Sunday, June 24, 2007

Fin...

To those who have returned to the USA, I hope you had a safe flight and no major delays.

To those in Brasil still until the end of summer, have safe travels within Brasil, and your flight back home to the USA.

To this, this will be my last broadcast...

Sir DWD out.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

To clear up a statement connecting Papal Action to favela social justice...

I had made a comment based on what I was told in a catholic classroom, how the late Pope JP II had made a donation to a local favela in Rio to prevent favela residents from being evicted from their homes. What I understood, the Pope asked the President of Brasil how much would it cost to bring them peace from the danger of eviction. He was told the price would be high. Then the pope offered his papal ring in request that the people of the Rio favela not be evicted.

Apparently the story has some mixed up facts.

The actual story was published 27 years ago in Time magazine, during JP II's first visit to Brasil
.
------------
Monday, Jul. 14, 1980

Just "Look Around a Bit"

In a troubled land, the Pope pleads for social justice

Visiting Brazil, a country in which doing something as simple as giving bread to a worker on strike can be a political act, Pope John Paul II last week did his work in the shadow of two Christs: the passive Christ who said, "My kingdom is not of this world," and the active Christ who called upon all mankind to "love thy neighbor as thyself."

In the slums of Rio de Janeiro. John Paul saw squalor. He climbed up a dirt road past the wooden shacks where 20,000 squatters exist under constant threat of eviction, toward a tiny parish church that serves the favela of Vidigal. On the way, he suddenly turned aside into a

three-room hovel, where Elvira Almeida Lima, caught by surprise, had yet to make her bed or clear the breakfast dishes. The Pope gently kissed the old woman and blessed her. As he left she clutched a tablecloth and buried her face in it, sobbing. When he reached the church. John Paul removed the gold ring that Pope Paul VI had given him when he was named a Cardinal. Then he handed it to a local priest as a donation to the parish.

Those were only two emotional events in a twelve-day, 9,000-mile journey with an exhausting itinerary that took the Pope all over Brazil, the world's largest Roman Catholic nation. The papal plane touched down at Brasilia, the futuristic capital of Brazil, where the Pope marked out one of his major themes by offering President Joao Baptista de Oliveira Figueiredo a sermon on social justice. The tour's pitch rose in Belo Horizonte, the

nation's third largest city. Youths cheered wildly and chanted, "The Pope is our king!" John Paul spoke movingly to them of life under the Nazis, when, he said, "I saw my convictions trampled on."

Bells pealed all across the congested city of Rio as John Paul's "Popemobile" arrived. At a jammed open-air Mass in sight of Sugar Loaf Mountain, the Pope made his way to the altar, hugging and kissing babies. Two days later, in São Paulo, the fervor of an open-air throng of 1.5 million brought tears to John Paul's eyes.

The Pope's warm gestures, the stately progress via Popemobile through city streets, the huge adoring crowds, the songs and symbolic gifts (among other things, a guitar, a coffee plant, a h

ard hat) are now routine in John Paul's travels. In Brazil, the familiar spectacle tended to blur the importance of the trip. The Pope's visit has notable significance for Brazil, where 80% of the 120 million people are at least nominally church members, and some 80,000 groups of believers, known as "base communities," operate mainly without priests. But in the perspective of history, John Paul's achievement in Brazil may be his often compelling attempt to link the church with revolutionary social reform but to draw the line at political violence.

The papal strictures are clear enough.

But the distinction is far from clear between the strong social pressure that the Pope seems to endorse and the overt political action that he has forbidden. In Brazil, that line has become a razor's edge.

Brazilian Catholicism once lived all too cozily with dictators. After the military coup in 1964,

the hierarchy rendered public thanks to God for the soldiers who "delivered us from Communist danger." But for a decade and more. Brazil's bishops have been known for their willingness to stand up to the regime in the name of Christian justice. As one priest says, "The government calls a bishop a Communist, but when we see people being exploited, we have to say this is contrary to the Gospel." The toll has been high —since 1968, by church count, 122 bishops, priests and seminarians and 273 lay pastoral workers imprisoned or detained, and 84 people physically or psychologically abused. Despite the harassment, the progressive National Conference of Brazilian Bishops has become the most severe critic of the government. The church's task now, explains Paulo Evaristo Cardinal Arns of Sao Paulo, is to seek "a more just and participatory society." An indirect church-state clash occurred this spring when Brazil's auto metalworkers began a 41-day strike in Sao Paulo. The government, which is desperately trying to build up Brazil's industrial production, declared the strike illegal and took control of the unions. Bishop Claudio Hummes. Arns' head of the labor pastorate, promptly opened 75 churches for strike meetings and food distribution. Earlier this year, too, by an overwhelming vote (172 to 4, though with four abstentions and 100 absent), the National Conference of Brazilian Bishops took a stand on land reform, Brazil's most serious problem. More than 30 million people have been driven off the land and into the slums since 1964 to make way for industry and agribusiness. The bishops declared the government's economic policies are responsible for the hardship. Though some labeled the action "Marxist inspired," the bishops condemned the use of land for exploitation, urging instead land in the hands of those who work it.

John Paul has made no comments on these specific church actions, but he may lay down general guidelines at a meeting of Brazil's bishops this week. Last week he steadily strengthened the hand of Brazil's progressives, in effect trying to seize the initiative in social action from Marxist revolutionaries. But as in Mexico last year, he issued notes of caution lest Catholics be lured into concluding that ends excuse any means.

Speaking to President Figueiredo and others at a Brasilia reception. John Paul listed "seven rights" that instantly became a declaration for activists: "The right to life, to security, to work, to a home, to health, to education, to religious expression. " In the slums of Rio he called out to the rich: "Look around a bit. Does it not wound your heart? Do you not feel remorse of conscience because of your riches and abundance?" He urged economic reorganization and a "more just distribution" of wealth. In a land where the church once preached passivity and fatalism, he urged the poor to "do everything legal to assure their families whatever is necessary for life." Afterward, listeners handed him letters asking for help in or der to get running water, electricity, sew age lines and title to the land they live on.

On Thursday John Paul stood for nearly two hours in a driving rain to meet workers in a soccer stadium in Sao Pau lo. He seemed to be drawn deeper into politics. As soon as John Paul finished his greetings, a metalworker took the micro phone, and implored him to support workers as they "break the barrier imposed by the political system that governs us." The Pope called out for social justice. But he added a line that again emerged at the heart of his message. Social justice "cannot be attained by violence. Violence kills what it intends to create.''

