Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Geometry and short lunch breaks do not tell the story


The poet Wallace Stevens says that space is not filled with objects, it is filled with the meaningful relationships among people.  The same can be said for the skyways.  They are not objects containing and linking more objects and objectified people.  They are containers and connectors of relationships, past present and future.  I walked them yesterday on the look-out for anyone who fit the description of "zombie."  I didn't find a single human being who was dead-eyed, cold, grey, controlled by external forces of evil.

If strangers do not stop to interact casually with you on the skyways, it is because they have short lunch breaks, and often have to bring fast food back to their desks. 
Yesterday I saw several young families with children in strollers or in tow.  They didn't look lifeless.  Kids really dig the skyways, both for the vantage over the streets and sidewalks that give them plenty to gawk at, and the open space and revolving doors that challenge their sense of adventure.  Skyways aren't built to amuse children, of course.

What has been missing from the discussion in public so far is the compartmentalized social aspects of downtown.  Outside of major sporting events, you don't have areas where there seems to be a real mix of populations, except down by the Target store on Nicollet Mall.

There are residential areas that are far removed from the entertainment areas.  And most of the skyway system serves the working commuters who represent a narrow spectrum on the band of urban demographics.  Is it fair to call them zombies?  Is it fair to judge the people who you see using the skyways because they don't have much time when you see them?  We don't have an idle urban culture in Minneapolis..at least not in the visible form that is signature of Paris or New York or LA. But  the focus of criticism I have heard so far seems to be on the colorful aspects of cafe culture or the location-determined economics of impulse shopping.  Really?  Is that what we are trying to encourage above all else?

There is something else here that needs to be said.  The skyway critics aren't even talking about the real skyways. They are talking about a shibboleth called "skyways" that exists in cocktail party conversations and sound byte colloquiems of news anchors, political candidates and flyoverland elitism  -- the skyways of habitrail mindlessness, of midwestern parochialism, of unsophisticated rubes. If you go out and start walking around, you won't find those skyways on the real map.

How much time have the critics spent on the skyways?  Have they looked around with the simple curiousity of a child, or the discipline of a cultural anthropologist, or the creativity of an artist, or the vulnerability of an handicapped or elderly person on their own?  The best stories I have heard have been about people forced to find themselves, and, finding themselves on the skyways, they found a lively city to see and reflect on, not just chrome and glass.

Let's quit talking about the skyways in cartoon terms.  It is a disservice to the workers who benefit consistently from their utility, and it is an disservice to the intelligence of looking beyond the cariacatures. Look for yourself: see the faces, the real artistry of the building interiors, the real effort of the entrepreneurs that line the arcades between bridges.

If Videotect started the conversation on a kind of goofy, energetic note, let's find ways to keep it going. That would be a good thing.  It would do justice to the real quality of human relationships that are forged here in the midwest, the kind of qualities that make the skyways ultimately worth thinking about.

Monday, April 4, 2011

Skyways and Poetry in the same breath

An anthology of poetry by states' poets laureates has been published recently under the title "An Endless Skyway."  If you are struggling with the phrase "states' poets laureates" don't feel bad, because it took several minutes for me to figure out that this referred, literally, to poets who represented their respective states as Poets Laureate.

Anyway, the idea of poetry and skyways is instant dissonance for those who see the skyways as pure utility, the invisible shortest line between two frozen dots in the winter, and the air conditioned indulgence of fresh-averse cube zombies in the summer.

So just to prolong this moment, I have composed an instant poem in honor of the Videotect winning theme of "Zombies on the Skyway".

"Skyways: Yes, but..."
Dedicated to Mayor Rybak.
(I have added some grit and patina, vocabulary-wise, to whet the appetite)

I think that I shall never say
the Sky's more lively as a way
Than Street, sidewalk or alley
The walking dead through glassy shell
traverse their AC'd path from Hell
to desk and back. Don't dally
In the chromed Intestine coiled
Midst city belly.  Surging, roiled
clots of souls on furlough splay
Across the grid.  What cheer or joy
is, is not about  the second story.
The first story's yet untold  today.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

The aimless urban microcosm

Mayor Rybak claims that 51% of his response to the skyways is dominated by zombies.  "The night of the living dead" is his reference.  He wants to put external stairways between the skyways and the streets to break things up a bit.  He says he needs the "grit and patina" of the streets.   

Britt Aamodt, who did a radio documentary on the skyways, admits that her take on the skyways was dominated by her reaction to her job downtown.  When she left her job, then came back to the skyways for their own sake, it changed her thinking entirely.  This blog tries to inspire people to leave themselves open to a world of experience available on the skyways. 


Things happen.  People wait.  Life has a mind of its own.