Nor are vast exurban expanses
found throughout the northeast and mid-west, filled with McMansions
intermingled with rural uses. Moreover there is no reason to be concerned about
exurbanization. The land is not needed for agriculture, and if nearby central
cities are being eviscerated it is not because their most affluent residents have
decamped for the exurbs. Indeed, according to Bruegmann, the exurban rich will
save the day, their continued consumption of central city goods and services
allowing the city to retain some (albeit poor) residents until once totally
bottomed out and hence attractive to real estate speculators it undergoes
revival and gentrification. A second misstep is theoretical. Bruegmann conflates urban
form with process or dynamics. He argues that something akin to sprawl has characterized
urbanization since the days of A third problem is analytic: the selective and/or inappropriate
use of evidence. Bruegmann caricatures the mountainous research on the causes
of suburbanization and low-density peripheral development, and relies on
place-specific information, spatially aggregate data, or ungrounded
generalities to dismiss standard explanations for sprawl, wave away concerns
about the impacts of sprawl, or debunk proposed remedies. For example, an enormous
volume of research shows that white flight from central cities with expanding
African American populations helped fuel 20th century
suburbanization, defensive municipal incorporation and exclusionary zoning, simultaneously
creating wealth for white homeowners and their children. But the role of race
is dismissed out of hand on the grounds that A fourth problem is that when Bruegmann hits one of the most
powerful arguments against sprawl that it is not environmentally sustainable
he uses a familiar conservative ploy: the science is there yet. This is despite
widespread scientific agreement about the relationships between urbanization
and energy intensive urban lifestyles on habitat loss and greenhouse gas
production. Calling sustainability warm and fuzzy (p.148) complaining that it
relies on notions of carrying capacity that he argues have been discredited, he
places his bets of a technological fix to extend resources as fast as global demand
rises and ignores the mounting scientific evidence of ecosystem appropriation
by cities. Moreover, he claims that low density sprawl may be more sustainable
that other forms of settlement because [a]t low enough densities, most
citizens would probably be able to generate, using wind, water, solar, and
geothermal power sources, a great deal of the energy they need on their own
land (p.148-9). But would not such low densities create massive habitat loss? Here
Bruegmann reverts to questioning science and how much we really know: habitat
loss and species endangerment may due to urbanization, but species extinction
is still not well understood and we need more research (p. 149). Similarly,
while conceding that human activities are playing a role in global warming,
what can and should be done by whom and at what cost is still very much in
dispute (p.149). And because Brugemann questions how, if at all, sprawling cities
and their auto-dependent transportation patterns contribute to global warming,
attention to reducing greenhouse gases produced by cities is misdirected. So, what is to be done? This is the policy question that Bruegmann
addresses in the last part of his book. After reviewing successive efforts to
contain sprawl, typically catalyzed by periods of rapid economic growth, he
concludes that results have been mixed at best. (The exception is Like Bruegmann, I close by considering southern
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