Tuesday, August 27, 2024

The most myopic way to do "comprehensive" re-zoning

 Baltimore County, the largest jurisdiction in the Baltimore region, has only seven council members who yield incredible power. For example in zoning.

Baltimore County Masterplan: Ransacked by the
Council

This was once again on display this week when the county council voted about nearly 400 zoning issues in a process that is as obtuse as its name: Quadrennial CZMP. This stands for comprehensive zoning map process, whereby the "map" part stands for the fact that this is geographically specific zoning that shows on the map (versus changes to the zoning code that can happen any time). The operation goes over two years from the time applications are allowed to the day of the vote and is repeated every four years. In those two years all applications for re-zoning are placed on a log of issues that are posted online. Each county resident can apply for zoning changes on any parcel of land that is zoned. Each issue is reviewed and commented by the planning department and the planning board of the county, both can suggest modifications to the original application. 

Mixed use that could be TOD: denied for Lutherville

The rationale for doing all the re-zoning in one consolidated process sounds convincing. It allows to see the bigger picture of what all changes combined would do to the County as a whole and how those changes would advance or hamper the goals and objectives of the county masterplan. That is the theory. The practice is quite different and actually resembles the opposite. 

It is hard to know where to begin with a critique of the process or describe all the places where it goes off the rails. As former Baltimore County planning director Keller stated in the Baltimore Banner, "the system pretty much sucks". 

To begin with, this round of rezoning falls half way into the old 2020 masterplan and halfway into the new 2030 masterplan which is now in effect. In other words, applicants went by a plan that was on its last breath when they filed for zoning change while the council voted when the new plan is already in effect. Zoning is an act of planning that by definition must look forward and think ahead.

Online access to the log of issues

The adoption of the new masterplan in itself was another example of the council power going awry. The council with its almost absolute powers ran rough-shot over the plan in the last moments of it being adopted as the guiding document and after years of preparation. Several renegade council members took the most important designation of the plan, the nodes out. One council member nixed out all nodes in his entire district, a random and capricious act. The Planning Director sums this up in his "director's report" on the CZMP:

Council’s amendments removed, or altered, a number of the Node Place Types that were provided in the draft Master Plan 2030, creating voids in the Place Type mapped areas. These have been designated as Undefined in the land use Place Types. The absence of a land use designation in these areas prevented determinations of consistency or inconsistency with Master Plan 2030. 

 The planning department did, in fact look at all the issues in the aggregate in a time consuming process that included "research regarding development proposals, zoning history, applicable school capacity, infrastructure and field visits", review of "comments from several county agencies, meeting with the applicants and attending public hearings to obtain community comments. The director's report summarizes:

 A total of 389 rezoning requests were received, totaling 9,439.55 acres. Requests for the NC zoning designation, alone, totaled 2,174.84 acres. The Department of Planning recommended zoning changes to 73 issues which involved 725.89 acres.

So far so good, the planners riddled down the chaos to a manageable change, had the council not messed up the new masterplan and weren’t the Masterplan out of sync with refining... But the orderly and systematic review of the planning department becomes much less meaningful when they have to hand the entire issue log over to the Planning Board which is far more developer friendly and recommended way more zoning changes than the department.  

The real kicker, though, is that the councilmen (yes they are all men) don't have to abide by neither what the planning department recommends nor what the Planning Board finds, nor by anything what the public told them. 

In the voting reality that took place once again this week, each council member has not only the last word on voting up or down on the application itself or the recommendations they can actually change the zoning in the the final vote to something different altogether. Yes, that's right! What actually stands at the end of a 2-year arduous process may have nothing to do with what the applicant wanted or what the planners and planning board members recommended. It may be a decision that has never been vetted by anyone at all and it will stand for four years unless somebody can prove to the Board of Appeals that there was an actual error, that it was grievously capricious or that the area in question has undergone such drastic change after the zoning was enacted, that it would be absurd to uphold it.  