Reported

by George Russell/Rio de Janeiro and Wilton Wynn/Rio de Janeiro

With reporting by George Russell, Wilton Wynn

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Presentation Schedule for the rest of week

Here is the tentative presentation schedule tomorrow and Thursday. Look for your presentation title, for I withheld names for confidentiality and security purposes...

Time Student Title / Topic



Wednesday, June 20th, 2007



9:00 - 9:20



10:00 - 10:20 Planning considerations for pandemic preparedness: Curitiba, Brazil, A Case Study


10:50 - 11:00 BREAK
11:00 - 11:20 Exploring the Political and Civic Function of Public Spaces and their Role in the Progression of Democracy



12:00 - 13:30 LUNCH
13:30 - 13:50
The Equitable Distribution of the Parks of Curitiba


14:30 - 14:50
A Closer Look at Social Service Institutions Provided to Favelas: Case Study on Vila Parolin



15:20 - 15:30 BREAK
15:30 - 15:50 Economic Development Plan for Vila Parolin: ABCD Approach for Rua Maria Moscardi Fanini

16:30 - 16:50 Evaluating Curitiba's Resettlement Policies for Informal Settlements





Thursday, June 21st, 2007



9:00 - 9:20


10:00 - 10:20
Curitiba's Urban Landscape: Integrated Land Use and Transportation Planning Molding a Brazilian Cityscape



10:50 - 11:00 BREAK
11:00 - 11:20
Sports Teams and their Effect on the Real Estate Values around their Stadiums


12:00 - 13:30 LUNCH
13:30 - 13:50 Curitiba's Sticks & Carrots - 35 Years of Policies and Incentives Used to Successfully Shape Real Estate Development around Curitiba, Brazil's Extensive Bus-Rapid-Transit Infrastructure



14:30 - 14:50
The Impact of Public Transportation on the Environment



15:20 - 15:30 BREAK
15:30 - 15:50
Curitiba's Built Heritage - a brief look

16:30 - 16:50 DEBRIEFING

Friday, June 15, 2007

Recap on Week 5: Maringa...

Welcome back from Maringa. After what was quite a challenge reuniting the class, in which half were in Montevideo, Uruguay, and were held up due to heavy delays due to fog and weather and had to catch a midnight bus to Maringa, we all made it together. Anywho, class involved a lecture on Maringa's history, before we took upon a bus tour around the city. We saw sights like the historic district, Av. Brasil, the old airport, and the defiantly designed cathedral. Did anyone notice the signals were like racecar signals?

Anywho, on Thursday morning, we had one more lecture on Maringa's population and economic activity, before the class broke for lunch and returned to Curitiba.






Wednesday, June 6, 2007

Recap on Week 4


Week 4 was quite a short week.

A few of us on Monday visited with the State Transportation Office, where we got some information on how the State Transportation system works, and the processes behind current projects.

Tuesday morning brought most of the class to visit Vila Parolin, a historic favela in central Curitiba, with a strong association president and social service presence. Here we had a lecture of social services present, and then a driving tour of Vila Parolin.

From here, Tuesday afternoon included a few lectures on flood prevention and hydrology on the Baragui river in Curtiba, among other topics...

Monday, June 4, 2007

Class schedule on Tuesday

Tomorrow,

AM options include:

8:30 AM meeting time to go to Vila Parolin with the prof...
9:00 AM meeting time to go to UFPR with the TA.

Class meets up in the afternoon for a lecture.

Just a reminder....

Return to the regular programming...

Friday, June 1, 2007

To all of those with student visas....

Celebrate!

You are now legal resident aliens of Brasil.

Thanks to our processing agent João.


Recomended by Dr. Steiner at UF...

A blog post on another researcher's blog which compared Curitiba and Bogota.

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Notes on Bogotá vs Curitiba


Curitiba, Brazil
Bogotá is interesting and important for many reasons but I write only to draw some quick comparisons between it and the Latin American success story probably best known by U.S. planners: Curitiba, Brazil. We mostly know Curitiba for its visionary mayor, Jaime Lerner, who made as much progress as anyone in a metropolitan city in promoting transit over car use for commuting, among several other impressive accomplishments. (PBS even has a web site on the city's planning history.) Lerner went on to become a multi-term mayor and then governor of that state -- and an international spokesperson for rational, economical, "smart" urban development -- and has even longer led a planning/architecture firm that remains extremely influential in Curitiba development and policy circles.

The New York Times Sunday Magazine published a provocative May 20 piece on Curitiba. (This is available online for the right price, or you can read it without the pictures in Matt Kahn's blog here.) It emphasized two points made in recent years: That Lerner's initial great successes were due in no small part to the existence of a military dictatorship at the national level at the time, and that many positive planning indicators have begun to slip lately, especially in the face of a growing low-income population at the urban periphery. Even the transit mode share is dropping.

Meanwhile, I visited Bogotá for the first time last week for a Lincoln seminar (all presentations are here) and, in addition to soaking up what I could of the urban colonial milieu in el centro, met Arturo Ardila-Gómez, a professor at the University of the Andes. His MIT urban studies dissertation, supervised by Ralph Gakenheimer, compared the transit planning processes of Bogotá and Curitiba during many of their formative transit years. He summarized his argument and evidence, as best I remember, as disputing the first part of the NYT article; namely, Lerner was effective mainly because he was a coalition builder, even when the system was not particularly democratic. Another point made in this presentation is that both bus systems were successful, in various respects, because they managed to balance the authority and expertise of both the transit operators and the municipal government. (He also has a nice essay on Bogotá, mostly from a planner's perspective, here in the Harvard Review of Latin America, circa 2003.)

I do not really know much about either city, or country, and hope the accidental reader can offer useful comparative information.


