Sprawl, World Climate Change, and Aldo Leopold
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The following is an essay I wrote for my current Environmental Planning course at St. Louis University. The assignment was to look at a current issue in the context of the writings of Aldo Leopold. Leopold’s book, the Sand County Almanac, was published in 1949 — the year following his death at age 61.
Aldo Leopold missed the most horrific land-use crime, suburban sprawl. Decades after Leopold was thinking like a mountain, men were blasting the mountain to flatten it for big box stores and acres of free parking. Leopold’s writings give us much to ponder
about the conservation of wild areas but little to work from with respect to the rapid development of land for human use. The amount of land consumed per person has steadily increased with each passing decade, and combined with an increase in total population the natural areas which Leopold worked to conserve are disappearing at an alarming rate.
With the exception of Pearl Harbor, the United States was untouched from the ravages of WWII. Just shy of six decades since his passing in 1948 at the age of 61, the world has changed considerably. Leopold would not be pleased with our progress of the last sixty years. In these passing years nearly equal to his life on this planet, we’ve ravaged our own landscape unlike anything seen in Europe during the war.
We’ve spent lifetimes attempting to seize control of the planet only to have it shake us off at different turns. Not to say this is right, just an acknowledgment that this is where society has taken us to date. There is no question that we humans have not been thinking like a mountain, but how to overtake and develop the mountain and everything around it. Ironically, while Leopold’s writings started an environmental movement for the conservation of wildlife areas he seemingly did nothing to abate the consumption of land for “normal†society.
Leopold’s time saw few suburban communities. Those he would have seen would be the “Garden City†developments offering pastoral settings ringing urban cores, radically different than today’s ex-urban areas. However, a year prior to his passing, the rise of suburbia was on its way with the 1947 start of Levittown. Interstate highways, drive-thrus, bedroom communities, and the cloverleaf interchange would all come following his death.
My personal land-use ethic relates to this sprawl and our consumption of land. In short, I believe that we humans are here for a short time and perhaps do get to consume the land — but only so much. Humans have been building civilizations for thousands of
years but never has planet earth seen a more destructive group of people. We crossed the line decades ago. So much so the line can no longer been seen in the rear-view mirror.
We are at a point where today’s generations must make up for the mistakes of past generations. In growing regions they must seek to rebuild in a more compact manner while any new ground taken needs to be developed in whatever term you like to use —
old urbanism, New Urbanism or just plain urbanism. Multiple modes of mobility need to be accommodated in whatever we build, in any region, from this day forward. Anything less is without a doubt, immoral.
So where does this leave Leopold? Nature should still be front and center in our minds — we must be aware of why it is that we are reversing our past mistakes. Nature, and the preservation of the planet as we know it, absolutely must come first. Interestingly, this involves building human habitats that has little to do with nature in its pure form: commercial districts lined with streetcars and rows upon rows of multi-unit housing stacked over retail, for example. Every region, large and small, needs an Urban Growth Boundary to contain it from encroaching onto the natural environment surrounding it’s borders. Many regions, from the Springfield Missouri’s to the St. Louis’ of the world, have already developed all the land they will need for the next 60 years.
The era of the ‘ranch’ house in the 1/4 acre ‘country’ subdivision are over. The naturalist packing the Subaru with Chinese-made camping equipment purchased at REI is also done. Our fundamental relationship with nature must shift. Just as Leopold
suggested multiple generations ago, we must make a major shift in our society in how we view nature. Our land ethic is no longer simply including land (soil, etc…) in with humans but we have to think globally as we never have before.
We Americans are warming the planet as no other country is doing and it is up to us to make sure we don’t heat the planet to the point where New York’s subways are flooded, that Miami beach’s deco hotels are not under water, that once lush areas of the world do not become arid and so on. Of course, other countries are doing their best to catch up to the U.S.
Leopold’s guidance has proven helpful with respect to managing wildlife preservation areas but has fallen way short in the rest of the earth. Although we’d never advocate hunting humans, we do need to learn to manage ourselves and the land we consume
so that we can get ourselves back in line with nature. At this point we have little choice.