In that vain, and in a move that defies all planning logic, Councilman Jack rezoned a former mall that is now a partially occupied shopping center in Lutherville right next to a light rail station not to mixed use (as applied for) as needed for a transit oriented development, but to DR16, ie. relatively low density housing which makes all existing use "conditional", i.e not "by right" anymore but subject to being revoked when any change is planned. 

What if the other council members find a particular move of a colleague especially obnoxious or egregious? In theory, they could vote the district representative's motion down. In reality, though, this has never happened in the history of the council. In part, this has practical reasons. No council member can understand the complexity of nearly 400 zoning issues and even less discuss them in a session where all are supposed to be voted into law. But the "councilmanic courtesy" principle goes beyond those practical matters. It  is an overall "gentlemen's" agreement  that applies the rule of "mind your own damn business" to countywide planning where it surely isn't appropriate. 

It is particularly inappropriate in a county that has a severe housing shortage and is under a mandate to create 1000 affordable housing units in 10 years. It is inappropriate in a county where NIMBYs are at time openly or veiled racist and where the population is stagnant because there is nobody who guides development in a manner that is rational and above board. 

Council members cannot take donations while the CZMP is underway, but, of course, they take them before and after to an extent that citizens' trust in local decision in Baltimore County is largely lost. Or as the chair of the policy advocacy group "We the People" writes in an email to members:

Why does this all matter? Because allowing each Councilmember to run his or her district as an individual fiefdom divides us from one another, and deprives us of the opportunity to build on our collective strengths. We are not seven individual counties, united by a loose alliance of roads, sewers and water pipes. We are One County. (Nick Stewart, We The People)

Division is a big loss in a time when only confidence in democratic institutions can hold the society somehow together. Gaining such trust is still the easiest on the local level where "potholes" are neither Republican nor Democrat", but it Maryland's third largest jurisdiction needs a very different council for that. 

Klaus Philipsen, FAIA

 

Friday, August 23, 2024

A Vision for Baltimore (Part 2 - A Strategy)

Recently I reviewed the Morgan State Capstone thesis work by Nicholas Chupein about urban highway removals and specifically concepts to remove the JFX titled "Windows of Opportunity" and a new, not yet published book by internationally known architect V. Chakrabarti about "connected design titled "The Architecture of Urbanity - Designing for Nature, Culture, and Joy" . After some consideration I think that combining a new transportation paradigm with the concept of urbanity and connectivity would make a solid foundation for a new vision of Baltimore.  See part 1 here

A new sound is coming from the Mayor

The several dozen Baltimore residents that recently made it to a public outreach meeting under the title Downtown Rise heard a very different tune about traffic directly from their Mayor.  Gone was the talk about congestion that dominated decades of public meetings about transportation. Instead the Mayor talked about walkability, connections and transit and how prioritizing those aspect would revive downtown.

Mayor Scott speaking about a walkable downtown
(Photo Philipsen)
Baltimore lags farthest behind in transportation and walk score when compared to peer cities.[...] Baltimore has historically prioritized regional vehicular mobility over pedestrian connectivity.[...] A high-quality pedestrian experience can be created with investment in diverse mobility options for a more livable, connected downtown neighborhood. (Downtown Rise 10-year plan)

From Mayor Brandon Scott to Downtown promoter Sheilanda Stokes one after the other official went to the podium to praise the benefits of a city built around walk access to amenities, built for the residents rather than suburban commuters and focusing on an attractive "public realm" rather than a high throughput of cars. 

