[p2p-research] resilient detroit

Michel Bauwens michelsub2004 at gmail.com
Thu Jul 1 06:20:40 CEST 2010


 A RESILIENT DETROIT?<http://globalguerrillas.typepad.com/globalguerrillas/2010/06/journal-resilient-detroit.html>

*We have a downtown core and then we clearly have an outer ring, the
question is how do you link those two?*" Douglass Diggs, interim executive
director Detroit Land Bank (in charge of Detroit's downsizing).
http://globalguerrillas.typepad.com/

*Here's a very short post on new twist on a conventional approach (not my
usual fare) to revitalize Detroit.  It's also a way to prototype methods of
building resilient communities without going too far outside of mainstream
thinking.*

Current efforts to revitalize Detroit appear to be a mix of ad hoc green
approaches (urban gardens, etc.) and traditional commercial development.
That's not going to turn the city's wealth creation engine back on. What's
needed is a rethink of how a city produces wealth and becomes economically
vibrant.

A good place to start is with the urbanist Jane Jacobs.  Her analysis showed
that the wealth engine of a city is a bootstrap called import replacement.
Essentially, a city become economically vibrant by finding ways to locally
produce the things it is currently importing. Within a global environment
where physical distance is becoming increasingly expensive (fuel and
overhead) and virtual distance is becoming increasingly free (bandwidth and
scale factor), the imports to replace will increasingly be food, energy, and
manufactured products.  Produce these locally.  The most valuable exports
will be virtual.  Simply, make this easier to do.  This is exactly what a
resilient community does.

So, the best way to restart Detroit's wealth engine is to foster the
development of resilient, economically vibrant, communities -- that produce
most of the food, energy, and products that they consume and export virtual
products/services -- in the blighted area that surrounds the shrinking urban
core.  This turns the city core into the hub for the services that require a
large population base to support (from entertainment to medicine).

How to build them?  These communities should be specifically designed
to attract two types:


   - The globally competitive telecommuter that will draw in wealth from
   global sources and
   - the food, energy, and micro-manufacturing entrepreneurs/workers that
   will build the innovative economic ecosystem required for local production.

Both are types that want to live within a resilient community.

NOTE:  think in terms of new rules + Duany's agricultural
urbanism<http://globalguerrillas.typepad.com/globalguerrillas/2010/06/agricultural-urbanism.html>
+
local energy + micro-manufacturing + walkable + ubiquitous/massive bandwidth
+ local currency...

Sheldon?
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