The Banks project and the City of Cincinnati should to acknowledge a man who helped shape the evolution of modern urban living – Robert Moses. While he doesn’t have a title in The Banks project, his presence is felt in every urban renewal project in the United States.
A project doesn’t have to share the same blueprints to benefit from Robert Moses. His incredible breadth of work included great successes as well as failures. Both of these provide useful lessons for modern urban planning. Study New York City and you are studying the work of Robert Moses.
I’m not going to eulogize the man, but I certainly respect a man who was able to accomplish as much as he was during his lifetime. I trust that his hometown paper was able to encapsulate his positive and negative impact on the city. In 1981, the New York Times wrote in Moses’ 5,000+ word obituary that he “…played a larger role in shaping the physical environment of New York State than any other figure in the 20th century.”
Is there a person in Cincinnati who will have as singular an impact on the Queen City as Moses did in the Big Apple? Not as far as I can tell, but our story is just getting started.