Investments in the public realm are critical to increasing equitable access to resources and enhancing livability (Slide from Downtown Rise)
The presenters pretty much followed a line of thinking that many cities had long embraced and that MSU student Chupein had laid out in his study titled "Windows of Opportunity". He placed the idea of removing the lower JFX into the context of the international movement of reconfiguring urban transportation by removing urban highways, strengthening transit, walking and biking and making streets inviting to sit down and enjoy urban amenities. Many cities removed freeways and replaced them with boulevards, local streets and entire new neighborhoods. 
Rochester: Small city streets and housing instead of
a freeway ditch. (Photo: Philipsen)


Baltimore, frequently a Johnny-come-lately, years ago embraced "complete streets", a bike masterplan and a green network plan. If implemented and combined those policies would result in just such a livable city. However, until now no administration has shown enough courage to really turn the ship. Every time there was push-back from those who are stuck in the avoid-congestion-paradigm backed off, especially the city's DOT. In Baltimore one would detect fragments of complete streets but nothing close to the comprehensive implementation of those policies that one can see in Portland OR, Washington DC, New York City, Vancouver, Rotterdam, Paris or Barcelona. Of course, so far Baltimore is only studying the removal of a freeway, at best it has nibbled at some edges as in the case of the Highway to Nowhere (H2TN). The current "Reconnecting Communities" grant pays Baltimore $2 million to study how the H2TN could reconnect communities but has little in terms of a vision to show for it as of now. 

The urbanized walkable city is in Baltimore's DNA. When the City had nearly a million residents it had no urban expressways, almost no one-way streets and a very pedestrian and bicycle friendly environment, augmented by a huge network of streetcars. Nevertheless, one should not confuse the vision of a walkable pedestrian-centric city with nostalgia for the 1950s, a time of  dirty air, unhealthy crowded living conditions and rampant open racial discrimination. Nor should the vision be seen as a liberal pipe dream of  the "coastal elites" since smaller towns in rural red states aspire to safer mor livable main streets just the same.

hHighway to Nowhere, Baltimore (Photo: Philipsen)

While the walkable "20-minute-city" concept emulates some aspects that seem normal in smaller towns such as not wasting long hours each day being stuck in traffic or meeting people in the street while doing errands by walking, or letting kids walk or bike  to school, the library or the pool with having to fear that they would be run over by a speeding car, these activities can work in large metropolises as well without reversing everything that has happened in the last 75 years or so.
Yet, drastic retooling is needed, especially in zoning and the allocation of life, work and recreation, not only within a single jurisdiction, but with an entire region. It is clear that the suburbanization of America has sucked the life out of many cities and has brought car dominance to our life, especially in the suburbs.

The reurbanization of Baltimore is not done by replacing a few parking spots with these skinny platforms placed in the gutter where one can sit in front of a restaurant and eat one's food a couple of feet away from buses, trucks and SUVs, even if those COVID induced expansions of outdoor eating options are fundamentally a step in the right direction. 

Market Street Frederick, MD (Photo: Philipsen)

If Baltimore would be following architect and urbanist Chankabarti's notion of connective design plus his notion of urbanity and joy it would become a city to live in not one to drive out of. A city to be in, not one to drive through, a city that keeps its residents and grows instead of one that shrinks. Connectivity follows the removal of barriers. Free flowing traffic is always a barrier. And by the way, connectivity is also needed to bring all those many, many plans and policies in alignment that have stacked up without implementation. Connectivity also means eliminating the silos, coordination across departments and pulling jointly in the same direction.

For estimating the effects of connectivity consider how disconnected Baltimore is: Downtown is disconnected on all sides from the surrounding neighborhoods by an almost complete noose roadways designed for maximal throughput of cars, including Martin Luther King Boulevard, the JFX, President Street, Key Highway, Pratt Street, and Light Street. Those last two streets is another case where the Mayor and DOT sing a to a new tune. 

While their hopping on the wagon of MCB's HarborPlace redevelopment ideas is criticized by many, the embracing of the envisioned "road diets" and closure of the Light to Calvert Street connector is almost as revolutionary as the partial closure of Time Square for cars was in Manhattan. After languishing for years, the idea of connecting McKeldin Plaza was not only suddenly endorsed but also followed by a traffic study of the entire area that calculated the effects.  In spite of following a very traditional approach of counting traffic and reallocating the entire volume of cars, the study still concluded that the suggested lane reductions and closures would be feasible with only 14% increased travel times.

