| The Platform: Volume Four, Number Three | November 2005 | |||
ARTICLE: CAN CULTURE SAVE DOWNTOWN?
The reasons that museums, galleries, theaters and concert halls have come to play such a central role in urban renewal are well rehearsed. They provide a context for the highly expressive and iconic architecture that is so central to the branding of a place; and in a privatized, secular, fragmented, post-modern world they are one of the few candidates for public space that can provide a more communal feeling than the circulation areas and car parks attached to shopping malls. Sports stadia and public parks perhaps bear a similar civic burden. The contribution that certain overwhelmingly successful arts buildings have made to the brand definition and revitalization of urban areas. The Guggenheim in Bilbao, the Tate Modern in Southwark and most recently Disney Hall in downtown Los Angeles – has encouraged a rather naïve “copycat” strategy in many cities throughout the world. This approach is almost certain to fail in cases where the following three factors are neglected. First, culture cannot revitalize downtown alone. Where cultural infrastructure plays a role it plays it alongside public and private investment in other civic amenities, transport systems and housing. The Brookings Institution, in a recent regeneration-by-numbers primer Turning Around Downtown: Twelve Steps to Revitalization,[1] puts “Create an Urban Entertainment District” as Step Seven, slightly ahead of housing and retail but well behind the creation of a Business Improvement District. That’s probably about right. Disney Hall is part of a major initiative that has a further $1.2bn of public and private investment earmarked for Grand Avenue. Tate Britain is part of an integrated revitalization of the South Bank of the Thames river. It is depressing, however, how often significant investment in cultural buildings is made outside of an integrated urban renewal strategy. These cultural institutions then come to bear impossible expectations alone and without context. Second, the cultural building boom has not been driven by ‘consumer demand’ in the sense of an increase in audiences. Global cities like London, New York, Los Angeles and Tokyo have a density of population in their immediate catchment and a sophisticated cultural tourist market that smaller cities cannot match, and yet many “supply driven” infrastructure projects do not take this into account. Large scale arts buildings have recently been opened in Madison, Dayton, Denver and Omaha; new ones are in the pipeline in Miami, Dallas, Orange County and Nashville. Given the economics, it seems likely that these buildings will have a major adverse impact on wider ecology of the arts in these communities as they preempt and siphon off existing audiences and philanthropic resources rather than generating new ones. This is hardly the regenerative function that the planners will have had in mind. Third, vibrant arts centers require thriving occupants if culture’s role in revitalizing downtown through generating social capital is to be realized. In the Faustian pact between cultural organizations and urban planners, both parties have tended to gloss over the longer term financial impact of expansion on the resident organisations whilst playing up the economic impact on the community as a whole. But struggling arts organizations, seeking to meet the increased fixed costs that come with a highly specified new building, are unlikely to deliver on hopes for wider community revitalization. The antidote to naïve optimism with respect to the contribution of culture to urban regeneration is not unqualified and jaded conservatism, but greater due diligence by both arts organizations and those responsible for renewal strategies. Arts organizations contemplating a potential role in urban regeneration would be well advised to:
Those public agencies wishing to use culture as a policy tool are well advised to:
This article is based on a presentation made to the October 2005 Grant-makers in the Arts conference in Los Angeles called “Can Culture Save Downtown?” Adrian Ellis [1] Stephen
B. Leinberger, March 2005 http://www.brookings.edu/metro/pubs/20050307_12steps.htm
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