Naked City
The Death and Life of Authentic Urban Places
Sharon Zukin
From Our Blog
The fourth of May marks the centenary of the birth of Jane Jacobs, patron saint of contemporary urbanism, at least for most urban planners, architects and local political officials in the US and for many of us who live in cities as well. Both by her writing and her activism, Jacobs promoted livable cities'walkable, enjoyable, sociable places where communities provide distinctive experiences and locals have a say in determining what goes on.
Posted on May 3, 2016
Read the blog post
By Sharon Zukin Today, the sixth of August, marks the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Tompkins Square Park riot in New York's East Village. Though on that night many neighborhood residents were protesting in the streets, the riot was caused by police brutality.
Posted on August 6, 2013
Read the blog post
By Sharon Zukin E. B. White was correct when he wrote more than sixty years ago that New York is a city of neighborhoods, and he was even more correct that every neighborhood has its own 'little main street.' 'No matter where you live,' he says, 'you will find within a block or two a grocery store, a barbershop, a newsstand and shoeshine shack, an ice-coal-and-wood cellar.., a dry cleaner, a laundry, a delicatessen' and on to the 'hardware store, a liquor store, a shoe-repair shop.' Except for the coal
Posted on August 16, 2011
Read the blog post
By Sharon Zukin Everyone knows by now that Tropical Storm Irene, which blew through the East Coast last weekend, flooded the beaches, suburbs and some inland towns but did little lasting damage in New York City. I have seldom felt so lucky to live on a high floor with no river view and on a street with very few trees.
Posted on September 1, 2011
Read the blog post
By Sharon Zukin Until the early morning of November 15, a few hundred Occupy Wall Street protesters spent the chilly nights of a glorious autumn camping out in Lower Manhattan's Zuccotti Park. Despite Mayor Michael Bloomberg's disapproval with their politics and under the New York City Police Department's anxious eye, the occupiers captured public attention in a remarkably peaceful way. Regrouping for the winter, they will take stock of what they have achieved so far and the work that remains.
Posted on November 16, 2011
Read the blog post
By Sharon Zukin On a recent Saturday afternoon, along with 200 other two-legged residents of Greenwich Village and an equal number of their four-legged friends, I attended a protest meeting against New York University's Plan 2031, a 20-year strategy to increase the size of NYU's physical presence in New York City by 6 million square feet, 2 million of those to be newly built in the heart of our neighborhood.
Posted on March 5, 2012
Read the blog post