Existing and proposed Pratt Street cross section
(Dept. of Planning )
While one can certainly argue with the methodology of the traffic consultant, the benefits of making Light and Pratt Street less dominated by fast moving cars are obvious if one wants to revitalize downtown by benefitting from the waterfront and the visitors that go there or to the convention center, the National Aquarium or the other attractions. 

West Baltimore is cut in half by the Highway to Nowhere and Druid Park is isolated from the surrounding neighborhoods by the JFX on one side and the 10 lanes of Druid Park Lake Drive and Druid Hill Avenue. The beautiful urban wilderness of the Jones Falls is largely ruined by the expressway frequently running on top of it. Historic Oldtown and Jonestown have been turned into ruins by the Orleans Street viaduct and I-83. Sharp Leadenhall was disconnected from Ridgely's Delight and downtown plus it was amputated by the spur of I-395. 

All of these dividers and community destroyers were built so people could come in quickly during the morning rush hour and leave equally quickly in the evening. The new paradigm would be nothing less than a reversal. Just as the emphasis on free-flowing traffic in and out of the city helped empty it out, a reversal would help the city gain new residents and keep existing ones and it would also mean less not more traffic. If people live near where they work, shop and amuse themselves, there would be much less driving and driving and getting around in general would be organized differently. Dismantling the road barriers in favor of connectivity in all directions would not only make the city far more livable, it would also be less congested. "Impossible", most people would cry, "costs too much and is illogical to boot. The entire city would come to a standstill, and  people would want want to live in the city even less than today". 

Taking back the streets for people: Rotterdam, (Photo: Philipsen)

Actual examples of success help. As I have shown in a previous article, the Dutch city of Rotterdam and many other cities have proved that it is not only possible to take the streets back from cars that it  doesn't mean impossible grid-lock and that it can mean growth. Our neighbor DC was over long stretches considered an urban basket case, a shrinking population left many vacant houses behind, just as in Baltimore. In the last 30 years the District not only grew by many 10s of thousands of residents, it actually also experiences now less gridlock than before. Many of the new residents don't need to drive because they live in the middle of everything they usually need and have good transit options. 

Well, you may say, Baltimore isn't Rotterdam or DC, it has less transit and more poverty. True, both but the liveable city follows a different model of mobility that decreases congestion. Instead of channeling all vehicles into a few freeways and major arteries from where they are released in non digestible concentrations into local streets that have been made one way arteries with prohibited rush hour parking (such as I-395 dumping into Conway and Howard Streets or the JFX into President Street), the already much lower volumes (fewer commuters) would be much more evenly distributed into the local grid of streets. Aside from the fact that residents in older quarters often have no garage and need on street parking so that rush-hour parking restrictions are a real burden, a distributed network has redundancy that makes traffic much less vulnerable to disruptions. Instead of one route, there are always many more that will make "gridlock" less likely.

Washington DC, Center City pedestrian streets
(Photo: Philipsen)

But true, more and better transit would be needed as well. It along with the better general quality of life would then reduce the concentrations in poverty by adding additional residents.

Initially called Project Livable, that group grew to be representative of 30+ institutions who focus on downtown or are headquartered downtown. Those organizations included Downtown Partnership of Baltimore, the University of Maryland Medical System, the University of Maryland, Baltimore, the National Aquarium, and so many more. That group, under the leadership of Governor Wes Moore and Mayor Brandon M. Scott, spent significant time talking about connecting our assets and our neighborhoods, about how we help people move from one experience to another (Downtown Rise 10-year plan)

In fact, "traffic" is not a god-given constant but the result of many factors, especially local zoning and land use policies. The walkable 20 minute city would generate less traffic and the absence of quick drives across larger distances would also reduce unnecessary trips and reverse "induced demand".  Chupein, in his work about removal of the JFX, quotes research that after systematic analysis shows that up to 40% of traffic simply disappear. Let's explain how.

