Opinion: The beauty of industrial West Berkeley

The writing on the wall says it all. Photo: John C. Osborn.

John Osborn moved from northern California to Berkeley in the late winter of 2010 and has been surprised by what he’s found: the wonders of BART, the diversity of people, the good food. John has been reporting on the issues of Humboldt County for years and will now be reporting on Berkeley issues for Berkeleyside. He will also be writing about his impressions of our city. Here he shares some impressions of our city:

West Berkeley is not an industrial wasteland; it is beautiful. But you know the cliché: beauty is in the eyes of the beholder.

The robust and thriving industrial lifeblood of America has undergone a profound change. What was once the enviable industrial base of the world, employing untold numbers of blue-collar workers with middle class wages and benefits, has since succumbed to the great race for the bottom — a consequence of unleashing our national companies into the global marketplace.

But fear not. This doesn’t herald the death of manufacturing as some are quick to tell you. There is still a spirit of resilience that permeates particular areas, including here in West Berkeley.

I spent the past month talking with artisans and small manufacturers deeply rooted in the district, spent untold sunsets snapping pictures of the landscape, and sat through hours of public testimony about the proposed zoning changes for a series of articles and a slide show about the West Berkeley plan.

What I see and hear is not death: there is history; there is livelihood; there is a reason to be cautious moving forward, but there is also a reason to evolve and grow.

The city has been exploring the possibility of changing zoning restrictions on the types of uses that have been in place for almost two decades in West Berkeley. Hearings have whittled down hundreds of concerns from workers, residents, city officials, and property owners into what some consider a compromise proposal, a plan to catalyze a high-tech industry without completely sacrificing the livelihood of those who call the district their work and/or home.  Some, however, regard the plan as execution warrant of sorts — an invitation that will bring in a deluge of high-tech companies, residential expansion, and tall office buildings, which will increase rents and push out small businesses.

When I published my photo essay on the district, I was criticized for focusing on the “negative” (i.e. the dilapidation and decay throughout the district). But you know what, I think it’s beautiful; it caught my eye because it represents the raw industrial essence still coursing through the district, and I think it attracts the interest of others because it represents a wounded beast fighting to survive.

Industry is gritty, dirty, and tactile. If you want fresh and clean, go to the Fourth Street shopping area, which represents the district’s retail base. Visit the new Fourth and University residential towers for new, but pricey, housing opportunities. Heck, if you really want a sight to satisfy the eye, go to Aquatic Park at sunset. But don’t think for a minute that the rough structures, the empty lots, the railroad is anyway indicative of the death of manufacturing overall.

This reminds me of journalism. Everyone and their mentor has an opinion on the future of my industry. I keep hearing that it’s not just a wounded beast, it’s a patient with terminal cancer, clutching on desperately to some miracle cure while ignoring the death throes chiming from the Internet. A dying field. Why bother? The end is nigh! Long live the Huffington Post…cough.

But you know what, my industry is not dying, even if there have been mass layoffs and the shuttering of many newspapers. It’s evolving, and there will always be a demand for quality media that the information free-for-all on the Internet cannot completely satisfy.

Manufacturing is not dying either; it has a nasty gash perhaps, but it’s not in the grave. No, we don’t see the scale of manufacturing that existed prior to the North American Free Trade Agreement, the World Trade Organization, the technological automation, and the “freeing” of markets. What we see, especially in Berkeley, are niche manufacturers who fill a need that is not going to go away anytime soon.

Take Adam and Chittenden Scientific Glass. No amount of automation and robotics will replace a glassblower’s care and attention to the crafting of specific plexi-glass products. The business has international penetration for its products, a substantial number of clients in West Berkeley alone, and it provides a number of high-paying jobs. As long as those niches fill a demand, those manufacturers are not going anywhere… unless other factors influence their business future.

Back in Arcata where I’m from, we have a community of niche manufacturers and light industry that has done much to keep the city from plunging deeply into the red with its budget. Arcata is actually expanding the land available for light industrial use in order to attract talent and entrepreneurship from Humboldt State University, and to help stabilize the volatile retail sector. There is even a push by young technology folk to attract R&D there, since Arcata, like Berkeley, has what affluent techies want: beauty, food, and good beer. Seriously.

Safeguarding what cultural and industrial resources the city has is not protectionism; it is the cultivation of a strong, diverse community: a community where R&D start-ups, movie technicians, and E-Bay traders all have a place.

It’s a strange calculation when jobs and livelihoods are at stake verses the promises of a high-tech revolution. But I would hate to see the passion I saw in the artisans and manufacturers while working on my essay be extinguished because they were told they aren’t part of the future plan, and forces beyond them acted accordingly.

 

Print Friendly
Tagged
  • Sharkey

    I love Arcata and always enjoy it when I visit the city, but Arcata is not located within spitting distance of San Francisco (not to mention all the other cities in the area), does not have a college like UC Berkeley, and is not as centrally located.

    Ive always wondered, are West Berkeley building owners not held to the same graffiti removal standards as building owners in Downtown Berkeley? Or are Downtown merchants just quicker to remove it because they don’t have as much of it? Graffiti seems to linger longer at West Berkeley sites than it does in other parts of town, but my perspective may be warped since I don’t get out to that part of town as often as I should. Maybe the “artists” are just quicker to scrawl their signs back up on West Berkeley walls.

