The power of subtraction for better US infrastructure
If
her book sales are any indication, you or someone you know have probably used
Marie Kondo's "KonMariTM" method for tidying up your home.
Sure,
Kondo's approach has some space-saving sock-folding tips, but the real tidying
benefits come only if you follow her instructions to subtract everything you
don't love from your home.
It's nice to have a tidy personal home, but Kondo's advice holds far more potential when we apply it to the infrastructure that connects these personal homes and turns them into communities.
It's nice to have a tidy personal home, but Kondo's advice holds far more potential when we apply it to the infrastructure that connects these personal homes and turns them into communities.
Our
infrastructure includes everything from roads to public buildings to sewer
lines to the electric grid. Everyone paying attention recognizes the need to
make this infrastructure better.
Consider
a seemingly bipartisan and non-controversial proclamation from the most recent
U.S. State of the Union address. "We will build gleaming new roads,
bridges, highways, railways, and waterways across our land." Who argues
with that?
As
a civil engineering professor, I'm all for infrastructure, but worry about
prioritizing the "gleaming new" kind over the subtractive KonMariTM kind.
For the shared homes that are our communities and planet, what we subtract from
infrastructure is at least as important as what we add.
There
isn't a one-size-fits-all solution. What works for roads may not work for the
electric grid. What works in Staten Island, New York, won't necessarily work in
Puerto Rico or Houston.
But there is a common theme among many infrastructure success stories: They improve quality of life, in large part, by KonMariTM-style subtracting.
Subtraction through
“Superblocks”
Consider
Barcelona's innovative "Superblocks" program,
which subtracts by closing roads to through-traffic. Ultimately, the program
will close two of every three roads in the city's grid system.
Superblocks reduce the vehicle air pollution that make Barcelona residents (and probably you) more likely to die early from vehicle air pollution than from a car crash.
Superblocks reduce the vehicle air pollution that make Barcelona residents (and probably you) more likely to die early from vehicle air pollution than from a car crash.
Superblocks
also relieve congestion. Before Superblocks, private vehicles accounted for
more than half of road-use but less than a quarter of human movements within
Barcelona. Subtracting for Superblocks has "created" streets that do
more than convey vehicles.
An
area equivalent to ten full-size golf courses will be reclaimed from vehicles
and returned to people. Spaces previously devoted to metal boxes and their
drivers are repurposed for strolling, biking, kissing and any other activity
that is safer and more fun when you don't have to worry about automobiles
whizzing by, or worse.
At
$10 million dollars, Superblocks is an inexpensive infrastructure program,
roughly equivalent in price to a cup of coffee per Barcelona resident or to
building one mile of superhighway near a city.
Because
it subtracts for better roads rather than adding "gleaming and new,"
Superblocks also avoids any need for more concrete, which accounts for more
climate changing emissions than any other material.
U.S. opportunities
Many
U.S. cities have shut down individual streets to through traffic, but few have
done so on a Superblocks scale. Copying the best parts of Barcelona's program
in places where it makes sense carries little risk. Ten million dollars is not
even a rounding error in the $2 trillion White House infrastructure
initiative.
What
about subtractive thinking for other types of infrastructure? Stormwater
management is increasingly challenging with climate change induced storm events
and salt-water intrusion.
Subtractive
thinking about stormwater might mean that, instead of adding pipes to move
water out of cities, we remove manmade barriers that prevent water from
infiltrating the ground.
In
Baltimore, for example, residents get paid to aerate their lawns, breaking up
the soil that has become densely packed together over the years. Widespread
aeration not only prevents flooding, it makes for more beautiful and productive
gardens.
Subtractive
thinking about much-needed storm protection infrastructure could lead to more
projects like the post-Hurricane Sandy "managed retreat" in the Ocean
Breeze community of Staten Island, New York.
Returning
vulnerable areas to their natural vegetated state inexpensively creates buffer
zones, which protect surrounding communities from inevitable future storms.
Certainly,
managed retreat, distributed electric generation, aerated lawns, or even
Superblocks are not right for every scenario. However, the KonMariTM-style
subtraction that leads to responses like these must be a part of the
infrastructure legacy we leave.
Overcoming barriers to
subtraction
Of
course developers who want to sell you "gleaming and new"
infrastructure have little incentive for subtractive thinking.
But
there is an even more fundamental human barrier to subtraction: loss aversion.
Loss aversion means we dislike losing more than we like gaining. Loss aversion
is why my commercial meat slicer remained in our pantry to be tidied more than
six years after I became a vegetarian.
If
you are human, you are probably loss averse; it's one of the most widespread
phenomena in behavioral science.
Loss
aversion has been observed in countless decisions and in a range of
populations, even extending to apes and monkeys. Brain imaging studies even
confirm that activity associated with the fear and anxiety of experiencing loss
is a more powerful motivator than the possibility of rewards.
Loss
aversion may be a formidable mental obstacle to better infrastructure, but
research suggests ways we can check our loss-averse instincts when they blind
us to good options.
One
way is to avoid gain-loss comparisons altogether, or to reframe losses as
gains. Superblocks can be described as "adding green space to the
city" rather than as "subtracting roads."
Reframing
does have its limits. A Staten Islander mourning the loss of her home is
unlikely to mentally process "planned retreat" as an infrastructure
gain no matter how it is framed.
A
more promising approach may be shifting the reference points against
which gains and losses are measured. When promotors say, "the nation's
infrastructure needs to be rebuilt," the implied reference point is what
currently exists, invoking loss averse biases.
On
the other hand, a plan for carbon-zero infrastructure would set up a very
different reference point where anything less than carbon-zero infrastructure,
including perpetuating the status-quo, feels like an uncomfortable loss.
Perhaps
the best way to inspire infrastructure subtraction is to recognize initial loss
averse instincts and then deliberately consider the opposite. Marie Kondo's
tidying method asks us to subtract everything we don't love from our personal
homes, even things we like and use.
And
when it comes to our shared homes, simply taking a moment to ask ourselves,
"Did I consider subtracting?" would take us a long way toward the
infrastructure that provides the best quality of life for the most people.
Leidy
Klotz is a University of Virginia professor, jointly appointed in Engineering
and in Architecture. His teaching and research merge design and behavioral
science for a more sustainable built environment. Leidy is also the author
of Sustainability through Soccer: An
Unexpected Approach to Saving Our World.