Subway station in DC: A different type of mobility
(Photo: Klaus Philipsen)

A recent traffic study addressing the lane reductions proposed for Pratt and Light streets concluded only a 14% increase in travel delays and suggested that even that would not necessarily materialize because some traffic would disappear thanks to "learned behavior". Critics quickly ridiculed this notion as magic thinking. In reality, this traffic study doesn't go nearly far enough in considering a comprehensive mitigation strategy.

Disappearing traffic is not nearly as magic as it may appear. To understand this, all it takes is a look at how we arrived at all this traffic in the first place. It didn't just come from sprawl alone. "Induced demand"  inevitably showed up every time transportation capacity was increased. When trip-time is reduced, people will make new decisions. They will make additional and even longer trips since they now take less or the same amount of time people previously deemed acceptable. They will chose more distant locations acceptable as their home, drive further for groceries and just about anything else until one gets a situation like Los Angelos used to be before their mayor turned transportation policy around.  In the LA of old residents zipped around on freeways on the way to daycare, jobs, shopping or the movies. LA became first famous and then infamous for its mobility woes. Freeways along with cheap energy and policies that promoted single family home-ownership induced suburbanization not only in LA but also in Baltimore. I-695 opened up Carroll County for people who work in the Baltimore core metro area and I-83 opened up north Baltimore County and even Pennsylvania to commuters. The result is that vehicle miles travelled (VMT) increased far more than population. Americans drive further per year than most anyone else in the world, and no, it has very little to do with the size of the country. 

Before and after being made car-centric

It stands to reason that these processes are largely reversible. Just as more and faster roadways induced demand, so will fewer and slower roadways reduce demand. Baltimore City can very well be re-urbanized if the City provides the amenities, the services and the type of housing modern households need. One can see how from shifting the transportation paradigm an entire comprehensive vision emerges.


While one could argue what is the chicken and what the egg in the matter of urban flight, there is no doubt that reduced livability due to car centric planning accelerated flight and that, conversely,  quality of live achieved by a new transportation paradigm will assit in attracting residents. A connected City that doesn't isolate neighborhoods and doesn't starve them from investment and people will have more resources to provide good services. New areas that are no longer impacted by the noise and fumes of high-speed, high-volume and nearly impassable roadways will become thriving communities. 

Based on his book, Chakrabarti would agree. He blames the flight to the suburbs and the resulting inefficient sprawl development patterns for isolation, health problems and the excessive energy hunger that characterizes the US. He and many others demonstrate that the denser city uses less energy and allow a healthier and happier lifestyle. And dense, he says, doesn't have to mean towers. Chakrabarti has good news for a rowhouse city like Baltimore: He identifies the connected three-story building as ideal for achieving urban density and energy self sufficiency. Calculating roof area over living area used for solar cells has a lot to do with his conclusion. Indeed, our very own row house can achieve about 50 units per acre, close to what the old style Parisian five story elevator apartment buildings also achieve, which, Chakrabarti points out would be prohibited under modern building codes.

Space for people: Baltimore Inner Harbor 
(Photo: Philipsen)

Even if downtown were again connected to the surrounding neighborhoods, it would still lack a lot to be called perfectly walkable or desirable. Yes, it has sidewalks an all streets, yes, there are crosswalks and curb cuts and at times sidewalks are even a bit wider than the minimum and at some places there are trees and sometimes even a spacial pavement that isn't plain concrete. But all of that is not enough to make anyone who has a choice want to walk along one or several city blocks. 

For that outdated bourgeois figure of the urban "flaneur" (a person leisurely walking through the city with no other purpose than to enjoy the walk) there usually must be some kind of destination and ideally "entertainment" along the way. It is true for everyone else as well, even if walking has a strict purpose. Sociologists have found out that the biggest urban enticement is other people. Not only for entertainment as in people watching, but for safety, information exchange and comfort. If there are no other people it usually doesn't feel right to be in the street. If there are plenty of people it feels safe. Just walk through Manhattan and you can see people and entertainment everywhere:

Street vendors, food trucks, storefronts, buskers, small parks, museums, benches to sit and watch, sometimes street cafes like in Paris, it rarely gets boring. But  one doesn't need a big metropolis for those types of experiences. A recent Friday afternoon on Frederick's Market Street was almost as entertaining,  as are Canton's O'Donnell Square, Federal Hill's Cross Street, Thames Street in Fells Point, Eastern Avenue in Highlandtown or Hampden's "Avenue". 

