Submitted by WA Contents

New documentary features epic battles of Jane Jacobs and Robert Moses for the rights of citizens

United Kingdom Architecture News - May 03, 2017 - 12:59   16109 views

New documentary features epic battles of Jane Jacobs and Robert Moses for the rights of citizens

A new documentary by Matt Tyrnauer will tell the unstoppable story of Jane Jacobs for the streets and citizens, as being a new street fighter, rescuer and the local voice of citizen movement in the 20th Century. Directed and produced by Matt Tyrnauer, the 92-min documentary will be in UK cinemas on May 5, 2017 and the teaser of the movie has been released by Dogwoof

Dubbed as Citizen Jane: Battle for the City, the documentary will narrate epic battles of Jane Jacobs and Robert Moses for the right to the city in the 20th century, and how those struggles inform, define and frame the fights we are having over cities in the era of mass urbanization and the global megacity.

Video by Dogwoof

In 1960, Jane Jacobs’s book The Death and Life of Great American Cities sent shockwaves through the architecture and planning worlds, with its exploration of the consequences of modern planners’ and architects’ reconfiguration of cities. Jacobs was also an activist, who was involved in many fights in mid - century New York, to stop "master builder" Robert Moses from running roughshod over the city. 

This film retraces the battles for the city as personified by Jacobs and Moses, as urbanization moves to the very front of the global agenda. Many of the clues for formulating solutions to the dizzying array of urban issues can be found in Jacobs’s prescient text, and a close second look at her thinking and writing about cities is very much in order. This film sets out to examine the city of today through the lens of one of its greatest champions.

New documentary features epic battles of Jane Jacobs and Robert Moses for the rights of citizens

Paul Rudolph's plan for the Lower Manhattan Expressway. Image courtesy of Library of Congress

"In the face of developers and the overzealous parks commissioner Robert Moses, who, in the 1950s, wanted to run a four-lane highway through the middle of the park, Jacobs and other Greenwich Village residents and activists organized a formal opposition to the city’s plans", said Matt Tyrnauer, Director and Producer of Citizen Jane: Battle for the City.

"Through community-driven support, a large neighborhood coalition, a series of public protests, and a years-long letter-writing campaign to officials at every level of city government, Jacobs and her compatriots eventually triumphed and Moses’s park-destroying plan was shelved."

"It was a battle much like the one Sanders’s campaign has framed today: a grassroots coalition of regular people fed up with the top-down impositions of the powers that be running roughshod over regular citizens," he added.

New documentary features epic battles of Jane Jacobs and Robert Moses for the rights of citizens

Paul Rudolph's plan for the Lower Manhattan Expressway. Image courtesy of Library of Congress

Citizen Jane: Battle for the City is a story about our global urban future, in which nearly three-fourths of the world’s population will live in cities by the end of this century. It’s also a story about America’s recent urban past, in which bureaucratic, "top down" approaches to building cities have dramatically clashed with grassroots, "bottom up" approaches. The film brings us back mid-century, on the eve of the battles for the heart and soul of American cities, about to be routed by cataclysmically destructive Urban Renewal and highway projects.

The film details the revolutionary thinking of Jane Jacobs, and the origins of her magisterial 1961 treatise The Death and Life of Great American Cities, in which she single-handedly undercuts her era’s orthodox model of city planning, exemplified by the massive Urban Renewal projects of New York’s “Master Builder,” Robert Moses. Jacobs and Moses figure centrally in our story as archetypes of the "bottom up" and the "top down" vision for cities. 

New documentary features epic battles of Jane Jacobs and Robert Moses for the rights of citizens

Jane Jacobs holding a petition. Image © Phil Stanziola/World Telegram & Sun/Library of Congress

They also figure as two larger-than-life personalities: Jacobs—a journalist with provincial origins, no formal training in city planning, and scarce institutional authority—seems at first glance to share little in common with Robert Moses, the upper class, high prince of government and urban theory fully ensconced in New York’s halls of power and privilege.

Yet both reveal themselves to be master tacticians who, in the middle of the 20th century, became locked in an epic struggle over the fate of the city. In three suspenseful acts, Citizen Jane: Battle for the City gives audiences a front row seat to this battle, and shows how two opposing visions of urban greatness continue to ripple across the world stage, with unexpectedly high stakes, made even higher and more unexpectedly urgent in the suddenly shifting national political landscape of 2017, in which the newly inaugurated U.S. 

New documentary features epic battles of Jane Jacobs and Robert Moses for the rights of citizens

Robert Moses on site. Image courtesy of Library of Congress

President is a real estate developer, who is calling for a new era Urban Renewal, echoing the traumatic period in which this film takes place. In perilous times for the city and for civil rights, Citizen Jane offers a playbook, courtesy of Jane Jacobs, for organizing communities and speaking the truth to entrenched and seemingly insurmountable powers.

Top image: Paul Rudolph's plan for the Lower Manhattan Expressway (1967-1972)

> via Dogwoof