elevator nodes and feeder paths. This proposed system would effectively create bicycle highways and bicycle freeways and linear multiuse parks above the existing automobile thoroughfares and freeways for a complete network of safe, compelling and fast people powered transportation system. The space between the upper bicycle freeway and the lower automobile freeway may be used for high speed monorail lines for effective mass transit that is connected to the bicycle freeways as well as automobile routes and can complement their use.
Another drastic and equally urgent proposition is the complete overhaul of the current zoning ordinances. We propose to replace these outdated spatial organization systems with new performance criterion that would allow for mixed use urban vitality throughout the city and require high environmental performance, while valuing economic, social and aesthetic benefits to the community creating buildings and facilities that add to the quality of urban life.
The current housing stock, much of it in financial bankruptcy, should be reorganized under various forms of cooperative housing and community managed mortgages with the support of the federal government. The re-use of housing to increase shared living in the existing under-utilized units could be made possible by the proposed revision of the zoning ordinances and would better reflect the current demographics and the new typology of families in our society.
In a similar vein, we propose a network of distributed public space adapted to the existing city, emphasizing spontaneous interaction and multi functionality. Used public space and a pedestrian friendly environment will be effective antidotes against fear of the other that frequently dominates the experience of urban everyday life.
Flexible planning and citizen involvement in urban governance will make possible the implementation of innovation in the way we build and manage our cities. The proposals submitted here are technically feasible, not utopian dreams. However, they can only become materials for a new form of urban planning under the condition of grassroots mobilization and a change in urban politics. By communicating our ideas for a new urban economy and a new model of city we hope to contribute both to a renewed debate on urban policies and to a process of community mobilization, the fundamental lever of urban transformation. In the midst of a devastating crisis we are planting the seeds of hope for a better urban life beyond the crisis.