Manhattan: All day action (Photo: Philipsen)
But downtown Baltimore's streets and many neighborhood streets feel deserted, are often dirty and have not much to offer. The patrolling security cars of various benefits districts or flashing police lights on top of lamp posts only add to the unease. Complete streets need much investments in the public space, form trees to benches. But equally important is what lines the streets. Without restaurants, shops and services the prettiest sidewalk won't help. A restaurant that puts some umbrellas out and has enough space to place more than those skinny "cafe tables" in a tight row will change the character of a whole block. If traffic moves along slowly it just adds eyes to the street and is fine. But if the roadway is a speedway with four lanes all in one direction like Pratt Street even an amply dimensioned sidewalk with trees and planters and big outdoor seating areas can't compensate for the din of the roaring vehicles.  retail, entertainment and restaurants lining the streets requires residents. It easy to see the feedback loop which, by definition, has no one single begin and end point. 

For a vision of Baltimore it is as with the proverbial knot: One has to find the strand on which to pull in order to undo it. To many Baltimoreans the city appears to be tied up in a knot of urban problems that nobody can undo. I hope I could show in this article that a new transportation paradigm that emphasizes network connectivity instead of linear, radial connectivity and trip avoidance rather than trip facilitation may be just that strand that loosens the knot from which then everything else could follow. 

Klaus Philipsen, FAIA


Thursday, August 15, 2024

A vision for Baltimore (Part 1 - Successes and Questions)

Recently I concurrently reviewed the Morgan State Capstone thesis work by Nicholas Chupein about the JFX removal plans titled "Windows of Opportunity" and a new, not yet published book by internationally known architect V. Chakrabarti titled "The Architecture of UrbanityDesigning for Nature, Culture, and Joy".  This inspired me to think about what Baltimore would look like if one combines those two aspirations. 

Success story Oriole Park: Can it be replicated? 

Baltimore- What comes to mind?

Baltimore could use some windows of opportunity and some more joy. Those terms probably don't come to mind when one thinks about Baltimore. More likely: Gritty, authentic, historic, shrinking, traffic, race, crime, poverty, addiction, disparities, redlining, diversity, Johns Hopkins, John Waters, The Ravens and the Orioles, the harbor, crabs,  Old Bay, pretty architecture and yes, always "the Wire". The list has good and bad for sure, but the associations lack a clear direction, especially not a trajectory to a bright future, in short, there is no "vision"..

Before we go to the "windows of opportunity" coming from highway removal as addressed in the planning student's thesis, let's look more broadly what windows Baltimore has already opened and how its rich architecture translated into joyous urbanity in the past.

Resting on laurels

Baltimore had a series of strong mayors, including McKeldin, Schaefer, O'Malley and Schmoke who tried to seized opportunities ("The Baltimore Renaissance") and enacted numerous joyous urbanity events such as City Fair, Artscape, AFRAM, Hon-Fest and Pride. 

However, for quite a few years the City has dropped off the lists of leaders, trailblazers, or innovators where the likes of Joe Riley (Charleston) Tom Murphy (Pittsburgh), Michael Bloomberg (New York)  Enrique PeƱalosa (Bogota),  Anne Hidalgo (Paris) or Mike Duggan in Detroit have had or still have a permanent perch on that list. New type festivities such night markets and light festivals came to Baltimore late and then faltered. The last pieces of national noteworthiness were the Inner Harbor, Camden Yards, O'Malley's Citi-Stat and a series of successful Health Commissioners. All this now dated, the shine has dimmed and major overhauls are needed. For more than a decade Baltimore has made the national news more frequently for negative records than leadership. Under Armours ambitious plans for Port Covington briefly made national waves even as a potential home for Amazon, but was rejected and then massively scaled down.