Bogotá, Colombia
A densely sprawling city of 7 million plus, I can tell you that Bogotá is substantially safer and more pleasant than I imagined, owing apparently to a series of quite visionary and effective mayors over the past decade and a half. And the country is far more compelling than the casual observer might guess: The ambassador to the U.S. Carolina Barco is a city planner (MCP, Harvard; SPURS, MIT) and the foreign minister Fernando Araujo was appointed to that position in February, just 7 weeks after escaping from the leftist FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) rebels, active in Colombia for 40 something years, after being held prisoner in the rain forest the previous 6 years. If you happened to catch him on Charlie Rose two months ago, available here, it was quite a tale. Then there is the extraordinary rising star of 34 year old Senator Gina Parody, the sponsor of our meeting in the National Congress. (Significantly, the president of the Colombian congress is also female.)

President Uribe, another controversial yet extremely popular center-right figure -- snubbed recently by Al Gore due to rumored past connections with right wing paramilitary groups, and who has the additional baggage of a good relationship with our President Bush (in return for $700+ million/year in U.S. aid, that we know of) -- is pushing for a NAFTA-like Latin American free trade agreement while prioritizing a domestic crack down on rebel violence. (The Washington Post has audio interviews from his recent visit to D.C., where his lobbying to the new Democratic leadership in Congress was widely reported as having received little sympathy.)

That said, a highlight of the trip for me was when Uribe spoke to our seminar and took questions in the National Congress building. A former mayor and governor, he impressed even political opponents with his detailed knowledge of municipal finance and land taxation policy wrinkles, and his openness to debate on these issues. Since lots of heavily armed people would like him dead, security was high. (His father was assassinated by the FARC in 1983 and he has survived several such attempts.)

I also enjoyed meeting two past mayors, one now running for reelection: the bold, innovative, and engaging Enrique Peñalosa, largely responsible for the successful Curitiba-like bus rapid transit, the TransMilenio. As Mexico still does, Colombia only permitted mayors to serve one 3-year term in a row until recently. This is crazy, especially for planning purposes, but at least Colombian mayoral terms have recently been extended to 4 years. Allowing a second consecutive term seems wise. (And the Colombian president can now serve two 4-year terms; Uribe is the first two-term president in the country's modern history, with approval ratings in the 60s and 70s.)

(I was introduced to Professor Ardila by my former student, Professor Eduardo Behrentz, an air quality expert now directing the Environmental Engineering Research Center at the University of the Andes. This photo has him pointing to an announcement of that day's march protesting the pending trade agreement. Like many Colombian academics, he actively advises the government and writes op-eds, such as on the issue of the exhaust of the diesel TransMilenio buses. It is quite unhealthy as diesel particulates are bad enough, but Colombian diesel is particularly high sulfur. Efforts to change this at the refinery stage have sputtered. He advised importing cleaner diesel until better domestic supplies are refined.)


Every Colombian politician I've mentioned here is astoundingly well informed, a lot smarter than most smart people I know, and -- as influential pivots in contentious, risky settings -- somewhat polarizing. Their attention to fundamental planning issues and interest in the related scholarship is especially refreshing. I dearly hope to learn more about these cities, their planning processes, their results, and not least their lessons for elsewhere.

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Week 3 recap...

It has been now three weeks that we have been in Brasil. Boy how times fly. Its now the half way point of the course. Now we have had the opportunity to hear from many aspects of planning and city function here in Curitiba. Hopefully things will now come together as to our particular projects, and to whom we should seek more information from based on their presentations.

Anywho, to a recap on the week's events.

Tuesday brought the class back together to go to UFPR, where we attened a studio session with the local class. We went around groups, and offered criticisms and suggestions as to their project to revitalize a city block behind the city Cathedral near Praza Tiradentes. The afternoon, we heard a very comprehensive, yet critical lecture of Curitiba and its planning from former IPPUC head Dr. Luis Fragomeni.

Tuesday night, the class had a pow-wow, hosted by one of our classmates, where we conjured up ideas that we could present to the local class that could help them in their project. We hoped to bring new ideas from our research, and from other workshops and conferences we had attended to them.

Wednesday, it was game time, as our class took the lecturn, and presented new ideas to the local class. Before that, did anyone notice the weather? IT WAS COLD!!!! Try 32 degrees for a morning low. According to meteorologists, it was the coldest May in 138 years.




------
From Accuweather.com on Tuesday:

South America Cold Snap
Tuesday, May 29, 2007

May 29, 2007

--Day two of a Southern cold snap centered upon Argentina. Down to -16 -8 lower readings, be they nearby or elsewhere. The wedge of cold air that thrust northward behind the leading cold front lapped against the foothills of northern Argentina and southern Bolivia. At Salta, Argentina, snow flurries were sighted early today (Tuesday morning). Even as I write, it has been no `warmer` than 3

At the heart of this cold wave is a strong high building northeast from eastern Patagonia. It will settle over Uruguay and eastern Argentina Wednesday before heading seaward off southern Brasil. In heading seaward, this high will spare the populous southern heartland of Brasil a hard cold wave, although there will be no mistaking the mid-week chill in areas such as Sao Paulo. No equivalent cold outbreak is indicated by numerical forecasts for at least the next fortnight.

----
Back to our regular programming...

Topics in our class's lecture included SWOT analysis, Green Architecture, Community Compatibility, Conceptual Thinking, among other events (correct me if I am wrong on those topic titles). But I hope you get the jist. Some students came after our presentation quite intrigued as to the new ideas presented, and wondered where to get more information.

Today, our class had three lectures in which we attened this afternoon. Lecture one related to the real estate prices in the formal and informal market. Lecture two related to a study that pressures more sustainable development and development controls in the environmentally sensitive watershed. Lecture three related a research project by a UFPR Graduate student relating issues in traffic psychology. Specifically, Metropolization Management technology through a psychological lens with a goal of sustainable development.

Anywho, this weekend prompts us to continue our respective research. Good luck with that.

Those who have visa issues to resolve. Meet at the hotel lobby at 10 AM.

Any issues or questions on setting up interviews, speak to the prof or TA.

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Those with Visa issues still... (regarding the tax)

Correspondence from UFIC

Sent on May 23rd,

Good afternoon,

Thank you for your email. I have spoken with my director regarding your circumstance and we both agree that these unexpected fees are certainly unfair to you and the other participants. We would be happy to assist
you in paying the final (we hope) $100 to complete your stay in Curitiba. I'm very sorry that you have had to endure such pains, but I hope that this trip will be well worth it in the end. I will be getting back to all of you regarding payment/reimbursement for the extra $100.

