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EDITORIAL DENSITY'S CHILD MAKING THE MOST OF LOS ANGELES SPRAWL.


PUT the NIMBYs, anti-sprawl lobby and champions of wide open spaces at all costs among the ranks of the flat-Earth types.

It's too late to stop densification in Southern California Southern California, also colloquially known as SoCal, is the southern portion of the U.S. state of California. Centered on the cities of Los Angeles and San Diego, Southern California is home to nearly 24 million people and is the nation's second most populated region, , for it's already happened.

A study led by noted planning expert William Fulton This article is about William Fulton, an American algebraic geometer. For the U.S. Senator from Arkansas, see William Savin Fulton.
William Fulton (born 1939) is an American algebraic geometer.
 of Ventura for the Brookings Institution Brookings Institution, at Washington, D.C.; chartered 1927 as a consolidation of the Institute for Government Research (est. 1916), the Institute of Economics (est. 1922), and the Robert S. Brookings Graduate School of Economics and Government (est. 1924).  found that the Greater L.A. area has an even higher density of population than the New York metropolitan area New York–Northern New Jersey–Long Island is the most populous metropolitan area in the United States and the third most populous in the world, after Tokyo and Mexico City. . It is second only to Honolulu in what Fulton calls ``dense sprawl.''

In the years ahead, the sprawl will become even denser and farther reaching. For L.A., Ventura, San Bernardino San Bernardino, city, United States
San Bernardino (săn bûr'nədē`nō), city (1990 pop. 164,164), seat of San Bernardino co., S Calif., at the foot of the San Bernardino Mts.; inc. 1854.
, Orange and Riverside counties - density is our destiny.

That's not all bad news.

If there's a lesson to be learned in the region's last half-century of explosive growth, it's that there's good sprawl and bad. The challenge for Greater Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  is to ensure that new developments are well-designed - and to correct the planning mistakes of the past.

Good sprawl can be seen in many of the region's newest land developments - massive, but self-contained communities. They use limited space wisely, with zero-lot lines and two-story structures, while leaving plenty of open spaces in the outlying areas.

More importantly, they are self-sufficient. They contain schools, community centers, internal transportation systems, and ample commercial and business areas to meet shopping and employment needs. Residents need not leave the community - and clog the freeways - to buy groceries or get to work.

Such developments are dense, but comfortable. They provide a good quality of urban life, and they lay the foundation for strong neighborhoods and communities.

They're worlds apart from the bad sort of sprawl that has consumed much of L.A. over the past several decades: crammed apartment complexes or housing developments and gigantic retail outlets that are built with little thought for community or quality-of-life concerns.

Poorly planned sprawl overwhelms public resources and is a blight on the regional landscape.

The continued expansion and densification of metropolitan L.A. should put to rest once and for all the spokes-on-the-wheel mentality of city planners who think all of L.A. should flow in and out of downtown. L.A. never has and never will be that sort of metropolis - it's a loose confederation of smaller, well-defined communities in urban hubs.

And it needs to be run that way.

When it comes to urban planning urban planning: see city planning.
urban planning

Programs pursued as a means of improving the urban environment and achieving certain social and economic objectives.
, local leaders should make quality of life - not placating the whims of developers or raising sales tax sales tax, levy on the sale of goods or services, generally calculated as a percentage of the selling price, and sometimes called a purchase tax. It is usually collected in the form of an extra charge by the retailer, who remits the tax to the government.  revenue - their top priority. In local government, authority must reside in smaller communities and neighborhood councils Neighborhood councils are governmental or non-governmental bodies composed of local people who handle neighborhood problems. They can be found in many cities throughout the world. , which deserve the most say in their own future.

The key for L.A. leaders is to make '`dense sprawl'' work - to use land in a way that's efficient, but not destructive, and creates sustainable communities.

It's a choice between making L.A. the city of the future - or a ghetto of the past.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Article Type:Editorial
Date:Jul 17, 2001
Words:478
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