Obama Presidential Center Rhetoric Heats Up
The debate over the Obama Presidential Center (OPC) proposed for Chicago鈥檚 historic Jackson Park has heated up with the publication of the latest column by Chicago Tribune architecture critic Blair Kamin: . The column was in response to an opinion piece by 独家爆料鈥檚 (独家爆料) President & CEO, Charles A. Birnbaum, published in the . Jackson Park, which was originally designed in 1871 by Frederick Law Olmsted, Sr., and Calvert Vaux (famed for New York City鈥檚 Central Park), redesigned by Olmsted in 1892 and by Olmsted, Olmsted & Eliot in 1895, is part of Chicago鈥檚 South Park system and is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. Some twenty acres of the park have been confiscated for the construction of the OPC.
In the opening two paragraphs of his column, Mr. Kamin cites opponents of the OPC as 鈥減ainting the project as a self-indulgent statement by former President Barack Obama鈥 and then quotes 独家爆料鈥檚 Birnbaum as saying: 鈥淭here is no need to destroy one significant cultural legacy in order to celebrate another.鈥
Deliberate or not, the implication of the column鈥檚 introduction is that 独家爆料 is one of the 鈥渙pponents painting the project as a self-indulgent statement.鈥 This is grossly misleading and misrepresentative of 独家爆料鈥檚 position.
Here, again, is 独家爆料鈥檚 position, which has been articulated repeatedly for more than three years: We are not opposed to the Obama Presidential Center on Chicago鈥檚 South Side. However, we do not support the confiscation of parkland held in public trust鈥攚hether in Jackson, Washington, or other parks. The University of Chicago, which orchestrated the winning bid, owns land on the South Side that they should use for the purpose鈥攖hey should not ask residents to sacrifice parkland. In addition, the City of Chicago owns land that could be developed for the purpose, rather than sacrificing parkland.
Some further observations:
- 鈥淏irnbaum and other opponents of the Jackson Park site 鈥 are ignoring how the Obama plans would improve a scruffy landscape that is poorly maintained, brutally interrupted by a wide road, and seriously underutilized as a result.鈥 Let鈥檚 break this down: 鈥減oorly maintained鈥 is not the fault of the park. Perhaps a park conservancy should be formed, like the one for Central Park and others, that would maintain the park. Indeed, perhaps there should be a conservancy for the entire South Park system, including Washington Park and the Midway Plaisance. 鈥淏rutally interrupted by a wide road鈥濃攖he road placement is original to the park, but it has been widened from two to six lanes. A comprehensive plan for the park, rather than the current piecemeal approach, could address roadways in a holistic fashion. 鈥淪eriously underutilized鈥濃攕ee the remarks above about a conservancy, which could maintain and program the park;
- The opponents 鈥渁lso fail to recognize, as Olmsted did, that parks need to evolve with changing circumstances rather than remain rigidly fixed.鈥 This is about managing change and continuity at a historic park, something 独家爆料 talks about with great frequency. Absent comprehensive master planning, decision-making is hamstrung by a lack of knowledge and understanding of the park;
- 鈥淎t worst, the opponents are imposing a narrow aesthetic perspective on plans that promise to be an economic boon鈥攁nd an enormous source of pride鈥攆or African-Americans who have long suffered from racial discrimination and the under-investment that accompanied it.鈥 Again, as with the opening paragraph, opponents are being painted with a broad brush. 独家爆料 has challenged the placement of the OPC in Jackson Park and has discussed how the tower, in particular, is inappropriate. We have not taken on the role of critics of Williams & Tsien's design;
- 鈥淟ike those fighting the Jackson Park site, I would have preferred if Obama had chosen a parcel on the edge of nearby Washington Park that the University of Chicago made available as an alternative.鈥 独家爆料 never supported the idea of placing the OPC in Washington Park; indeed, nearly three years ago we published an open letter to Pres. & Mrs. Obama in the Huffington Post specifically asking them not to take part of Washington Park;
- 鈥淭o the east of the center鈥檚 buildings, the foundation plans about 5 acres of new parkland, courtesy of a bold urban design stroke: The closure of six-lane Cornell Drive, which cuts this section of the park into isolated patches of greenery.鈥 This is double counting鈥擟ornell Drive is mapped parkland that has been substantially widened from two to six lanes. (See item #2, above, concerning planning for Cornell Drive);