Thank you and have a great day,
Angela

Angela Grindal
Study Abroad Advisor
_______________
University of Florida
International Center
170 HUB
Gainesville, FL 32611

Sent today, May 30

Good evening,
Please pay the fee and you will be reimbursed once you submit a receipt of payment to our office. You can mail your receipt to:
Angela Grindal
170 HUB
Gainesville, FL 32611
Thank you,
Angela

Change in meeting time tomorrow...

From the TA,

Class tomorrow will be at 2 PM at UFPR. We will meet around 1 PM to commute by bus to campus. The morning lecture was cancelled.

Monday, May 28, 2007

Recap on the soccer game...

Francisca invited us to a good game between Clube Atletico Paranese versus Santos, but unfortunately Clube Atletico Paranese (the local team for Curitiba and the Parana state) 0-1 to Santos. Anywho, instead of putting pictures on this post, I figure I would give you a 2 1/2 minute clip from the game yesterday. Take a look and enjoy. (Click on the image or hyperlink.)

Saturday, May 26, 2007

Futbol game on Sunday...








For those still in town, Francisca has invited us to go to a soccer game. The information is as follows

Meet at the lobby at 2:30 PM. We will take a cab to the stadium and meet Francisca there at 3 PM.

Dresscode: Wear Black and/or red. Francisca insisted that you do NOT wear green. (Probably the opposing team).

Leave your bags or purses at home. Just bring a camera, money for the ticket, and your student ID.

Ticket price - R$20-30 (US$10-15) with a student ID Card.

You can't bring water to the game. It must be bought at the stadium.

Dress warmly, it will be chilly.

Game starts at 4 PM.

If you miss the group and still want to go, it is the Estadio do Athletico on Rua Buenos Aires (note, the road will be closed, so the taxi might not be able to get too close to the area.)

If you need Francisca's cell number, let me know. I will not post it on the blog for confidentiality.

Friday, May 25, 2007

That's a wrap on Week 2...

Happy Friday. For those stateside, Happy Memorial Day Weekend.

To those that went to Rio de Janiero this weekend, be safe and have lots of fun.

For the rest here in Curitiba, keep warm, its cold out.

Anywho, relating the story of Wednesday onward...

Wednesday was a day of lectures at UFPR. There was a charette in the morning with the Architecture students, but since they need time and privacy to sort out their projects, our group refrained from going. Anywho, our group took the adventure of navigating the city buses to UFPR, with our TA taking the lead. She did an excellend job of getting us to our destination and attending both lectures. Unfortunately, the Prof was unable to attend as she recovers from a serious cold. Hope you feel better. Drink plenty of tea.

The lectures at UFPR included a architectural history lesson of Brazil, with emphasis of the Parana state. The lecturer used models to help us visualize the transformation of the architecture in Brazil, from the colonial style, to the Bauhaus modernist style.

The second lecture, involved speaking of lighting, and electrical wiring on the urban landscape. The lecturer spoke about how the wiring of the electric grid on the city has varying effects on the perception of the city. The second half of the presentation involved speaking of an experiment that was conducted by some of his students regarding the perceptions one has as the result of night lighting.

Both lectures were very informative and were quite related when it comes to the urban form.

As a recap on how to get to UFPR from the hotel, you have several options.

1. Walk to Praza Rui Barbosa, and take either the Petropolis or Sta. Barbara bus to Centro Politecnico.

2. Take the Centenario / Campo Comprido biarticulated line from Brigadero Franco stop to Campo Imbuia Stop, and Transfer to Interbarrio II to Centro Politecnico.

3. Take Praza 29 de Marzo stop (near supermarket, but the tube not facing it) on the Pinahais / Campo Comprido line (304) to Campo Imbuia Stop, and Transfer to Interbarrio II to Centro Politecnico (less stops).

Note: The Praza 29 de Marzo bus line (Pinahais / Campo Comprido line (304)) is the same line to Rodoferroveraria, which you can get to the train/bus station. Furthermore, the Rodoferroviaria stop on the Pinahais / Campo Comprido line (304), has a free transfer to the Airport line (208) if you don't take the Executive Airport shuttle.

From Caitlin and the NY Times

An article of Curitiba in the New York Times

The New York Times
Printer Friendly Format Sponsored By


May 20, 2007
Recycle City

The Road to Curitiba

Simon Norfolk for The New York Times

The Wire Opera House (1992), completed in about two months under the guidance of Curitiba’s visionary architect-mayor, Jaime Lerner.

Published: May 20, 2007

On Saturday mornings, children gather to paint and draw in the main downtown shopping street of Curitiba, in southern Brazil. More than just a charming tradition, the child’s play commemorates a key victory in a hard-fought, ongoing war. Back in 1972, the new mayor of the city, an architect and urban planner named Jaime Lerner, ordered a lightning transformation of six blocks of the street into a pedestrian zone. The change was recommended in a master plan for the city that was approved six years earlier, but fierce objections from the downtown merchants blocked its implementation. Lerner instructed his secretary of public works to institute the change quickly and asked how long it would take. “He said he needed four months,” Lerner recalled recently. “I said, ‘Forty-eight hours.’ He said, ‘You’re crazy.’ I said, ‘Yes, I’m crazy, but do it in 48 hours.’ ” The municipal authorities were able to accomplish it in three days, beginning on a Friday night and installing paving, lighting, planters and furniture by the end of the day on Monday. “Being a very weak mayor, if I start to do it and take too long, everyone could stop it through a juridical demand,” Lerner went on to explain. “If they stop the work, it’s finished. I had to do it very fast, at least in part. Because we had discussed it a great deal. Sometimes they have to have a demonstration effect.”


Simon Norfolk for The New York Times

A station on Curitiba’s rapid-transit-bus system.

Simon Norfolk for The New York Times

Curitiba’s rapid-transit buses can move 36,000 passengers an hour, a cheap alternative to a subway system.


Simon Norfolk for The New York Times

Despite its development as a city for public transportation, Curitiba is said to have more cars per capita than any other city in Brazil.

