Regenerating America's Legacy Cities
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Transcript of Regenerating America's Legacy Cities
10 Ways to Regenerate America’s Legacy Cities by Alan Mallach and Lavea Brachman
Urban renaissance has touched many cities across America in the last two decades, but there are many others – typically what we call “legacy cities” that are still trying to find their footing a generation or two after experiencing drastic manufacturing loss and population decline.
These 18 cities are:
-Akron, OH -Dayton, OH -Youngstown, Ohio
-Baltimore, MD -Detroit, MI -Newark, NJ
-Buffalo, NY -Flint, MI -Philadelphia, PA
-Camden, NJ -Milwaukee, WI -Birmingham, AL
-Canton, OH -Pittsburgh, PA -St. Louis, MO
-Cincinnati, OH -Cleveland, OH -Syracuse, NY
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10 Ways to Regenerate America’s Legacy Cities by Alan Mallach and Lavea Brachman
The truth is the silver-bullet syndrome can inhibit revitalization.
A mega-project can become an important asset, yet it is not a strategy for change in itself, unless it is integrated into larger schemes to make a meaningful contribution to the city’s future.
Also, it is usually a very costly undertaking that these cities can ill afford.
What’s needed: a more incremental approach built on collaboration and partnerships, combined with a fresh appreciation of existing assets.
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Five Ways to Regenerate America’s Legacy Cities
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1. Have faith in downtowns
• A central core with density, a walkable, urban texture and proximity to major institutions and employers, is a powerful attraction for young single people and couples, and a strong basis for residential redevelopment
• Set a friendly regulatory environment for infill redevelopment, reinvent public spaces, and encourage private market re-use of older buildings
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2. Sustain viable neighborhoods • Build partnerships with
neighborhood associations and CDCs to implement multifaceted neighborhood strategies that draw demand, rebuild housing markets and address destabilizing elements such as crime, foreclosure, and property abandonment
3. Don’t be afraid to demolish • Repurposing large
inventories of vacant land strategically is a major springboard for change in heavily disinvested areas
• Cities should explore large-scale reconfiguration of land uses, including the use of vacant land properties for public open space, urban agriculture, or storm water management
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4. Reinvent the economic base • Not every city can become
the next bio-tech capital • Honest assessment of local
assets and regional competitive advantages can help build new export-oriented economies
• Partner with local educational institutions and major employers like hospitals – “eds and meds” – to build workforce development and a competitive regional labor market
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5. Make sure all city residents benefit from change • Engaging residents,
and providing the educational and workforce development systems they need to become competitive, can build a stronger city for everyone
6. Use economic growth to increase community and resident well-being
• Build on the city’s human capital by increasing education
• Adding city residents to the labor market will demand greater regional employment strategies, which in turn creates more job growth in the city
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7. Build stronger local governance and partnerships
• Centralized leadership, such as with a strong mayor, is not the only answer
• Look to other institutions, such as nonprofit sectors (eds or meds)
• Forge public-private partnerships
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8. Build stronger ties between legacy cities and their regions
• Consider rebalancing the relationship between the city and its region, perhaps through new forms of governance
• This has the potential to reduce costs and leverage funds for strategic investments
• It also encourages jurisdictions to bolster the wider economy
• And it can level the playing field and incentivize policy makers
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9. Make change happen through strategic incrementalism
• Avoid grandiose proposals that fly in the face of what’s possible
• Meld long-term strategic vision with incremental process for change
• Don’t get stuck on creating a formal plan, which could be a diversion or impediment
• Explore multiple, flexible processes
• Over time, incremental improvements can become transformational
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10. Rethink state and federal policy toward legacy cities
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• State and federal policies should not favor suburban over urban or one-size fits all programs that can hinder revitalization
• All levels of government must rethink how they address these cities
America’s legacy cities were once the great economic engines of this country. The right mixture of new forms and directions, fueled by their powerful assets and historic can-do culture of achievement, can provide the springboard for a new era of prosperity.
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All photos courtesy of iStock.