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Let's take the ideas in the Big City Plan and run with them

By Stef Lewandowski on Apr 21, 08 07:59 PM in Regeneration

It's been a while since my last post and the hiatus isn't because of a lack of things to write about - in fact it's quite the opposite! Too much going on can actually reduce the number of blog posts that you produce, especially with fun new services like Twitter to play with.

So. To reintroduce some of my ideas back into the Post Blog I'm changing format for the moment at least, accepting that I'm just very busy and going with the following:

  • A single piece of video where I talk about what I'm up to or an idea that I've got
  • No editing allowed (don't you just hate the eighties graphics on so much web video)
  • Recorded in one take (no going back over anything, no cuts, no mistakes, every err included)
  • A static camera (no panning, tilting or zooming)
  • Keep it as short as possible and end with a question

It's just me, talking about something I find interesting with no nonsense, warts and all. You may see a few of these appearing so this expains what it's about.

Obviously it's taking a while for me to write this, so I think that video might be an interesting way for me to get some ideas out without it taking so long and perhaps capturing some of the emotion and off-the-cuff thinking that sometimes gets lost in the over-self-analysed process of the blogger.

This one took just over 7 minutes to film and was online immediately thanks to Viddler's (pretty amazing) record-directly-to-the-web feature.

So. To the case in point.
I've noticed that there's not much web activity going on around the Big City Plan, which I think is a shame, and actually quite strange. We're at the beginning of a process talking about the next 25 years of the city that we could potentially all have a say in, but perhaps there's just no mechanism for it yet?

How could we get us all involved in the plan?

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9 Comments

sid langley said:

Two points:
a)Look at the people running Brum (Whitby and the Lib Dems, who can't even be manipulative and corrupt efficiently) and the alternative (Bore and the in-fighting Labourites) and tell me anything is going to change soon
b) What a great toy video is for bloggers.
Can we all have one Auntie Jo? We can take it to gigs and events and perhaps make this web citizens journalism idea really interesting and part of a Big City consciousness.

Paul Groves said:

At the risk of agreeing with Sid again (funny, we never used agree on so much when we worked together), I think his point (a) is valid.
The Big City Plan does need people to pick it up, run with it and make it zingy in every respect - but working with the public sector often feels like taking one step forward and three or four back.
Dynamism, spontaneity, risk-taking and drive are not always characteristics you associate with the public sector. I realise this is a sweeping generalisation and I'm sure there are some out there who will happily out me in my place.
Public-private sector partnerships obviously do work, look at the first phase of Birmingham's regeneration and the progress being made in other cities around the UK.
So why does it feel like we're now stalled?
Birmingham and the wider Midlands is all set to shift into top gear, yet BCC and other public sector groups supposedly navigating the drive forward are also acting as a very effective wheel clamp.
As for web traffic on the Big City Plan, if you type it into a search engine the first few pages of hits are dominated by the usual suspects (BCC, the BCP site itself, various local companies, groups and bloggers). This is fine and a lot of people raise valid points and interesting ideas (yourself included), but even these articles and blogs are not attracting comments from the wider community. The same names keep appearing, which is OK as they're all adding stuff to the mix, but there does need to be more widespread engagement.
Perhaps people aren't interested enough, maybe they haven't taken notice because of the link to Whitby et al, or they could just feel excluded?
Fingers crossed, this post could be a useful starting point.

On the first day I was involved with this I suggested "How about we design Birmingham with a WIKI?" which I'm now realising was a little on the geeky side, and asking for permission from any organisation to back a project of that kind is just difficult from everyone's point of view. I never heard anything about it again.

If we want an 'in' on the issues you're both raising it has to come from everyone eventually - perhaps this is a way of informing some of the consultation that will be happening over the next few months?

From my point of view I would like to have as wide a cross-section of people 'interested' in what's going on, even if it's much later when they get asked for their opinions on things.

Sandra Hall (Friction Arts) joked I while back that there should be a 'mistress plan' to the 'master plan' - maybe that still stands true in some way?

Joanna Geary said:

Hi Sid

In answer to your question, any of our bloggers can embed video onto The Post blogs!

Stef is using a platform called Viddler which allows you to upload videos in the same way you would with YouTube or, alternatively, lets you record directly onto the site using a webcam. Viddler is free to sign up to.

What is also interesting about Viddler is that you can 'tag' parts of the timeline in order to make it easier for viewers to skip to interesting sections.

A good example of this is the effusive wine reviewer Gary Vaynerchuk who tags the start of each wine review in his timeline. (Hover the cursor over the black dots in the timeline to see them.)