The demonstration worked. Within days, impressed by the increase in their business, the once-recalcitrant shop owners were demanding an extension of the traffic-free district. Some diehard motorists, however, sulked. Lerner heard that a group of them were planning to disregard the prohibition and drive their cars into the street on a Saturday morning. So he contrived an unbreachable defense. With the cooperation of the city’s teachers and a donation of rolls of newsprint and boxes of paint, on that morning he assembled several hundred children in the street, where they sat and drew pictures. “It was to say, ‘This is being done for children and their parents — don’t even think of putting cars there,’ ” he told me. The sputtered-out protest was the last resistance to the pedestrianization of the shopping area, which has since expanded from the original 6 blocks to encompass about 15 today. “Of course, this was very emblematic,” Lerner recounted. “We were trying to say, ‘This city is not for cars.’ When many mayors at the time were planning for individual cars, we were countervailing.” He observed that it was emblematic in another way also: “From that point, they said, ‘If he could do this in 72 hours, he can do anything.’ It was a good strategy.”

An opening salvo, the creation of the pedestrian zone inaugurated a series of programs by Lerner and his colleagues that made Curitiba a famous model of late-20th-century urban planning. In the early 1970s, when Brazil was welcoming any industry, no matter how toxic its byproducts, Curitiba decided to admit only nonpolluters; to accommodate them, it constructed an industrial district that reserved so much land for green space that it was derided as a “golf course” until it succeeded in filling up with major businesses while its counterparts in other Latin American cities were flagging. Through the creation of two dozen recreational parks, many with lakes to catch runoff in low-lying areas that flood periodically, Curitiba managed, at a time of explosive population growth, to increase its green areas from 5 square feet per inhabitant to an astounding 560 square feet. The city promoted “green” policies before they were fashionable and called itself “the ecological capital of Brazil” in the 1980s, when there were no rivals for such a title. Today, Curitiba remains a pilgrimage destination for urbanists fascinated by its bus system, garbage-recycling program and network of parks. It is the answer to what might otherwise be a hypothetical question: How would cities look if urban planners, not politicians, took control?

Although the children who paint on Saturday mornings are no longer needed to protect the downtown shopping street from cars, the battle to keep Curitiba green is never-ending. Indeed, some say it is going badly these days. The rivers, once crystalline, reek of untreated sewage. The bus system that has won admirers throughout the world appears to be nearing capacity; what’s more, Curitiba, by some measures, has a higher per capita ownership of private cars than any city in Brazil — even exceeding BrasÃlia, a city that was designed for cars. Curitiba’s garbage-recycling rate has been declining over the last six or seven years, and the only landfill in the municipal region will be full by the end of 2008. Jorge Wilheim, the São Paulo architect who drafted Curitiba’s master plan in 1965, says: “When we made the plan, the population was 350,000. We thought in a few years it would reach 500,000. But it has grown much bigger.” The municipality of Curitiba today has 1.8 million people, and the population of the metropolitan region is 3.2 million. “I know the plan of Curitiba is very famous, and I am the first to enjoy it, but that was in ’65,” Wilheim continues. “The metropolitan region must have a new vision.”

It is often said of Curitiba that it doesn’t feel like Brazil. Depending on who’s speaking, that can be intended as a compliment or a criticism. Populated by European immigrants in the 19th century, Curitiba has a demographic makeup that is largely more fair-skinned and well educated than that of Brazil’s tropical north. It is also unusually affluent. Unlike São Paulo, with its startling extremes of wealth and poverty, much of Curitiba to an American eye looks familiarly middle class. Even the scruffy used-car lots have a seediness reminiscent of Los Angeles, not the Rio de Janeiro of “City of God.” The city, especially the large downtown, is very clean, thanks to municipal sanitation trucks and the freelance carrinheiros, or cart people, who pick up trash to sell at recycling centers.

During my visit to Curitiba in March, the city was the host of an international biodiversity conference. While I hadn’t known of it when I scheduled my trip, the coincidence was about as remarkable as finding a design show to greet you in Milan or a wine festival under way in Bordeaux. Environmentalism is the heart of Curitiba’s self-identity, and the municipal government is always devising new schemes that showcase the brand. The rest of the world has caught on, if not yet caught up. Ecological awareness is architecturally trendy. This year’s winner of the prestigious Pritzker Prize is Richard Rogers, a longtime proponent of mass transit, lower energy consumption and ecologically sensitive buildings. Commercially, real-estate developers from Beijing to Santa Monica are brandishing their LEED certificates (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) as they market condominiums and office suites to green-minded consumers. While it is unusually ambitious, the 25-year plan that Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg proposed last month for New York is part of an international wave of recognition that cities must live more responsibly, especially when it comes to their effusions of climate-warming gases and their excretions of mountains of solid waste. Bloomberg’s most contentious idea — a “congestion tax” on cars entering traffic-clogged districts during peak hours — has been working for more than four years in London (and more than 30 years in Singapore) to increase the numbers of people using public transportation. Interestingly, Curitiba adopted an opposite approach, brandishing a carrot instead of a stick. The city planners suspected that public transportation would attract more users if it was more attractive. And that reasonable assumption turned out to be correct.

The efficient buses that zip across the Curitiba metropolitan region are the most conspicuously un-Brazilian feature of the city. Instead of descending into subway stations, Curitibanos file into ribbed glass tubes that are boarding platforms for the rapid-transit buses. (The glass tubes resemble the “fosteritos” that Norman Foster later designed for the metro in Bilbao, Spain.) Curitiba has five express-bus avenues, with a sixth in development, to allow you to traverse the city with speedy dispatch. In the early 1970s, most cities investing in public transportation were building subways or light-rail networks. Curitiba lacked the resources and the time to install a train system. Lerner says that compared with the Curitiba bus network, a light rail system would have required 20 times the financial investment; a subway would have cost 100 times as much. “We tried to understand, what is a subway?” he recalls. “It has to have speed, comfort, reliability and good frequency. But why does it have to be underground? Underground is very expensive. With dedicated lanes and not stopping on every corner, we could do it with buses.” Because widening the avenues would have required a lengthy and costly expropriation process, the planners came up with a “trinary” system that embraced three parallel thoroughfares: a large central avenue dedicated to two-way rapid-bus traffic (flanked by slow lanes for cars making short local trips) and, a block over on each side, an avenue for fast one-way automobile traffic.