Some would make the argument that such top-down leadership and those grand projects aren't really desirable and appropriate in a time that calls for environmental justice, equity, resilience and healthy neighborhoods. Successful cities and Baltimore's trajectory show that it takes all to succeed: Leadership, catalytic projects, healthy neighborhoods and equity. Without a clear vision the activities of city department don't align, priorities are not obvious and communications is muddled. As a result the city goes everywhere and nowhere, maybe sideways or even backwards, in the end no-one benefits. 

There have been times when Baltimore was the second largest city in the US and known for global innovations such as the first passenger rail line, the first gas street lights and was filled with national enterprises. Charm City's architecture is still testimony to those better days. Deindustrialization has hit Baltimore hard and the successes of today are, indeed, not always physical. For example world leading higher education and health care institutions (ed and meds). Still, unlike some of its peers such as Cleveland, St Louis and Cincinnati, Baltimore has not been able to stem population loss and huge disparities.

How transportation shapes a city

On highways, specifically, Baltimore has a mixed record. Yes it defeated some highways and exactly those neighborhoods that were spared, Federal Hill, Fells Point, Canton, Dickeyville, Hunting Ridge are today's most walkable, connected and attractive ones. But in many parts the traffic engineers had the upper hand with the JFX, Druid Lake Park Drive, the Fallsway, the Orleans Street viaduct, the Russell Street viaduct, I-395 and the infamous highway to nowhere. Space that the streetcars freed was shamelessly converted into pavement, ruining once glorious streets like North Avenue in the process, not to mention the relentless one way system that converted even smaller streets into traffic sewers. All these anti-urban moves present "windows of opportunity" today.

As for its urbanity, Baltimore's DNA isn't derived from plans by Pierre L'Enfant as in the case of its famous sibling to the south, or by William Penn as in Philadelphia to the north. But the 1904 regional green plan by the Olmsted brothers isn't shabby either and that period left us marvelous parks and a number of grand civic gestures such as City Hall, the BMA and Penn Station. Olmsted's ideas and parks live on in Baltimore's Green Network Plan and there are big plans at least for Penn Station, if not for City Hall. Especially with re-thinking urban transportation many aspects of the Olmsted Plan can be revived. 

Success story: Art as incubator (MICA college)
So many projects and plans

So what would it take to again catapult Baltimore to the forefront of innovative successful cities? 

There is no lack of plans. Plenty of short-mid and long-term -plans have been prepared, especially for transportation, redevelopment and the never ending task of getting rid of vacant homes. Some are actually well underway, they just never line up like magnets to create a powerful pull. In a diverse city there are many divergent interests and aligning projects to create a larger force isn't easy. Just think of the list below and how each of those set of plans and projects have their detractors who rather wish those investments away.
Success story: Health institutions Hopkins & UMMS
  • EBDI (nationally the largest sustained place based redevelopment according to the Urban Institute)
  • Port Covington (Baltimore Peninsula) also initially conceived as one of the largest developments in the country now with the Insulator factory redevelopment which is well underway
  • Perkins-Somerset: Well underway and in parts completed
  • Madison Park (Reservoir Park)
  • The Uplands (stalled after a completed phase 1 and recently revived)
  • The Frederick Douglass tunnel (in progress with small scale construction started)
  • The Penn Station restoration and redevelopment (small steps are completed)
  • The Park Avenue redevelopment (under construction)
  •  HarborPoint (the former Allied site) underway but nearing completion and build out
  • Canton Crossing (underway but largely completed)
  • Yard 56 (in progress but largely completed)
  • Sharp Leadenhall and South Baltimore (many completed apartment buildings and some entertainment venues)
  • Locust Point and the Key Highway developments
  • The expansions and new construction at the campuses of Johns Hopkins, UMM, Coppin and Morgan State (largely complete)
There are even more big plans that exist mainly on paper and may never happen, each of those equally controversial:
Success story: Higher education (Morgan State University)

