Who owns the view?
As population increases and second-home
purchases grow, many scenic areas are equally valuable to developers and valued
by preservationists.
By Teresa Méndez | Special to The
Christian Science Monitor
Gary Johnson is so rarely behind his
desk, he can be difficult to track down. The chief resource planner for the
Blue Ridge Parkway spends most days wending his way through Virginia and North
Carolina. His daily activities take him along one of the nation's most scenic
roads - rural farmland and forested slopes streaming past his car window.
Mr. Johnson spends countless hours
inventorying the parkway's "viewshed" - the area visible from a particular
vantage point - and plotting to protect its most prized vistas. After all, the
impressive views along the road are what bring millions of visitors to the
Parkway each year.
But what can the National
Park Service (NPS) do about protecting the famous panorama from
scenery-spoiling development that occurs on private property as far as 20 miles
away?
It's an increasingly common problem
around the US as population and the numbers of second homes both climb.
And it brings up the thorny question: Can
anyone own the view?
Land buyers and developers who are
attracted to the same spectacular scenery as visitors to an area ask: Who has
the right to tell us what we can do with private property?
Environmentalists and many local
residents counter that the view belongs to everyone, and no one should be
allowed to spoil it for future generations.
Meg Maguire of Scenic America, an
organization dedicated to preserving natural beauty, worries that as urban
growth envelops rural areas, the distinction between city and country is being
lost: "Everything is looking like everywhere, and everywhere is nowhere."
Others are concerned that the cherished
right to do as they please on their own land may be in jeopardy.
The term viewshed is best known from the
writings of Frederick Law Olmsted, the 19th-century father of landscape
architecture who designed retreats such as New York's Central Park. But
according to Niall Kirkwood, chairman of Harvard University's landscape
architecture department, the term dates to the Egyptian battlefield, where
strategy was determined by whom you could see and who could see you.
This year, viewsheds appeared for the
first time on Scenic America's annual list of Last Chance Landscapes - places
in danger of disappearing but with potential to be saved. Two of the areas on
the list, California's Gaviota Coast and the Blue Ridge Parkway, illustrate the
conflicts - and some potential solutions.
Between the mountains and ocean
North on Highway 101 out of Santa
Barbara, Calif., the road narrows to two lanes and the trees melt into a blur
of rippling grasses. Nestled between the Santa Ynez Mountains and the gripping
blue of the Pacific Ocean, the freeway gently follows the curves of the
coastline.
Here, only a spattering of homes, the
occasional backhoe, or the dot of an oil rig on the horizon breaks the panorama
of mountains, ocean, and the Channel Islands. These 76 miles - known as the
Gaviota Coast - make up the longest span of undeveloped coastline left in
southern California.
But beneath the idyllic surface simmers a
battle between champions of public land and outside developers. Caught in the
middle are private owners who want their spreads protected, but don't want to
be told how to do it. At stake: close to 100,000 acres - a rural checkerboard
of cattle ranches, avocado and lemon orchards, and open space.
At one point in the past century, the
Hollister family owned virtually the entire Gaviota Coast. Today, J.J.
Hollister III still cares passionately about the rural coast where he grew up,
patches of which his family still holds. Mr. Hollister talks of a place
"vibrant with historical quality" and hopes the "agricultural overlay" will
remain intact. "I think there's a tremendous value in open space, watershed,
and view," he says.
Yet he was one of many old-timers who
fought a recent push to integrate the coastline into the National Park System.
The reason? He is as worried about public feet trampling the pristine ecology
as he is about developers' bulldozers.
Bernice ("Bernie") Stableford, a longtime
avocado grower and cattle rancher in the region, also opposed the area's being
designated a National Seashore, but for a different reason. "It is very well
protected," she says flatly. "The viewshed is not going anywhere."
Many of Mrs. Stableford's neighbors feel
that the threat of sprawl is overblown. Between existing restrictions and
locals who, Stableford says, will "fight as hard as anybody to keep the city
limits where they are," she believes the fear of development is a case of "the
sky is falling."
The real threat, some landowners in the
region say, is from heavy recreational traffic, with its accompanying litter
and risk of fire. Had the Gaviota Coast been designated a National Seashore
(the NPS decided against it earlier this year), its pristine hills would have
been marked by public access trails and roads.
Michael Feeney, executive director of the
Land Trust for Santa Barbara County, is disappointed that the Gaviota Coast
will remain mostly in private hands. "The only tangible enjoyment that most
people get is being able to look at [the scenery] as they drive up the highway
or go to the beaches. Instead of seeing a bunch of Malibu mansions they're
seeing oak trees and cattle and undeveloped land."
But that undeveloped land is being
swallowed up.
Seventy-eight acres have already been turned into a
beachfront resort near Santa Barbara. Some see the resort as revitalizing a
sleepy spot just outside the city. To others, it's an ominous warning of sprawl
to come.
Another 485 acres, tapped for a luxury
residential development, is undergoing the approval process.
Stableford is unconcerned. She believes
that the rules the developers have agreed to follow - including planting trees
so the houses can't be seen - will ensure that the view won't be spoiled.
Others aren't as optimistic. Among them
is Mr. Feeney, who says the development is "going to be a wart on the Gaviota
Coast."
But there are eager second-home buyers
ready to snap up a residence in such a beautiful area. In 2000Jennifer Aniston
and Brad Pitt bought a 11-1/2-acre coastal parcel here for about $4 million,
although they have not built on it.
Purchases such as theirs sometimes spark
a cycle of soaring land prices, increased propertytaxes, and a resulting
decline of agriculture, which can lead to more land gobbled up by developers.
Rural for how long?
Across the country, nearly 22 million
people yearly pass through the Blue Ridge Parkway, which begins in Virginia and
runs through North Carolina. Ninety-five percent say they come for the scenery.
They come to traverse a 469-mile-long road that skims treetops and dips into
valleys sprinkled with old farmsteads and split-rail fences.
The parkway's viewshed is designed to
move between overview and detail - from grand panoramic vistas to sharply
focused close-ups. But some wonder how long that popular view will exist.
The federal government controls at least
200 feet on either side of the Parkway - yet many of its best views lie beyond
that boundary.
Working with developers since 1996, the
parkway's planning team has tried to influence development along the road
without appearing "heavy-handed" or "pushy."
They have worked with developers on six
large projects and consulted on a number of smaller ones.
One of the first developers they met with
was Steve Musselwhite, who lives next to the parkway. In return for permission
to run a sewer line under NPS land, Mr. Musselwhite agreed to reduce from 150
to 100 the number of homes he would build on his 40-acre tract. They'll be
clustered to maximize open space, and he'll plant trees and a wildflower meadow
to help shelter the houses from view.
Although negotiating was an arduous
process that took two years of negotiations, both parties agree it was worth
it.
"We got a better product as a result of
the cooperation," says Musselwhite.
Johnson notes the fact that a dialogue
took place at all as a sign of success.
Preserving views can be a slippery slope.
The modern landscape is manipulated all the time. Even the Blue Ridge Parkway
cuts vegetation and overgrowth to frame scenic views and clear outlooks.
Among developers, preservationists, and
private landowners, the consensus seems to be that development will continue.
The challenge, then, is to figure out how best to do it.
Revitalizing already developed areas is
key, says Professor Kirkwood, the landscape architect, who specializes in
reclaiming industrial landscapes. Originally from Scotland, he contrasts the
"American predilection for starting from scratch" with the European habit of
building upon the past to create a palimpsest.
Many on both sides of the issue would
agree with a statement on the website of Scenic America: "Growth may be
inevitable, but ugliness is not."
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