When the bus system was inaugurated, it transported 54,000 passengers daily. That number has ballooned to 2.3 million, in large part because of innovations that permit passengers to board and exit rapidly. In 1992, Lerner and his team established the tubular boarding platforms with fare clerks and turnstiles, so that the mechanisms for paying and boarding are separated, as in a subway. To carry more people at a time, the city introduced flexible-hinged articulated buses that open their doors wide for rapid entry and egress; then, when the buses couldn’t cope with the demand, the Lerner team called for bi-articulated buses of 88 feet with two hinges (and a 270-passenger capacity), which Volvo manufactured at Curitiba’s request. Comparing the capacities of bus and subway systems, Lerner reels off numbers with a promoter’s panache. “A normal bus in a normal street conducts x passengers a day,” he told me. “With a dedicated lane, it can transport 2x a day. If you have an articulated bus in a dedicated lane, 2.7x passengers. If you add a boarding tube, you can achieve 3.4x passengers, and if you add double articulated buses, you can have four times as many passengers as a normal bus in a normal street.” He says that with an arrival frequency of 30 seconds, you can transport 36,000 passengers every hour — which is about the same load he would have achieved with a subway.

Unfortunately, the trends of bus usage are down. While the system has expanded to cover 13 of the cities in the metropolitan region, charging a flat fare that in practice subsidizes the trips of the mostly poorer workers who live in outlying areas, bus ridership within the Curitiba municipality has been declining. “We are losing bus passengers and gaining cars,” says Luis Fragomeni, a Curitiba urban planner. He observes that, like potential users of public transport everywhere, many Curitibanos view it as noisy, crowded and unsafe. Undermining the thinking behind the master plan, even those who live alongside the high-density rapid-bus corridors are buying cars. “The licensing of cars in Curitiba is 2.5 times higher than babies being born in Curitiba,” he says. “Trouble.” Because cars are status symbols, attempts to discourage people from buying them are probably futile. “We say, ‘Have your own car, but keep it in the garage and use it only on weekends,’ ” Fragomeni remarks. And the public-transport system must be upgraded continuously to remain an appealing alternative to private vehicles. “That competition is very hard,” says Paulo Schmidt, the president of URBS, the rapid-bus system. During peak hours, buses on the main routes are already arriving at almost 30-second intervals; any more buses, and they would back up. While acknowledging his iconoclasm in questioning the sufficiency of Curitiba’s trademark bus network, Schmidt nevertheless says a light-rail system is needed to complement it.

When it comes to modifying human behavior, persuading urban dwellers to sort their garbage can be harder than coaxing them to garage their cars. Lerner and his allies have claimed that they have succeeded beyond the dreams of environmentalists in far more eco-friendly countries, including Japan and Sweden. Curitiba was a pioneer in separating recyclable materials, with its “Garbage That Is Not Garbage” program, inaugurated in 1989. (The city leaders have a flair for slogans.) Recycling has assumed a new urgency, because the entire metropolitan area contains only one landfill, and it will be exhausted by the end of next year. José Antonio Andreguetto, Curitiba’s secretary for the environment, told me that 22 percent of the city’s garbage is being separated for recycling, a rate that has been declining over the last half-dozen years; he says he hopes to bring the number up to 34 percent by the end of the current mayor’s term in 2008. Lerner says the numbers have been eroding until recently because some recent mayors haven’t emphasized the issue, but he maintains that the recycling rate in Curitiba is still the highest in the world.

It is very hard to determine how accurate the estimates are for garbage separation. “Curitiba began early to look at recycling garbage — that is true, and it is good,” says Teresa Urban, a local journalist and environmental activist. “But the separation of recycled garbage is a little part of all the garbage we have here. There is no tradition of participation here. The mayor sold to the people the idea that this is a wonderful city. And the people think, This is wonderful, I don’t have to do anything.”

Like other left-wing critics, Urban traces the lack of participation to an original sin. The progressive urban planning of Curitiba was not initiated by a democratic process; it was set in motion by the military dictatorship that seized power in 1964 and ruled Brazil until the mid-’80s. Its environmentalism is rooted in authoritarianism. “They didn’t have to confront the public through public participation, and the decisions could be made by urban planners — architects acting as politicians,” says Clara Irazábal, who has written a book comparing the urban planning experiences of Curitiba and Portland, Ore. The city that has been called the most forward-looking in the Western Hemisphere is an outgrowth of an era that many Brazilians prefer not to look back on. Jaime Lerner, the archangel of the Curitiba green movement, was anointed by the dragons of war.

Always an anomaly, Curitiba became a model for our day by defying the spirit of the time. In the late 1950s and early 1960s, urban developers throughout the world, influenced by Le Corbusier and his followers, were remodeling cities to facilitate the easy circulation of people in automobiles. But in Curitiba, an informal group of young architects, urban planners and civil engineers at the city’s Federal University of Paraná, which is the oldest university in Brazil, objected more effectively to the mayor’s widening of streets and a proposed highway bypass that threatened the historic city center. As luck would have it, one of these outraged civil engineers, Fanchette Rischbieter, was married to the chairman of the government-controlled investment company that was financing the construction of roads in Paraná, the largely agricultural state of which Curitiba is the capital. “I said, ‘It doesn’t make sense, my wife and her friends are against these people — why don’t we make a plan?’ ” Karlos Rischbieter recalls. Selected by the city, Jorge Wilheim came up with a master plan that concentrated high-density construction along two long rapid-transit axes that skirted the center. At least as important as his transportation and zoning recommendations was Wilheim’s request for an urban-planning institute to implement them. In retrospect, the enthusiastic and talented staff of the Institute of Urban Research and Planning of Curitiba, which is known by its Portuguese acronym, Ippuc, ensured the success of Curitiba’s redevelopment.

