Development like baby blocks Saturday, January 14, 201
The cold
finally came, making January feel like January finally, the way Januaries used
to feel when I was a kid.
Regardless
of what T.S. Eliot said, I always thought of January and February as the
cruelest months, draped in dark, and ill tempered changes in the temperature.
But when I
spent a few winters in
I ached for
the change of leaves in the fall and then the gradual growth of green in
spring. It is no accident that the Irish celebrate St. Patrick’s Day in
mid-March just ahead of the official arrival of Spring.
Recovering
from eye surgery has taught me the value of walking, and how close a look at
the world walking provides. I learned a similar lesson back in 2002 when I
mistakenly parked my car in a remote section of Union City to avoid getting
parking musical chairs of Hoboken and the perpetual tickets and towing, and
found my car broken into – leaving me stranded from Thanksgiving into the new
year of 2003.
As my wife
pointed out in a poem she wrote about
Yet I see
more with one eye during these times than I have with two driving, the small
details of life going on in the world that gets lost in the rush of wheels, the
people who are making their way in this world – even the jerks.
Like the
idiot who drives around in a silver pick up truck in the heights and in
I’m very
impressed with the buildings I see tucked into corners of
We live in
a part of the world where every new development scheme alters life for
everybody – new designs replacing tried and true.
We have a
line of three family houses on our street that replaced one family houses just
before we arrived here in the late 1990s. These are not owner occupied, so they
draw some of the worst element, gun toting, drug dealing delinquents who park
all over the sidewalk and rent out their garages for illegal apartments.
One U.S.
Marine’s home on the other side of the street – which he kept up meticulously –
was bulldozed down to make way for two such raunchy new buildings with brass
rails and other ostentatiously designs that the new occupants seem to find
tasteful, when they are gaudy examples of bad taste.
Walking
through these neighborhoods, I see clutches of such buildings, built at various
peaks in the real estate market, new ideas that faltered when that economy did,
so that this line of houses stands out against the line from the previous
development boom.
City
planners who allowed these to go on our like babies with blocks, piling them up
and knocking them down, never happy with what they have come up with, until the
next baby comes along the rearranges them again, unaware or uncaring about the
lives they disrupt in the process.
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