Movement

FORDHAM UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9781531508210

New York's Long War to Take Back Its Streets from the Car

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By Nicole Gelinas
Imprint:
FORDHAM UNIVERSITY PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:
980 g
Pages:
277

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Description

Nicole Gelinas is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a contributing editor to the Manhattan Institute's City Journal, and a regular columnist for the New York Post. She is the author of the 2009 book on the global financial crisis, After the Fall: Saving Capitalism from Wall Street-and Washington. She and her husband live in Hell's Kitchen.

Introduction 1 Part 1: Driving to the Brink 5 1. New York's Original Sin: Scrapping Street Transit 7 2. The 1929 Regional Plan: Paving New York's Car Future 23 3. Kids versus Cars: A Housewife's Fight to Save Washington Square Park 43 4. Changing Times (and Minds): Defeating the Lower Manhattan Expressway 65 5. No Way on Westway: A Watery Grave for Manhattan's Last Highway 79 Part 2: Getting Back on Track 103 6. Struck City: The Shutdown That Stressed the Value of Transit 105 7. Skull Practice at Triborough: Confronting Decades of Mass- Transit Deficits 118 8. Nixon's Nudge: The Federal Laws That Forced a New Direction 143 9. The Lion of the MTA: The Push to Rebuild New York's Transit 159 10. From Fear Train to Packed Train: Securing New York's Subways 180 Part 3: Beyond Transit: Wrestling with New York's Asphalt Legacy 201 11. Splitting Lanes: From Bike Nuts to Bike Share 203 12. Freedom to Walk: The Rise and Fall and Rise Again of Play Streets 242 13. Killed in the Crosswalk: Turning Tragedies into Progress 271 14. Yellow, Green, Black: The Struggle to Limit Ride Services 297 15. Thou Shalt Not Park Here: The Politics of Public Parking 327 16. Our Right to Park: The High Cost of Residential Parking 348 Part 4: Unfinished Business 361 17. Fast Forward: Plans to Fix New York's Bus System 363 18. Ban, Charge, or Suffer: The Forever Politics of Congestion Pricing 378 19. Two Miles: Bronx Mothers versus the Ghost of Moses 404 20. Deliveristas and Dining Sheds: Locked- Down New York Unlocks Its Streets 420 21. Sick Transit: Whither the Subways-and New York? 440 Acknowledgments 457 Notes 461 Bibliography 553 Index 557 Insert follows page 286

This is a story that needs to be understood by everyone with who cares about the urban realm. For a century or more, creating space for cars has been associated with improving the prosperity of cities when, as Gelinas shows in her comprehensive and engaging account of New York's history so cogently, they have done the opposite. Yet, even now as many cities are taking in the lessons, New York remains at a crossroads. Gelinas is in no doubt about which path it should take and this book is a powerful argument not just for Gotham city, but for politicians and planners everywhere.---Christian Wolmar, author of Are Trams Socialist? Simply the best book on explaining the history of our physical city, the protagonists and the obstructionists, viewed through the nuances of the times. It's been fifty years since The Power Broker was published; this book will undoubtedly serve as the definitive treatise on NYC transportation for the next 50 years. The Power Broker focused on one man, Robert Moses. Gelinas shows that it takes a city and a state and their elected officials to make a regional transportation system. Moses may have been the longest lasting slugger on the team but the drive to adapt the metropolitan region to the car preceded him with Mayor Hylan, the Regional Plan Association, The New York Times and others all calling for the modernization of the city with expressways, parkways and motor vehicle-only bridges. Successive mayors and governors all played a role until Governor Nelson Rockefeller and Mayor John Lindsay reigned in Moses and ended the era of road expansion. Even though I had a ringside seat for transportation planning over the past half-century I learned so much about what was going on behind the scenes. Movement: New York's Long War to Take Back Its Streets from the Car is a must-read for transportation and city planners as well as anyone who wants to learn how the city got to where it is and where it may be going. ---Samuel I. Schwartz, CEO, Sam Schwartz Pedestrian Traffic Management Services, Inc. In this meticulously researched opus, Nicole Gelinas shows us the underbelly of NY politics, the brinksmanship, the civic commitment, the short-sighted self-interest, and the long view. She shows us the heroes and the villains and the people who at different times wore both hats. As a New Yorker I related (and sometimes laughed) to be reminded of the Guardian Angels, the token suckers, the dismal conditions of public transit. . . I learned something in every chapter. Kudos to Nicole, I will refer to this book again and again.---Rachel Weinberger, Regional Plan Association Why is America's urban landscape so car-centric? Nicole Gelinas exposes some universal dynamics in Movement: New York's Long War to Take Back Its Streets from the Car. While Robert Moses 'has shouldered the blame, ' Gelinas shows that generations of politicians and planners have failed to right the wrongs. Advocating for people over cars is not easy. In one of many fascinating examples, Gelinas reveals that urbanist Jane Jacobs was ready to compromise in the battle to exclude cars from Washington Square Park. Another woman, Shirley Hayes, saved the day.---Richard K. Rein, author of American Urbanist: How William H. Whyte's Unconventional Wisdom Shaped Public Life You will never look at a city street in the same way again after reading Nicole Gelinas' magisterial and gripping history of the rise, and maybe decline, of urban car culture. Gelinas persuasively re-interprets "The Power Broker" for the 21st century, showing how a cacophonous crowd of politicians, business elites, labor, newspapers and others pulled New York City into a chokehold of cars. She also offers hope in her nuanced and captivating account of how a new mix of public servants, civic leaders, community groups and determined New Yorkers have started on a path where car-clogged streets may well yield to pedestrians and mass transit, the bedrock of the thriving city.---Elizabeth Glazer, founder Vital City Movement tells the story of New York through the mastery of its streets. Mayor by mayor, year by year and sometimes street by street, Gelinas assembles the historical facts, the political forces, the powerful personalities and the street fights that have transformed and continue to shape America's greatest city.---Janette Sadik-Khan, Bloomberg Associates, former Commissioner, NYC Dept. of Transportation An important and timely book. Gelinas has done a superb job of describing and analyzing major conflicts and decisions regarding mass transit, proposed highway projects, and efforts to improve pedestrian and cycling infrastructure in NYC over the past 75 years.---Mitchell Moss, New York University

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