Still, there was a lag of five years from the formal adoption of the master plan in 1966 until its implementation, which began with the governor’s selection of Lerner, who was president of Ippuc, to be mayor in 1971. Wilheim the planner needed Lerner the doer to turn abstract ideas into inventive reality. Curitiba has been studied more than copied (one notable exception is a Curitiba-style bus system in Bogotá, Colombia) because unlike Lerner, most mayors stumble over political obstacles. “I always tell a story of the ’80s,” Rischbieter says. “A friend from São Paulo came with his wife and son to visit Curitiba. He did not know this city. I took my car and showed him Curitiba for three hours. When I left him at the hotel, he said, ‘What did you show people before Jaime Lerner?’ ”

A spark plug of ideas, Lerner, the son of Jewish immigrants from Poland, combines salesmanship and pragmatism. Following his mayoral terms, he won election twice as governor of Paraná State, retiring in 2002 at the age of 65 to devote himself to his architecture firm and to worldwide speaking engagements espousing green urban planning. He has a large head that seems to rest directly on wide shoulders; knowing his passion for recycling, you might almost believe that his thick-set body has been through a compactor. He radiates a highly compressed and infectious energy, with a can-do assertiveness that borders on arrogance. “He never asked if something was good or not,” Rischbieter remarks. “He would say, ‘I’ll go do it.’ I would say, ‘You have to go ask people and get their opinions.’ He would say, ‘No, they won’t agree with me, and it has to be done.’ He is not a political animal, he is a dictator.” Rischbieter admires Lerner; others, however, using the same descriptive terminology, do not. In the rough-and-tumble of Brazilian politics, it has become customary for supporters of populist parties to disparage Lerner (who personifies his talented team to allies and foes alike) as a creature of the dictatorship. According to this argument, the generals detested politicians; they admired technical experts. In Curitiba, they found a showplace to display their accomplishments to the world. “The military are addicted to planning,” says Fragomeni, who has an ambivalent attitude toward Lerner. “If they don’t plan, they don’t go forward. They invested in Curitiba. Mr. Lerner may like it or not. His continuity was ensured by the military government.” For his part, Lerner says that he had a far harder time with the military dictatorship than he did later, as an elected official. Under the military regime, he served at the pleasure of the governor and the state assembly. “I could be fired the next day,” he says. “Being an elected mayor, I was stronger. Nobody could fire me.”

In two terms (1971-75 and 1979-83) under the military regime, and then in an elected third term (1989-92) after the restoration of democracy, Lerner translated the master plan into concrete and leafy reality. Like an impatient muralist, he worked on a wide scope at high speed. “I know cities that plant 10,000 trees, and they make a whole festival,” he told me. “We planted a million trees. I am obsessed with scale.” He sought to make a livable city; over time that segued smoothly into an ecological city. Parks initially intended as recreational areas would also absorb floodwaters and extract carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Lerner used tax breaks to wheedle landowners into turning over portions of their property, which typically had little value at the time. In the rocky northern district, he converted one flooded quarry into the Wire Opera House, which has become a city icon, and another into the Free University of the Environment, a non-degree-granting institution that educates people on ecological issues. He transformed land that was serving as a refuse dump into a botanical garden; named for Fanchette Rischbieter, who died in 1989, it features a duck pond, French parterres and a classic Victorian greenhouse. The architecture in all three of these parks is less noteworthy for its formal design than for its building materials — salvaged telephone poles, mesh grating, metal tubing — and the speed of construction. From blueprint drafts to opening night, the Wire Opera House took about two months to complete. Lerner refers to such projects as “urban acupuncture” that energizes the development process.

When I would ask people if they thought Lerner could have accomplished his reforms under a democracy, people sympathetic to both Lerner and the military (like Rischbieter) or critical of both (like Urban) would say no; but most, professing admiration for Lerner but distaste for the military, said the dictatorship was not a precondition for his success. Lerner and Wilheim were emphatic on this point. “Not being a traditional politician helped me a lot,” Lerner told me. Nonetheless, by entering public life, even a self-professed apolitical man becomes a political actor. What struck me was the way in which the return of democracy changed Lerner’s core constituency. Under the generals, he was vulnerable mainly to the business community. That is why, for instance, he had to implement the pedestrian mall so quickly: if the business class lost confidence in him, the state assembly would have insisted that he be replaced. In a democratic Brazil, Lerner and his successors are threatened not just by the rich, but perhaps even more acutely by the poor — politically, by populist parties, and demographically, by the inexorable population growth. In politics, the pendulum has swung, as it always does. For the first time in 15 years, the winning candidate in Curitiba’s last mayoral election, in 2004, was not directly associated with the Lerner Group, the firm of 10 architects and planners that Lerner runs. Still, the new administration is continuing on the path that Lerner blazed. More worrisome for Curitiba’s future is the demographic trend. Over the past half-century, the state of Paraná underwent a radical change, from a labor-intensive coffee economy to a mechanized agriculture of soybeans. Hundreds of thousands lost their jobs. Many of the dispossessed have relocated to the Curitiba metropolitan region, which in Brazil is famously livable. Every day, more keep coming.

The “invasions” of homeless people onto unoccupied land spill like ink stains over the neatly outlined development maps of the urban planners, not only in Curitiba but across Brazil. One Saturday morning, I visited the neighborhood of Nossa Senhora da Luz, where a small group of people waited with sacks or improvised carts of garbage. The hardscrabble community dates from an early invasion of the 1970s. Today the streets are paved and the houses are solid cinder block, but unlike downtown Curitiba, here it is immediately apparent from the bleak, scrubby streetscape and the dark skins of the populace that you are in a third-world setting. I was there to observe one of 79 exchange centers that the municipality of Curitiba has established in communities where the streets are too narrow or too bumpy for large garbage trucks to circulate. Instead, people can carry their trash to biweekly collection sites and trade four pounds of garbage for one pound of vegetables. Mostly they bring plastic, paper and cardboard. At another site, run by the community council, more valuable aluminum cans are collected in return for money, and at yet another, organic material is traded for bus tokens. Compared with middle-class people, the residents of this neighborhood do not generate so much recyclable material; much of what they trade they prospect for around the city. Curitiba may be more successful in enlisting poor citizens to function as part-time carrinheiros than in enlightening better-off residents on their civic responsibilities.

The largest working-class housing development within Curitiba is called Bairro Novo, or “new neighborhood.” It was developed hurriedly, you might say frantically, after a band of 3,000 people, at the start of a three-day holiday weekend in September 1992, invaded a nearby parcel of vacant land where a disused railroad line once operated. This was the same sort of stealth tactic that Lerner employed two decades earlier to pedestrianize the shopping street, but now it was being used against him — coordinated, he maintains, by his political opponents, who controlled the governorship then as they do now. Since the security forces are directed by the state of Paraná and not the city, there was no way Lerner could stop the so-called Ferrovila (or railroad town) invasion. He says that he was especially infuriated because his administration had been researching the creation of a much larger development on the same land, housing 10 times as many people, as well as establishing schools and other social services. Instead, his team began planning the Bairro Novo on a parcel of land that was slated for development a decade or two later. There are 80,000 people living in Bairro Novo today. For a while, the illegal squats died off. “If you have a good alternative, you can prevent the invasions,” Lerner says.