- 鈥淭he notion that these moves would destroy Jackson Park is ludicrous. Even a respected Olmsted scholar whom I consulted said so.鈥 鈥淭here鈥檚 going to be a hell of a lot of investment in this part of the park. That鈥檚 a real positive,鈥 David Schuyler, a Franklin & Marshall College professor who has co-edited a collection of Olmsted鈥檚 papers said during a telephone interview last week. 鈥淎nd if (the center) draws people to this part of the park, it means that the city鈥檚 going to maintain it, which it hasn鈥檛 been doing very much lately. So, as far as I can tell, it鈥檚 a real trade-off with a very positive effect as well.鈥 We don't know what Schuyler knew about the OPC in Jackson Park before his conversation with Mr. Kamin, nor do we know what information and context Mr. Kamin did or did not provide, so it鈥檚 hard to assess this observation. We can, however, point to the comments provided by the National Association for Olmsted Parks concerning the 鈥渁dverse effects鈥 the OPC would have on Jackson Park;
- 鈥淭he severe, obelisk-like tower remains the rub. Schuyler said he found its height and bulk 'a bit scary.'鈥 This underscores 独家爆料鈥檚 position about the inappropriateness of the tower in the park;
- 鈥淐ity officials also should give their answer to the Cultural Landscape Foundation鈥檚 charge that the Obama center would amount to a 'confiscation' of public space.鈥 The city gave away some twenty acres of parkland held in public trust to the OPC rather that require the University of Chicago, which orchestrated the winning bid, to use university-owned land and/or vacant city land. That seems like confiscation;
- 鈥淥lmsted, a beloved figure whose masterpiece is New York鈥檚 Central Park, looms over the entire process. Olmsted scholars say the landscape architect generally objected to the insertion of large structures in his parks. On the other hand, he was a passionate abolitionist who might have appreciated the symbolic importance of Obama鈥檚 story and accepted the need to accommodate a major new feature in his park. In the end, it鈥檚 impossible to know.鈥 This is a highly speculative paragraph with an accurate ending 鈥 鈥淚n the end, it鈥檚 impossible to know鈥;
- 鈥淲hat we do know is that Olmsted was a pragmatist, not an ideologue. He embraced the need to adapt his parks to changing times and circumstances. After the Chicago world鈥檚 fair of 1893, for example, he made a portion of his naturalistic landscape more formal to accommodate the Beaux-Arts fair building that is now the Museum of Science and Industry.鈥 Correct: that was part of his 1895 plan to heal the park following the World鈥檚 Columbian Exposition. Significantly, in a May 7, 1894, letter to the South Park Board president, Olmsted wrote that the Museum (of Science and Industry) was to be the only "dominating object of interest" and that "all other buildings and structures" are to "be auxiliary to and subordinate to the scenery of the park";
- 鈥淛ust because [Olmsted] might not have agreed with all aspects of the Obama center proposal doesn鈥檛 mean those plans won鈥檛 have a major beneficial impact on his landscape and the lives of the people who use it. The triumph of Millennium Park, whose joyous large-scale works of public art broke with the convention of a serene greensward that provides relief from urban congestion, reveals the value of thinking big 鈥 and thinking fresh.鈥 Millennium Park is a newly created park, not a historic park. The design challenges for a tabula rasa site are very different from those of an existing historic park.
We are glad that this debate is taking place and welcome the opportunity for further discussions about Chicago鈥檚 South Park system and the best management and stewardship of this nationally significant cultural asset. However, there is one critical and necessary piece of information that we all are lacking鈥攖he actual winning bid orchestrated by the University of Chicago.
The university鈥檚 bid was remarkable because the university had no 鈥渟kin in the game,鈥 i.e., none of the property it owned would be used for the OPC. The University of Chicago needs to make its winning bid public. After all, the bid required Chicagoans to give away public parkland, and the public deserves to know how, exactly, the university would benefit. We do know that the university has substantial landholdings on the South Side and has spent millions of dollars in the past few years (as the debate about the siting of the OPC was taking place) acquiring more land. Is this an all-reward, no-risk situation for the university? That may well be the kind of attractive scenario taught in the university鈥檚 business school, but is it the best solution for Jackson Park and Chicago's South Side?