  • http://andrewteee.wordpress.com/ Andrew

    Great article! I often take pictures in West Berkeley for the same reason. It is a very beautiful place with a ton of interesting scenes, textures, colors, industrial landscapes, and on and on. My hope too is that while I know the area needs to be allowed to move forward it still retains some of its current charm as it does so.

    Thanks for posting your thoughts.

  • http://kymkemp.com kym

    Beautifully said.

  • Elizabeth

    Many thanks for your comprehensive vision. There is a book you might like (or might already know about). “Berkeley 1900: Daily Life at the Turn of the Century” by Richard Schwartz. Published in 2000 by RSB Books. Pegasus or Moe’s or Berkeley Public Library might have copies. While reading your article I thought about this book with its rich information about all of Berkeley, and much info about west Berkeley. Looking forward to your ongoing coverage of the west Berkeley issue.

  • Robert Collier

    Very thoughtful and well written.

  • tizzielish

    This is a well written essay. Is it news? The rezoning of West Berkeley is a public policy issue with important, meaningful and myriad consequences to the quality of life for all of Berkeley and, even, surrounding municipalities. While I enjoyed your ruminative reflections, with your personable but not-really-relevant reflections on your home town of Arcata, I feel cheated. I expected to read some news about the serious, and seriously complex, public policy issues of rezoning West Berkeley. All you have done is remind us that there are charms about West Berkeley that might be overlooked by some. Your comments about Arcata remind me that journalism has changed quite a bit: your arbitrary thoughts about your hometown don’t really related at all to rezoning West Berkeley and in the old days of journalism, a reporter not writing for the opinion page would have kept his personal reflections to himself. As I said at the beginning of my comment, your memoir piece is well written. But is it news? Is Berkeleyside.com confused about its mission? Or it berkeleyside.com a new thing, not traditional journalism but something emergent?

    I don’t really care what they do back in Arcata. Do you care what they do back where I come from? And does what they do back where I come from contribute to a reader’s understanding of the very real, important reality that West Berkeley zoning is going to change? And how is berkeleyside.com serving its mission when it publishes a charming, uninformative op-ed piece? At least make it clear that it’s op ed, maybe?

    And I admit that this question is impolite and probably rude: did you get paid to hang out in West Berkeley for a month and think about it? and then paid to write a news story that became this essay? I am curious: is this the kind of work you have been hired to do for berkeleyside? I am sincerely curious. .. this gets back to my curiosity about berkeleyside.com’s mission. What is its mission? Thanks.

  • http://www.berkeleyside.com Lance Knobel

    Tizzielish: no, of course it’s not news.

    Berkeleyside publishes a lot of news, but we also are interested in other aspects of Berkeley: intriguing photos, videos of Berkeley people, arts coverage, etc. We’re not just news, just like a newspaper is more than the news. What’s our mission? We say: breaking news, building community.

    We’ve done a lot of coverage of the news about the West Berkeley plan and we’ll do more. A good chunk of that coverage was written by John Osborn, which is why he formed opinions about the area that he wanted to share in a different form. Not sure why a piece that’s clearly labeled opinion got your dander up.

  • tizzielish

    an addendum to my earlier, snarky comment: I also love West Berkeley, and I love it for its gritty, funky, uneven charm. I know that change is going to come to West Berkeley. Change is inevitable everywhere. Making choices that will have long-term, meaningful, and very real ramificsations to lots of real humans is hard to do. No one has a crystal ball to precisely predict the future. Zoning choices made now will, very literally, influence what emerges. Moving into new zoning choices is a very serious cultural thing for the human collective of Berkeley to undertake. I am not convinced that our civic leaders that are in a position to mold the future with rezoning choices give such matters enough thought. I am not convinced that people in a position to change zoning in Berkeley ponder cultural values and cultural implications with anywhere near enough thought. It seems to me that our public servants weight economic guesses (all economics projections are guess work and, gosh, I sure wish our public servants would remember that when a capitalist tells a public servant that they will only be able to make money in Berkeley if the public servants let those capitalists do whatever it is they want to do) more than they weigh cultural consequences. I know that rezoning is like reading a crystal ball but since it is as much art as science, I sure wish our public servants would do their work with more art and spirit than they seem to. Your piece resonates with me in a lovely way. I’d love to entrust the writer of this piece in berkreleyside.com with the power to rezone Berkeley. Maybe your story will elicit some warmth into the hearts and minds of some of our public servants who will be deciding West Berkeley’s zoning future. I hope so. I wish our public zoning staffers would approach their work in the same kind of energy that this piece seems to have been written. But they don’t seem to be.

    Sharkey . . your snarky complaint about graffiti in West Berkeley seemed jarring after this lovely piece. I have bad news for you: the grafitti in this photo has been left on that wall a long time and I love seeing it every time I see it. I am glad it has not been painted over.

  • Sharkey

    My comment was a serious question and not meant to be snarky, whereas yours clearly was.

    The graffiti wall in the photograph – along the West side of the Takara sake factory – is not the only graffiti in West Berkeley. That wall is also along the RR tracks, and as such may not fall under the same graffiti rules as the rest of the city.

    The graffiti I was referring to is gang signs and names on fences, buildings, etc, that have less artistic merit than what’s seen in this photograph.

  • lifelongberkeleyan

    Emotional attachment and zoning plans are hardly immovable objects. By comparison, “highest and best use” easily qualifies as an irresistible force. West Berkeley will be developed by market demand. Everything else is about the schedule.