Recently, invasions have started up again. “There is a feeling that it may be politically motivated,” says Fragomeni, the urban planner, who served until March as president of Ippuc. He reports that in Curitiba today, there are 13,000 households in invasion settlements, 6,000 of them in ecologically fragile areas. Squatters often occupy land by rivers, both to obtain a water source and because, by law, the riverbanks can’t be developed. “The land is forbidden, and it is free at the same time,” says Urban, the environmental activist. Raw sewage from these settlements flows directly into the rivers. Fragomeni says that fewer than 70 percent of Curitiba households have sewer connections. The current administration, led by Mayor Beto Richa (who was endorsed by Lerner but is not professionally associated with him), is trying to alleviate the problem with a new program to clean up the water basin of the sadly polluted Bariguà River: relocating people to housing that is a little farther from the river, replanting vegetation on the banks and linking houses to the sewage system.

The program to reclaim the Bariguà basin was galvanized by the most recent invasion in February, when 1,500 people seized land near Ferrovila in Bariguà Park and hit a sensitive nerve. Their encampment is provocatively close to Ecoville, a controversial upper-middle-class development that arose in the mid-’90s along one of the rapid-bus corridors. As Lerner acidly observes of Ecoville, “I don’t like this project, because it is not ‘eco’ and it is not ‘ville.’ ” Ecoville is a self-contained development in which tall buildings loom over patches of vegetation and looping roads. It’s an unconvincing version of the discredited Corbusian model of “the city in the park,” an idea that the developers self-consciously reference by naming one of these buildings “Le Corbusier.” Many buildings have been labeled for works by Picasso — the Arlequin, the Pierrot, even the Guernica. One noteworthy Picasso-christened tower, the Suite Vollard, features 11 full-floor residences, each of which is supposed to be able to rotate independently. The Suite Vollard is 10 years overdue for occupancy. Its engineering is still unproved.

Ferrovila and Ecoville: in close proximity, you can see the politicized landless and the profit-minded land developers who threaten Curitiba’s status as an ecological city. A reputation can be as hard to uphold as to establish. Unlike his three immediate predecessors, Mayor Richa — a boyish, blow-dried 41-year-old civil engineer from a prominent political family — is not an urban planner. And Ippuc, while still powerful, no longer directs the show. Richa has discontinued the longstanding mayoral custom, established by Lerner, of attending a weekly meeting at Ippuc. Under Lerner and his successors, “the mayor sat in Ippuc, and you felt what he wanted,” Fragomeni says. “It was a very verticalized government. Ippuc also planned the budget for the city. There’s democracy now, which is good. But it is no longer a pyramid; it’s a network. The mayor now expects you to propose what Curitiba should look like. He’s not a town planner.”

Nor is Curitiba a single town any longer. It’s a conurbation. Planning must be for the metropolitan region, not just for the municipality. Does it matter that Curitiba bans polluting industries if the neighboring town of Araucária has an oil refinery belching smoke on the city line? Similarly, if the new immigrants to the poor surrounding communities don’t recycle, then Curitiba’s landfill, the only such facility in the metropolitan region, will fill up even sooner. Like garbage, water does not respect city limits: Curitiba’s water supply depends on reservoirs controlled by municipalities outside its borders. What was never simple has become even more complex. For a long time, the citizens of Curitiba were so proud of the city’s reputation as an urban showplace that they kept re-electing urban planners — self-styled technical experts who seemed to be above politics and who vaunted their expertise in running the buses, building the parks and recycling the garbage. But a mayor today must be able to negotiate successfully with other mayors if reform is to work. Mayors need to be politicians, even in Curitiba.

Arthur Lubow, a contributing writer, last wrote for the magazine about the photographer Jeff Wall.


Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Curitiba: Week 2, Take 2...

Wow, almost two weeks have flown by that we have been in Brasil, and much has happened.

What did everyone do on their first free weekend in Curitiba? Sunday Market? Day trip to a local village? Any places you found you would recommend for future visitors?

Anywho, to the update of our activities of the past two days...

On Monday, we met as a class in the early afternoon, due to squalid weather that has dominated the city all weekend. We were to visit the recycling plant for Curitiba, but that is postponed for the interim. We ended up going to the Environment Secretariat, where we discussed the function and design of Curitiba's parks. From there, most of us received a courtesy ride back to the nearest express bus stop to head back to the hotel.

Note that there is a Monday night special at the local churrascheria, where a full course buffet with many choices of meat is available for R$12.90. Can't beat that at all. From the hotel, walk towards the Brigadero Franco tube stop, and make a 90 degree right turn on the street. Follow the street to the Esso gas station. The churascheria is next door to the gas station.

Tuesday was another one of those bright and early days, where some of us just had a hard time getting up, but we still managed to be on time to class. We went to the Universidad Federal do Parana, where we interacted with 3rd year architecture and urbanism students on their revitalization project near Plaza Tiradentes (cathedral square). We followed up our studio visit, with a vist with the Dean of the college, which was very kind to our visit to UFPR.

Lunch was at Chale da Gloria, which has an excellent lunch buffet for R$9.90, so if you have a hunger, this is a good place for lunch to be filled.

The afternoon had us visit the Secretariat of Urbanism, who spoke of planning issues as it pertained from City Hall. Issues discussed included eminent domain, Transfer Development Rights, Zoning, and the organizational structure.

Our lecture at the Urbanism Secretariat was quickly followed by the Secretariat of Metropolitan Affairs, who deals with urban issues on the regional level. The Metropolitan area comprises of 3.4 million residents in 13 municipalities surrounding and including Curitiba and its 1.7 million residents. There is a lot of integrated works going on between municipalities, including sharing technical staff, holding regional sporting events, regional transit system, and a regional trash system.

This concluded our day that we embarked on officially interacting with UFPR, and we made it back to the hotel, before another evening deluge came upon us.

Tomorrow, we go on to have a lecture by distinguished professors at UFPR in the afternoon, before starting our inidividual research on our research projects.

Weather advisory:

Weather will be dropping to the freezing mark on Wednesday and Thursday night. Be prepared and dress warmly. Have fun.