If you have any more questions, please do email me!

Auntie Jo.

simon gray said:

I've not yet had chance to watch Stef's video - the problem being that in the daytime at work it is difficult to watch a video in an open plan office, even at lunchtime, even with headphones.

But to the final question of why there hasn't been much web discussion on the Big City Plan - is not the main reason for that the absence of anybody acting as a chair, to facilitate discussion? But also, what are the proposals (or even the frameworks from which proposals might emerge) for us to discuss? The strategic visions of the Themes & Ideas are grand enough, but surely for discussion to take place beyond "that's grand, let's do it", don't most of us need some more concrete starting points?

Ruth Slavid said:

Shouldn't the council's own Big City website incorporate blogs and forums for discussion?

Alternatively, is there an exisitng web forum that is regularly used by large numbers of Brummies? I don't know of one, but if it exists, perhaps something could be directed through it?

Another helpful move would be to get rid of Whitby and his cronies - Clive Dutton etc.

Peter Bacon said:

Ruth asks if there is a suitable forum. Well maybe the best place to start from is where you are now.
I am already trying to figure out how the burgeoning and vital jazz scene in Birmingham can be part of the Big City Plan. Which reminds me - it's all happening underneath Hockley Flyover on 31 May.
Stef imagines a car-free city in 25 years' time; I imagine a jazz band playing underneath every silent city flyover.

Andy said:

I'm fairly new to Birmingham and have only just came across the big city plan! I think it's great that a lot of money will be spent on Birmingham but i just hope the result is a genuine culture and not a pretense. I find Birmingham city centre very dull as it is just a series of chain shops, restaurants and bars. Frankly when i'm in Birmingham city centre I could be in any 'shopping centre' and that is depressing! Take the apparently marvelous Bullring, apart from the Selfridges building there is nothing individual about it, one interesting exterior does not make a forward thinking city.

I hope that part of the big city plan is to encourage, support and finance independence in the city, but very importantly, not to define it! Give local people to power to define their city by realising their own personal dreams, a small number of successes will change the city forever. It takes individuals to form a collective success, not through city wide discussion (or a master plan produced by the local government) but through individual actions, all of which add up to a successful, vibrant city.

steve Gwynne said:

I agree wholeheartedly that there should be a forum and a blog on the BigCityPlan website.

Also here is what i sent in relation to the 2026 Vision project which somehow relates to the BigCityPlan.

I am writing to communicate my concerns that the core strategies that make up the Birmingham 2026 Our Vision for the Future strategy do not make allowances for the white paper ‘Communities in Control’ (2008) and The Sustainable Communities Act (2007). Consequently I feel that the Vision is both unrepresentative of the diverse needs of Birmingham as a whole and also fails to take into account that Birmingham is a network of communities more than it is a single centralized community. Therefore, I feel that the Vision, rather than creating “A global city with a local heart” will instead create “A global city without a local heart”.

The Vision has to be flexible and inclusive enough to ‘be’ and ‘become’ a Vision that meets the diverse and changing needs of the city, otherwise it is just another vision that is imposed from above with little participation from the many communities that are Birmingham. Unfortunately, the past has shown that a vision of a centralized community tends to exclude those who either do not wish to participate in the hierarchical model that a centralized model usually implies or wish to focus on the politics of their own constituency community. Often, the vision shared by those at constituency level is very much different to the vision shared by those high up the hierarchy at the centre. Therefore, what I am arguing is that the concept of community that is shared at the centre is usually very different to the concept of community held by those within the periphery.

These different perspectives highlight the importance of both the white paper ‘Communities in Control’ and the Sustainable Communities Act. As you know, these different pieces of legislation aim to empower communities to take control of their own lives. They imply that the wisdom needed to sustain the integrity of communities both socially and ecologically is already present within the communities themselves but fails to become utilized because of the reasons above (and possibly more). Therefore, it is very important that the Vision is not one which aims to act on behalf of the different communities of Birmingham but acts to facilitate voluntary co-operation and mutual aid networks so as to foster a network of thriving and hospitable communities which regard well-being as paramount. This means that ‘Communities in Control’ and ‘The Sustainable Communities Act’ need to be incorporated into what will ‘be’ and ‘become’ Our Vision for the Future: The Sustainable Communities Strategy in Birmingham.

