Don’t Be Frank

Jonathan Lethem has an open letter to Frank Gehry, enumerating reasons to pull out of Bruce Ratner’s “development” project for Brooklyn:

The proposal currently on the table is a gang of 16 towers that would be the biggest project ever built by a single developer in the history of New York City. In fact, the proposed arena, like the surrounding neighborhoods, stands to be utterly dwarfed by these ponderous skyscrapers and superblocks. It’s a nightmare for Brooklyn, one that, if built, would cause irreparable damage to the quality of our lives and, I’d think, to your legacy. Your reputation, in this case, is the Trojan horse in a war to bring a commercially ambitious, but aesthetically—and socially—disastrous new development to Brooklyn. Your presence is intended to appease cultural tastemakers who might otherwise, correctly, recognize this atrocious plan for what it is, just as the notion of a basketball arena itself is a Trojan horse for the real plan: building a skyline suitable to some Sunbelt boomtown. I’ve been struggling to understand how someone of your sensibilities can have drifted into such an unfortunate alliance, with such potentially disastrous results. And so, I’d like to address you as one artist to another. Really, as one citizen to another. Here are some things I’d hope you’ll consider before this project advances any further.

I’d write more about it, but I’m way hungover from last night’s foray to Fenway Park. On the positive side, I maintained my cover throughout (“I’m a Kansas City Royals fan!”) and thus didn’t get killed by the local fans. More later.

2 Replies to “Don’t Be Frank”

  1. Gil–

    Thanks for adding this; I’ve not read Lethem (I guess his novels are well-regarded), but this is a fine piece of writing and perhaps the best explication I’ve of the issues surrounding this project.

    MRF

  2. I haven’t read any of Lethem’s books either. But I do have Motherless Brooklyn and Fortress of Solitude downstairs in The Library.

    As I read more of that Robert Moses biography, I see more and more of what gets lost in these massive development projects. What’s interesting is that the major papers all glossed over the “bad parts” of Moses’ autocratic/autocentric projects.

    And, of course, Bruce Ratner is the developer who’s building the new NYTimes building (brought to you by the power of eminent domain).

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