- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
The Nation: Let's Go, South Bronx!
How to fight the blight
"A very sobering trip," remarked Jimmy Carter last month after touring several blocks of burned-out buildings, rubble-choked vacant lots and garbage-strewn streets in the South Bronx of New York City. He ordered Aide Jack Watson Jr. to devise a salvage plan for the 3-sq.-mi. area, where about 400,000 people now live (compared with about 530,000 in 1970). Last week Watson got some unsolicited but worthwhile advice from I.D. Robbins, a part-time columnist for the New York Daily News and reform-minded real estate developer.
In a column headlined LET'S GO, SOUTH BRONX! Robbins warned Watson to avoid endless consultations with city officials and urban planners. "In New York," Robbins cautioned, "the process is often the product." He then offered suggestions for turning the South Bronx into "one of the best residential and industrial locations in New York City." Items:
> The redevelopment area should be big, and so should its budgetat least 1,000 acres and 30,000 dwelling units, at a cost to the Federal Government of $1 billion. An additional $200 million would go to encourage industrial and commercial development. The timetable should be equally ambitious: first occupants within one year and completion within five.
> The basic housing unit should be the single-family townhouse, a feature that would limit population density to 35 families per acre and relieve the tensions that are generated by overcrowding. To assure variety of design, the development would be subdivided into as many as 30 construction sites, with separate architects and contractors for each one.
> The housing would be aimed at families with incomes of $10,000 a year and thus able to afford rents of $50 per room per month. Those with lower incomes would get a rent subsidy from the Federal Government, while those with higher incomes would pay a surcharge. There would be condominiums as well as rental units. To avoid costly central management, each homeowner would be responsible for his own painting, snow removal and general maintenance.
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- Are the Bible's Stories True? Archaeology's Evidence
- Who Were the First Americans?
- Obama and Counterterrorism: The Debate Moves Right
- Spain's Troubled Economy: Why Europe Is Worried
- Toyota's Safety Problems: A Checkered History
- Asian Carp in the Great Lakes? This Means War!
- What Is Robert Gates Really Fighting For?
- A Tree Carving in California: Ancient Astronomers?
- U.S. Troops Prepare to Test Obama's Afghan War Plan
- Are the Bible's Stories True? Archaeology's Evidence
- Obesity in Kids: Three Lifestyle Changes that Help
- Asian Carp in the Great Lakes? This Means War!
- How German Homeschoolers Won Asylum in the U.S.
- Congress Resumes Battle Over Gays in the Military
- U.S. Troops Prepare to Test Obama's Afghan War Plan
- Obama Calls Out GOP, but Nobody's Home
- Toyota's Safety Problems: A Checkered History
- Republicans Must Embrace the Vital Center
- Spain's Troubled Economy: Why Europe Is Worried





RSS