Of course there are details, flaws, issues that have not been addressed, but we all know the whole 8664 package will never be adopted. What 8664.org has done, though, is provide an alternative vision of what this city is about, what it could be, where it is headed.
Several years ago we, as a country, had two visions to choose from, though most of us didn't realized it at the time. One side said We will build these bloated, ugly, thirsty cars called SUVs, and we will drive these SUVs far out into the suburbs and exurbs to houses on treeless tracts where there used to be woods and farms, and these houses, too, will be bloated and ugly and hungry. We will demand roads to get to our houses and to larger and larger malls, and to Cheesecake Factory and P.F. Chang's and Hooters. It will no longer matter what the name of that city off in the distance is. America will be One. We will have manufacturing jobs and construction jobs and service jobs. It will be Prosperity.
There was another, quieter, less respected vision. It saw mass transit and efficient cars and greater concentration of population in renewed cities with senses of place and history. It saw lofts and condos in green buildings and old, restored buildings, and open, treed spaces, and independent businesses and unique restaurants and cafes and bars and an active, aesthetic social life with people meeting people and talking.
The first vision won, of course, and then nearly destroyed us. The second vision was made real in a few towns and cities around the country - and now they are leading the way.
Louisville is faced with a similar set of visions, a similar choice. The Bridges Project and the support of Cordish are part of an old, now discredited SUV vision that places the movement of cars and trucks above the psychic well-being of citizens. The 8664 people are offering another way to see our city. We are being watched, and people are waiting for our decision, waiting to laugh at us:
http://www.ceosforcities.org/blog/entry/2516http://www.architectmagazine.com/industry-news.asp?sectionID=1006&articleID=985911http://www.streetsblog.org/2008/09/22/americas-least-wanted-highways/