It is obviously not too late to reconsider and transform the core strategies from those that support the concept of a centralized Sustainable Community to core strategies that support the concept of decentralized Sustainable Communities. This will obviously require that the current Vision is re-negotiated with another round of consultation so that the citizens of Birmingham can consult ‘Communities in Control’ and ‘The Sustainable Communities Act’ in order to envisage how the Vision can best support the development of their individual communities and develop affinity-links so as to enable co-operation with other communities. Birmingham City Council would obviously have a very important part to play in this exciting and progressive process which not only takes into consideration the well-being of all Birmingham citizens but allows them to participate more fully in their own development both socially and ecologically. In fact, it cannot be stressed enough how the people of Birmingham need support in this process of transition and given the opportunity to create lives which are aligned to the needs of the communities themselves.

Unfortunately, in the previous round of consultation which only captured the imagination of around 2000 people, a centralized Birmingham with a focus on capitalism was envisaged as the means to increase the prosperity of Birmingham and make it into a globally recognized city based on wealth production. However, the social imagination of Birmingham has now changed in light of the white paper and the Act and people now want to see a decentralized Birmingham that can sustain itself both socially and ecologically. For example, across Birmingham there are many community groups that would benefit greatly in a decentralized Birmingham and in turn these benefits would be passed onto the different communities of Birmingham. In particular I am referring to groups that have a vision of ecologism at the heart of their lives and so would rather see a post-development model applied within the Vision which would give land back to Nature and enable people to cultivate small scale market gardens and so produce and sell food locally. This type of vision must also have an opportunity to be represented in the Vision of Birmingham overall especially in relation to the efforts to reduce the carbon footprint of the city.

Similarly, it is also vital that the political imagination of Birmingham is able to express itself in its constituent parts. This is a particular aim of both ‘Communities in Control’ and the Sustainable Communities Act by effectively giving local people the resource base from which to create local services for local people as well as giving the people political legitimacy to form their own style of community. This provides another reason why the different and diverse communities of Birmingham need to be able to reconsider the Vision of Birmingham. The resources that are planned to be used to redevelop Birmingham as a corporate city-hub can instead be used to re-generate and re-vitalize our communities from decline as a result of years of neglect and favouritism towards the gentrification of the city. To not allow all people of Birmingham to reconsider the options in light of the potential that can be un-leased by both the ‘Communities in Control’ white paper and the Sustainable Communities Act will be a travesty for future generations, especially in light of the opportunity to invest in a socially and ecologically sustainable future that seeks to halt the social and cultural impoverishment that comes when development is geared towards wealth generation alone.

I know for a fact that every constituency in Birmingham does not want Capitalism (wealth generation) and Conservatism (centralized hierarchies) to be the sole and guiding ideologies that shapes the core strategies of the Vision. To a greater degree Ecologism, Socialism, Anarchism, Islamism and Liberalism need to be represented in the core strategies. Incorporating more these other ideologies will enable the Vision to be more sustainable and enduring. For example, a much greater appreciation of the way we use resources now will have a direct and positive effect on our future. In fact, it is now globally acknowledged that the excesses of capitalism and conservatism alone have created a potentially devastating future both socially and ecologically . This means that a second round of consultation is vital to not only enable these other ideologies expression in Our Vision but also to see whether we really can live by our most committed and deepest values, that being liberty, justice and community.

It is the values of liberty, justice and community respectively that need to determine the shape and scope of the three core strategies. Following this each core strategy can then be broken down as follows:-

Birmingham 2026: Our Vision for the Future
The Sustainable Communities Strategy
“A Global City with a Local Heart”

The Core Strategies
-Liberty Justice Community

- The Social Imagination of Birmingham
- The Political Imagination of Birmingham
- The Economic Imagination of Birmingham
- The Cultural Imagination of Birmingham

Personally I too want Birmingham to be a globally recognized city of importance but not for its ability to destroy our ecological and natural environment but for its ability to demonstrate to the world that we can co-operate and share global resources (that is, life-forms) to sustain positive and life-affirming socio-ecological relations and roles with other life-forms and their communities.

Of course capitalism has a limited place in our economic imagination within each of the core strategies but so does the ideologies of Ecologism, Socialism, and Islamism. Similarly, Liberalism, Anarchism, Islamism and Conservatism have a place in the political imagination of each of the core strategies. As does Socialism, Islamism and Liberalism in the social imagination of each of the core strategies. Finally all the ideologies have a place in the cultural imagination of each of the core strategies.

Anyway, I hope we have the opportunity to discuss further how we can help to shape and facilitate the necessary social, political, economic and cultural debates to decide upon a holy different set of core strategies and consequently create a much more socio-ecologically sustainable future for us all within the individual communities of Birmingham.

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