|
| |
If
a chief goal of Smart Growth is to increase the density
of Urbanized Areas, then Los Angeles is a champion of
Smart Growth. So with all that de facto Smart Growth,
why is L.A. mainly seen as a champion of sprawl?
|
|
The denser the better. That is one of the chief ideas
behind Smart Growth initiatives. Nearly all Smart Growth
policies are based on the concept that a city's population
can continue to grow indefinitely without creating a lot
of sprawl. Smart Growth can be an effective anti-sprawl
measure in only one way: by confining more and more people
into existing Urbanized Areas. You know that Smart Growth
efforts are reaching one of their major goals when you
see density increasing. The city that packs the most people
into each square mile gets the prize.
|
 |
Under
those criteria, the champion model of Smart Growth since
1970 has been none other than: Los Angeles?
The designation of Los Angeles as a Smart Growth model
may seem incongruous to many because of its reputation
as the "sultan of sprawl" and "suburbs in search of a
city." For many Americans, Los Angeles is a sprawling
model of what they don't want their city to become. But,
indeed, the Los Angeles Urbanized Area earned Smart Growth
honors in the density department between 1970 and 1990.
Smart Growth Honor No. 1: Unlike most American Urbanized
Areas, Los Angeles stopped all individual sprawl. That
is, the land consumption per resident did not increase.
In fact, the urban land per resident shrank by 8%. That
means the density increased. From 5,313 residents per
square mile in 1970, Los Angeles increased its density
to 5,801 per square mile in 1990. Moreover, Smart Growth
was achieving its goal throughout the Urbanized Area;
density increased in both the core city and in the suburbs.
|
 |
Smart Growth Honor No. 2: By 1990, land consumption per
L.A. resident had dropped to 0.11 acre. That made Los
Angeles the most densely populated Urbanized Area in America.
No other urban area provided so little land per resident.
This is a model that Smart Growth planners could wish
for all Americans.
|
|
By
1990, Los Angeles was the most densely populated Urbanized
Area in America. No other urban area provided so little
land per resident.
|
 |
The fact that Los Angeles on paper deserves Smart Growth
accolades raises two important questions: (1) Has the
increased density improved the quality of life of those
who live there? (2) Has the increased density stopped
sprawl?
The first question is a complex one that is outside the
scope of this website. Certainly, though, there are indicators
that the increased density is related to several major
causes of social frustration in Los Angeles, such as overcrowded
schools, crime and traffic snarls. Without substantial
and careful planning and spending, increased density results
in a more congested quality of life. And congestion is
not a result anybody is seeking. |
 |
The
second question is easy to answer, based on Census Bureau
calculations. Unfortunately, the results show that increasing
the density in Los Angeles did not stop sprawl. Between
1970 and 1990, Los Angeles sprawled across an extra 394
square miles (252,160 acres). This was in addition to
the 1,572 square miles it already occupied in 1970. Only
five other cities in the entire country sprawled more
than Los Angeles during this period. That's hardly a model
of success in combating the sprawl problem.
|
|
Increasing
the density in Los Angeles did not stop sprawl. Between
1970 and 1990, L.A. sprawled across an extra 394 square
miles (252,160 acres).
|
 |
What
accounted for this sprawl, population growth or declining
density? Population growth, pure and simple. Between 1970
and 1990, the L.A. Urbanized Area grew by 3.1 million
residents - largely because of the federal program of
increased immigration levels. All those people had to
live, work, play, commute and be educated somewhere. Although
they and the existing residents were willing and able
to crowd more closely together than in the past, they
did not choose to live together entirely within the existing
urban area. If they had, they would have increased the
density another 37% over what already are densest living
conditions that American are currently willing to accept
in any Urbanized Area. |
Adding
3.1 million residents resulted in another 394 square
miles of orchards, farmland, natural habitat and other
open and rural spaces lost to urbanization.
|
|
On the other hand, it is important to point out the benefits
of the increased density. If not for the Los Angeles success
in meeting Smart Growth goals of higher density, the sprawl
would have been far worse.
Even with the increased density, the result of the L.A.
population growth was that another 394 square miles of
orchards, farmland, natural habitat and other open and
rural spaces were lost to urbanization. It is a sobering
lesson in what the best example of dense-living in America
had to offer.
|
 |
Thus,
just as Los Angeles is a model for meeting the Smart Growth
goal of high-density living, it also is a model of how
Smart Growth initiatives are likely to fail to stop sprawl
under current federal population-growth policies. |
|
|
|