iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Charles R. Wolfe

GET UPDATES FROM Charles R. Wolfe

Corners as the Baseline for Urbanism

Posted: 06/12/11 05:53 PM ET

The corner is the central place of urban life. More so than public squares -- which require a conscious set-aside of assembled space -- corners naturally result from crossroads, the elemental feature of travel between places.

Ancient, grid-based Roman military towns, or castra, were planned around crossroads and their corners. The "100 percent corner" is historic shorthand for flagship downtown locations. Decision-making among retailers and residents debate the pros and cons of multi-street exposure to this day.

The corner has been inspiration to authors and poets:

Albert Camus noted the corner as among a city's most inventive places: "All great deeds and all great thoughts have a ridiculous beginning. Great works are often born on a street corner or in a restaurant's revolving door".

J.R.R. Tolkien's poetry provided fantastical inspiration: "Still round the corner there may wait, A new road or a secret gate".

As illustrated by the exploratory images provided here, corners are by nature interdisciplinary, regardless of cultural surrounding.

At crossroads, whether paved and straight or dirt and ill-defined, destinations meet wheeled and other forms of transport, while natural systems meet reconstructed space. As modes of transportation coalesce, people watch and wait. Often, drainage, power and other utilities focus at such central points, above and below ground. Corners are places of safety and intimidation, homogeneity and contrast.

Given these ironies of focus and ambiguity, corners become opportunities to unify design and land uses. Associated regulatory approaches attempt defensible mixtures of public and private uses at more than the scale of single buildings.

Increasingly popular examples include small commercial entities in traditionally residential zones, residential units located on floors above retail, private uses of otherwise public rights of way and greater human presence in the traditional vehicular domain.

Beyond the wry observation of Camus and the allegory of Tolkien, urban corners may represent the best, most visible and pragmatic opportunity to reorient our cities, and become nothing short of the baseline -- the building blocks -- for reinvention of city neighborhoods in the new millennium.


All images composed by the author. Click on each image for a larger view.

Cross-posted in myurbanist and Sustainable Cities Collective.

 
 
 

Follow Charles R. Wolfe on Twitter: www.twitter.com/crwolfelaw

The corner is the central place of urban life. More so than public squares -- which require a conscious set-aside of assembled space -- co...
The corner is the central place of urban life. More so than public squares -- which require a conscious set-aside of assembled space -- co...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 4
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Recency  | 
Popularity
02:53 AM on 06/13/2011
I have a graduate degree in Urban Management and I can honestly say I have never really thought of the importance of corners in the open spaces/new urbanism/ mixed use viewpoints of today. Thanks for opening my eyes to what potential corner actually have!
photo
artleads
Let's have a national retreat.
11:56 PM on 06/12/2011
While not 100% convinced, I like the concept. But does this concept claim to trump the need for urban greenery? BTW, I love the photo with the goats!
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Charles R. Wolfe
Attorney and Writer, Seattle
12:46 AM on 06/13/2011
Thanks---no, it does not trump greenery at all--and, in fact, as at least one photo shows, corners are opportunities for green focal points. The goat photo is in Karatu, Tanzania.
photo
artleads
Let's have a national retreat.
10:45 AM on 06/13/2011
I'm an advocate of urban trails, and also of an intercontinental netwoirk of trails. Yes, I approve of picking the loower hanging fruit like corners first, but I have difficulty with promoting it as an alternative to allocated green space.