Have an account? Login. Need an account? Register.

Making cities better.

Issue 21

Current Issue

SUBSCRIBE NOW
for exclusive online access to our issue archives and more!

City roll call

The Daily Report

The Architecture of Morale

Can a crumbling institution truly be improved by something as simple as a fresh coat of paint? Annette John-Hall of the Philadelphia Inquirer thinks so. Yesterday, she wrote that spiffed-up hallways, newly painted lockers, repaired windows, and a closed-down third floor has turned notorious West Philadelphia High School into a place where people “actually want to learn.”

Alain De Botton writes in The Architecture of Happiness that “buildings speak—and on topics which can readily be discerned. They speak of democracy or aristocracy, openness or arrogance, welcome or threat, a sympathy for the future or a hankering for the past.” In Jonathan Kozol’s seminal work, Savage Inequalities, he spends as much time lamenting the poor state of schools themselves (the toilets that don’t flush, the corroding facades, the barrack-like appearances) as he does the institutional shortcomings.

If the places we inhabit do have such an emotional impact, what do run-down schools in West Philadelphia say to us? Outdated public buildings? Fluorescent lighting? (My personal anathema).

And if buildings do need to up their “happiness-inducing quotient,” who should be consulted? Certainly not everyone is on the same page as to what that would look like (as evidenced by today’s controversy over tropical color schemes in Dallas housing developments).

I’d love to create a photo gallery where people could submit photos and tell stories about places that have been transformed by basic maintenance. The rules are simple: only places that have undergone aesthetic, and not structural changes need apply.

Go forth and submit.


Comments +

  1. No comments yet.

Add your comment

Have an account? Login. Want one? Sign up.

Please be civil. Some HTML is allowed. <b>, <i>, <u>, <em>, <strike>, <strong>, <pre>, <code>, <blockquote>

Enter the word you see in the image above.

Browse archives

Latest entries

Latest comments

  • CD: I dunno about Detroit, seeing as how many young Ohioans and Michiganders end up in Chicago … (read)
  • Dan: I foresee a return to people’s city of origin in 2009.  A diaspora back to core … (read)
  • Doc Barnett: I think New York will be fine and, in a positive sense, the economic crisis is … (read)
  • chris: In the teaser for this article, you misused the phrase ‘begs the question.’ This mistake is … (read)
  • Matt: Central city development has been hard to fund and risky to undertake for quite some time … (read)
URBANEXUS BOSTON RSVP Buy Art. Look Smart. 2008 Ozzie Award-Winner Ask An Urban Historian Revise [UPDATED] Facebook SMIBE

Browse by category

Browse by tag

Subscribe to the Daily Report

Blogroll