  • The Red Line east-west light rail line (unfunded but back in planning and design)
  • The redevelopment of Pimlico (mostly a concept on paper so far)
  • La Cite's Poppleton Plans (stalled and in litigation)
  • The Old Town redevelopment
  • The removal of the lower JFX in favor of an urban boulevard
  • The redevelopment of HarborPlace (requiring approval of a charter change and funding)
  • The Convention Center expansion and the mixed use development between Oriole Park and the Ravens Stadium (not designed, not funded)
  • The Middle Branch waterfront parks plan funded in part from casino revenues (underway)
  • Downtown Rise, a vision for downtown
    Success story: Development of formerly fallow industrial
    spaces (Harbor East, Allied Signal, Canton Crossing)

Plus policies that are supposed to revert past planning errors or injustices such as 

  • The removal or mitigation of the highway to nowhere 
  • Inclusionary zoning,  
  • Complete streets policies,
  • A Baltimore resilience and climate change plan, and 
  • Various policies to bring more equity to city investments. 
  • A Baltimore Green Network Plan
  • A Baltimore Comprehensive Plan (still to be completed)
  • As noted, without focus and vision, the jumble of plans will remain more confusion than guidance. But before there can be a vison, there needs to be some consensus what the objectives are.


    What is progress?

    But what is steady progress? People can't even agree on whether Baltimore got any better in the last 30 years. 

    A Baltimorean who would have left the city in 1994 would barely recognize large sections of the city if he returned today so many large scale investments are there across most areas of the city. The Rotunda, Charles Village, Remington, Johns Hopkins Hospital and EBDI, the MSU campus, Greektown and Canton Crossing, Sharp Leadenhall, Locust Point, Key Highway, Mulberry Street in downtown, or North Avenue in Station North or west of Walbrook. Much of these include many new housing units.

    Still there is a housing crisis.The suspicion against large projects is there for a reason. Truth is that massive physical transformations with lots of new housing have not abated the bleeding. Yet, most would agree that Baltimore today appears to be physically much improved since 1994 even in Sandtown or on North Avenue. Social ills can't be addressed without sound physical spaces, so is there at least a sound foundation?  
    Limited success: re-investment in redlined areas (Walbrook Junction)
    Who is the culprit?

    Why didn't all these developments result in a growing, prosperous, joyous and confident city on a forward thrust? 

    Giving answers to that question is a favorite Baltimore pastime. The lack of vision and focus was already mentioned.

    Simplistic answers are usually wrong when it comes to complex questions, but that doesn't stop residents to offer them, ranging from incompetent mayors to corruption, high property taxes, too much police, not enough police, bad schools, greedy developers, the digital divide, capitalism in general, and lately even bicyclists, to name just a few. 

    Many of such answers are ideologically motivated (too much government, not enough government etc.), some racist, most are not based on facts or they sometimes come from suburbanites who actually know very little about the city. After the cherished traditional home town paper the Sun fell into the hands of the Sinclair Owner of Fox 45, cutting the council in half or throttling Baltimore's  income down in a sudden spurt of tax cuts has been added to the false set of the silver bullets. 

    There isn't a scientific study that would give a convincing answer to the question why Baltimore is languishing, is the only major shrinking city in the East of the US, has the highest addiction rates in the nation, and in spite of recent progress, is still listed in the top ten cities when it comes to murders per capita takes many Abell Foundation reports to better understand and still remains a puzzle. 
    Limited success: Starter homes in Druid Heights: Can it be scaled up?

    Focus on a new transportation paradigm and connections

    In keeping with the question of focus and vision, let's return to the  two motivational documents of "windows of opportunity" derived from highway removal and the joyous city that comes from connections and Chakrabarti's concept of  "connected design". 

    What could a Baltimore look like that would systematically implement a new transportation paradigm and a consistent application of connectivity instead of separation? Together these guardrails should result in a pretty clear vision for Baltimore, to be laid out in a sequel to this article.

    Klaus Philipsen, FAIA