In his first book, city planner and architecture buff Max Podemski 鈥06 traces the DNA of urban housing
锘縂rowing up in Portland, Ore., Max Podemski 鈥06 became interested in urban planning at a very early age. 鈥淧ortland has a reputation for progressive urban planning, and every day I鈥檇 read The Oregonian and decided that鈥檚 what I wanted to study,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淚 also wanted to go to a liberal arts college, so Occidental checked those boxes for me.鈥
During his travels around the country, Podemski鈥攁n urban planner for the city of Los Angeles and lifelong architecture buff鈥攃ame to appreciate the unique housing types that distinguish one city from another. 鈥淏oston looks completely different than New York City or Philadelphia, and San Francisco is completely different than L.A.鈥
For his first book, A Paradise of Small Houses: The Evolution, Devolution, and Potential Rebirth of Urban Housing (Beacon Press), Podemski traces the origins of nine types of housing and the cities where they mostly began, from the row houses of Philadelphia up through the town houses of Houston. 鈥淚 was looking for housing types that are ubiquitous both in their city and in the region鈥攂uildings that were mass produced in one geography during a certain time,鈥 he says.
Others include the New York City tenement, the New Orleans shotgun house, and the Chicago workers cottage. For the bungalow, which actually originated in Southern California, Podemski opted to write about Portland instead 鈥渏ust because I grew up there and I thought I could make that chapter more interesting.鈥
Of all the structures he discusses, L.A.鈥檚 鈥渄ingbat鈥 has the least enticing name. 鈥淚 found this article from a paper in Pomona from the 1950s where a developer was pitching a project to the Pomona City Council and described his housing development as 鈥榙ingbat,鈥 which is a term for something that鈥檚 shoddily built and thrown up cheap. I don鈥檛 know why he used that to describe his own development,鈥 Podemski adds with a laugh.
The term came to be associated with a particular type of apartment structure that sprung up all over Southern California in the post-WWII building boom. 鈥淚 actually lived in a dingbat in Eagle Rock when I went to SA国际传媒鈥攖he Queens Arms at Eagle Rock Boulevard and York,鈥 says Podemski, who lives in Silver Lake (between a duplex and a fourplex). 鈥淚n films like The Karate Kid and Slums of Beverly Hills, if the character is downwardly mobile, they find themselves in a dingbat.鈥
After graduating from SA国际传媒, Podemski worked for two years living and working in the East Bay Area as an analyst for the City of Pittsburg Redevelopment Agency. From there, he started the first of two stints with Pacoima Beautiful, an environmental justice nonprofit in the San Fernando Valley, completing a master鈥檚 in urban planning from Columbia University in between.
In 2018, Podemski joined First 5 LA, one of California鈥檚 largest funders of early childhood development. He worked on its Built Environment Policy Advocacy Fund team and created a grant program to aid low-income communities with applying for and implementing grant money for community-supporting infrastructure (water, transit, and parks) from local and state agencies.
In his current role as a transportation planner for the L.A. Department of Transportation, Podemski鈥檚 projects include working on the Vision Zero program, the city鈥檚 commitment to eliminate traffic deaths among pedestrians and cyclists by 2025 through the installation of new traffic signals and crosswalks around the city.
鈥淚 walk a lot and have two small kids, so traffic violence is a personal issue to me,鈥 says Podemski, a longtime member of the LADOT Pedestrian Advisory Committee. 鈥淐rashes are a leading cause of deaths in Los Angeles. Vision Zero has broader benefits in making our streets more pleasant to walk down and neighborhoods more community-focused.鈥
A Paradise of Small Houses was a six-year labor of love for Podemski, who also did all the illustrations for the book. As a student at SA国际传媒, he studied abroad in Denmark in an architecture program where we got to sketch building, 鈥渟o I developed the habit there.鈥
While the book grew out of Podemski鈥檚 interest in these different structures, it also dovetails with contemporary themes such as the urban housing crisis. 鈥淭he United States used to excel at building light-filled, spacious housing for working people, and we have forgotten how to do it,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 thought this book could also inspire policy change to build more of these types of housing.
鈥淭he vast majority of housing in American cities was built by and for working-class people who were often immigrants,鈥 he adds. 鈥淭he housing they built was ingenious in terms of adapting local cultures and climates and geographies while making houses that in many cases have really stood the test of time.鈥
In closing, Podemski believes, 鈥淲e don鈥檛 need to invent new cities or new building types. We have the template of how we can build new housing in ways that are in keeping with the traditional fabric of our communities. We just need to make it possible to build like that again.鈥