Winter
2002

Vacant
Land
|
|

Vacant
Land or teeming with life?
Photo: Kim Karpeles, Life Through the Lens
|
hese
wordsvacant landpose a significant challenge
to those of us concerned about the conservation of natural
communities in this region and, indeed, for anyone concerned
about the quality of our lives into the future.
These are the termsvacant landused most often
by traditional planners and businessmen, economists, builders,
and municipal officials, and they reveal a mindset that
is all too standard.
Many of the people thinking about what the greater Chicago
metropolitan area might look like 30 years from now often
frame the question this way: We expect the population in
the six-county area to grow by 1.5 million people by 2030.
Where will these new inhabitants live and work? Should new
housing developments be spread across all the vacant land
on the fringes of our currently-developed areas, or should
housing and jobs be clustered around existing and new mass
transit hubs and developed as “in-fill” in the already-settled
urban/suburban core?
This framework is false and harmful. It reflects the thinking
that all land indeed, by extension, all of Creationis
there for our use, only waiting for us to build upon it,
or plow it, to mine it or log it or harvest its resources
in some fashion. At one time this mindset went by the name
‘Manifest Destiny,’ and it is false for two reasons.
First, because no land is truly vacant. In this region,
what some misinformed planners call “vacant land” is either
natural landswoods, marshes, a very few prairie remnants
providing essential habitat for tens of thousands of creatures
other than ourselves. Or, second, what is called “vacant
land” is agricultural land that feeds us.
To consider the agricultural lands and natural lands around
us as “vacant” is to make a fatal error, for if we consume
them all in our headlong rush to grow, then we will have
fouled our own nest and eaten the chicken that provided
the eggs that feed us.
Fortunately, all is not lost. Today we stand at a crossroads.
Like the planners and leaders of the past, we have a chance
to determine the nature and character of our region for
many years to come.
We stand at a crossroads because we have it within our power,
both individually and collectively, to create human communities
that are rich culturally, robust economically, attractive
and affordable to live in and work. We also have a chance
to forge these human communities in a way that celebrates,
respects, and sustains rich and robust natural communities
nearby.
The article beginning on page 12 describes The Metropolis
Plan for Growth and Transportation, one of several regional
planning initiatives now underway. We invite you to participate
in the process of creating a vision for this region by looking
closely at the maps, pondering some of the choices that
might lead to alternative development scenarios other than
“business as usual,” and filling out the questionnaire on
page 16. We have a chance, individually and collectively,
by acting in ways that are wise and thoughtful now, to make
this region a worthy example for this nation and the world.

Debra
Shore may be reached at editor@chicagowildernessmag.org.
|