'Cities' Author Jane Jacobs Dies at 89
Updated 4:33 PM ET April 25, 2006
By HILLEL ITALIE
NEW YORK (AP) - Jane Jacobs, an author and community activist of singular
influence whose classic "The Death and Life of Great American Cities"
transformed ideas about urban planning, died Tuesday, her publisher said.
Jacobs, a longtime resident of Toronto, was 89.
Jacobs died in her sleep Tuesday morning at a Toronto hospital, which she
entered a few days ago, according to Random House publicist Sally Marvin.
Jacobs' son, James, was with her at the time. The author, who would have
turned 90 on May 4, had been in poor health.
A native of Scranton, Pa., Jacobs lived for many years in New York before
moving to Toronto in the late 1960s. She and her husband, architect Robert
Jacobs Jr., were unhappy that their taxes supported the Vietnam War and
turned to Canada as their permanent home. Robert Jacobs died in 1996.
Jacobs, who based her findings on deep, eclectic reading and firsthand
observation, challenged assumptions she believed damaged modern cities _
that neighborhoods should be isolated from each other, that an empty street
was safer than a crowded one, that the car represented progress over the
pedestrian.
Her priorities were for integrated, manageable communities, for diversity of
people, transportation, architecture and commerce. She also believed that
economies need to be self-sustaining and self-renewing, relying on local
initiative instead of centralized bureaucracies.
"She inspired a kind of quiet revolution," her longtime editor, Jacob
Epstein, said Tuesday. "Every time you see people rise up and oppose a
developer, you think of Jane Jacobs."
"Death and Life," published in 1961, evolved from opposing the standards of
the time to becoming a standard itself. It was taught in urban studies
classes throughout North America and sold more than half a million copies.
City planners in New York and Toronto were among those who cited its
importance and her book became an essential text for "New Urban" communities
such as Hercules, Calif., and Civano, Ariz.
Jacobs also received a number of prizes, including a lifetime achievement
award in 2000 from the National Building Foundation in Washington, D.C.
With her bangs and owlish glasses, and her look of cheerful curiosity, it
was easy to mistake Jacobs for an idle eccentric, the kind of woman to be
found late at night in the research room of the public library.
But Jacobs was a dedicated, even iconic activist. In the 1950s, her loyalty
was questioned by the U.S. government, and in the 1960s, she was arrested
for protesting Vietnam. She successfully opposed a Toronto highway project
not long after moving there and was a distinctive presence at public
hearings.
"You sort of fell in love with Jane when you met her," Epstein said. "She
was exuberant, original, strong-minded and a very kind woman."
Her most famous confrontation came in the early '60s, when she helped defeat
a plan by New York City park commissioner Robert Moses to build an
expressway through Washington Square. During a 2000 interview with The
Associated Press, Jacobs recalled the city hearing where she first laid eyes
on the mighty Moses.
"He was one of the first speakers," she said. "He was furious and he stood
up there, inside the railed enclosure, and not where most speakers spoke _
outside where the public microphone was. He was privileged.
"He gripped this railing and he said, in dismissing scornfully our plan to
have no more than the existing road and better not even that, he said,
'These protests are just by a bunch of ... a bunch of mothers!'"
Robert Caro, whose classic biography of Moses, "The Power Broker," was often
taught alongside "Death and Life," said Tuesday that Jacobs was a
"far-sighted genius who guided cities in new directions." He called her
battle with Moses "one of the truly heroic sagas in the history of New
York."
Jacobs, born in 1916, was a doctor's daughter with a compulsion to question
authority and find answers for herself. During the Depression, on days when
job hunts went nowhere, she would invest a nickel in the subway and explore
a neighborhood: the diamond district, the garment district, the meatpacking
district. Soon, she made money out of her passion, writing articles for
various magazines.
"Death and Life" emerged from her reporting. Not only did it attack
canonical beliefs in city planning, it attacked such canonical figures as
Moses, for his dogmatic attachment to the automobile, and historian Lewis
Mumford, author of "The Culture of Cities," for his misguided attachment to
the anti-city philosophy.
Jacobs thought cities suffered from an anti-city bias among planners, the
romanticization of a more rural way of life. Because of this, she wrote,
vital communities were being torn down simply because they were "crowded,"
other neighborhoods were fatally isolated and parks were being constructed
without regard to their surrounding environment.
In later works, she examined the ideas outlined in "Death and Life" from
other perspectives: "Cities and the Wealth of Nations," the economy;
"Systems of Survival," morals; "The Nature of Economies," science and
ecology. Her final book was "Dark Age Ahead" in 2004.
Jacobs is survived by three children, James, Edward and Mary.
Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may
not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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