USDN Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities 6.16-FEIDENLegacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 1
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities
After Action Report
Albany, Burlington, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Milwaukee, Northampton, and St. Louis
USDN Peer Learning Exchange
Call them post-industrial cities, rust belt, shrinking cities, weak-market cities, or legacy cities; they are all the
cities where one sector of the economy, typically industrial, was once a primary economic engine but no
longer serves that role. Many of these cities’ challenges are shared by other cities, be it a period of
disinvestment in urban centers or other disruptive economic changes.
The terms are not synonymous (post-industrial is just that, while legacy cities or shrinking cites have lost
significant part of their population and economic activity and are the worst hit of the post-industrial
communities, and weak-market cities have just lost their strong market which once supported them). For that
matter, the terms are not even that accurate (e.g., Cleveland and Milwaukee remain proudly industrial cities
even while dealing with huge disruptive changes) with the term “Legacy Cities” becoming pejorative, when all
of us are proud of our legacies and the great communities that they have created.
In weak-market cities the market is not strong enough to backfill all of the lost jobs, economic activity and
wealth. New York City, for example, had a very large industrial sector that declined, but it doesn’t show up on
anyone’s list as a legacy city, a shrinking city, or a weak-market city because it found new activity (most
significantly finance and service) to replace those lost industrial jobs and allow the economy to continue to
grow. All of our cities have some weak market areas and limited or no growth, but all of us have some areas
and sectors with strong markets.
The commonalities for the peer-learning exchange communities, and for some other USDN communities, are
disruptive economic change and a period where growth is no longer the dominant paradigm.
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 2
Some post-industrial cities are spectacularly successful, think Pittsburg with its high quality of life, and some
are even growing again, while others are still struggling. All, however, have a legacy of the loss of a major part
of their industrial sector, manufacturing, shipping, or mineral extraction and processing and have
infrastructure that was designed to serve some uses that are no longer there.
Urban core area decline in post-industrial cities is driven by larger economic trends and large-scale industrial
restructuring. In many cities, decline is spread the entire urban metropolitan area. In many other cities,
however, especially in the United States, suburban flight from urban core areas to suburban areas has
exasperated the problem. In those cities there may be localized and devastating disinvestment even if their
metropolitan regions have overall population and economic growth. In communities with highly fractured
political jurisdictions, the loss of tax revenue and the lack of tax base sharing makes the winners and the
losers all the more apparent.
Planners and sustainability directors embrace the concept of social equity:
“Every life has equal value,” Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation,
“Black lives matter,” from the Trayvon Martin and then the Ferguson protests, and
“These cities matter…legacy cities matter,” Mallach and Scoresone (2011).
These seem like different stories, human lives mattering and cities mattering, but they are linked. When we
talk about equity issues it is hard not to notice that legacy cities, at least in the United States, have far more
than their share of poverty and have a higher ratio of people of color, and yet far less of national and state
resources than they need. As a nation, our commitment to valuing human capital, locational benefits, and
infrastructure in post-industrial and shrinking cities is embarrassingly small, harming not only those cities but
their region and our national competitiveness.
While legacy, post-industrial, shrinking, and weak-market cities have some different challenges than other
cities and other USDN cities, the lessons about addressing social inequities and intra-urban inconsistencies in
public and private investment apply to all urban areas. The seven USDN communities participating in this
peer learning exchange have vastly different sets of issues (e.g., some communities contain almost no vacant
and abandoned properties and others have many thousands of such properties), but they all suffer from
public and private underinvestment in some areas, functionally obsolete infrastructure, social inequities,
workforce training needs, and an inability to rely solely on market-driven growth to rebuild. Every community
has some extremely successful neighborhoods attracting new investment and urban vibrancy. Some of the
communities, however, also suffer from extreme disinvestment in some neighborhoods with so many vacant
and abandoned property that the property values of adjacent properties are severely depressed, even when
those adjacent properties are well maintained, thwarting investment and breeding blight.
The literature scan at the end of this report summarizes many of the lessons and best practices from other
communities. Our participating communities mostly validated those lessons and best practices. In our
discussions, our participants found a few commonalities:
1. Downtowns: No community can be vibrant and healthy without vibrant downtowns and commercial
centers. Even in the depth of our challenges, all of our communities are making progress and are
attracting new investors and residents into these areas.
2. Community Equity: No community can be healthy if success only exists in a few isolated commercial
and residential neighborhoods. All of our communities are searching for ways to spread the benefits
throughout our communities and have built enormous institutional commitment to equity.
3. Place Making and History: Our communities have rich histories, cultures, architectural and built
resources, natural resources, and human capital which provide the fuel for making us better communities.
We need to develop our communities building on these unique resources and creating attractive
neighborhoods and communities, and not risk creating sterile development and investment that does not
reflect on who we are.
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 3
4. Vision: Whether we are growing slowly (none of us are fast growing communities) or shrinking (and
trying to shrink gracefully), some of our greatest success comes from working with our communities to
create shared aspirational but achievable visions and not just responding to a series of events.
5. Creative Approaches and Capacity Building: Although virtually every community in country
complains about a lack of resources, our bottom line is that collectively our communities have less than
average resources. This challenge, however, helps ignite our passion, make us scrappy, creative and
entrepreneurial, and helped us have greater success per dollar invested than most communities. We need
to continue to build strong and lean institutions to move forward.
6. Collaboration: Collaboration across different sectors of the community (e.g., non-profits, for-profits,
grant-makers, universities, institutions) is always important in any community, but especially so in
communities with limited resources and major transformative needs.
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 4
City of Albany, NY Crystal Ball Report
Kate Lawrence, Sustainability Planner, City of Albany
This exchange provided a valuable opportunity to discuss sustainability issues with other cities that, like
Albany, face issues relating to being a post-industrial, financially-strapped city. Advancing sustainability in a
city like Albany, Cleveland, or St. Louis, where a host of financial and social concerns volley for dominance, is
very different from advancing sustainability in an affluent, growing city. Certain things that are possible in
growing cities are just not possible, or are much more difficult, in legacy cities.
This peer exchange allowed me the opportunity to make and strengthen connections with the sustainability
directors at these other legacy cities and discuss similar challenges. I anticipate that I will be much more likely
because of this exchange to reach out to these connections for advice on issues I may be facing. Knowing the
similarity of Albany’s situation to that of one of these other legacy cities is very valuable.
I also appreciated hearing about the various initiatives that the other cities are doing. I was especially
interested in hearing about projects like St. Louis’ butterfly garden initiative and Milwaukee’s Basetern
technology, which are innovative solutions that not only work well despite financial constraints but seem to
actually thrive because of financial constraints (i.e. these approaches only exist because an innovative solution
needed to be found that would overcome financial barriers). Some of these initiatives seem like they may be a
great fit for Albany and I look forward to trying to implement them, or projects inspired them, in my city.
Anticipated Impacts and Actionable Agenda
Milwaukee’s Basetern technology – The Basetern technology that Matt Howard from Milwaukee presented
could be a useful tool for our Water Department. We have a lot of issues with aging water infrastructure and
the need to reduce our combined sewer overflow. We also have some vacant buildings that might be
strategically located near areas of flooding. Once I receive the slides from Matt’s presentation I will forward
them to our Water Department for consideration.
St. Louis Vacant Property Competition – I think a similar project could work in Albany. We don’t have as
much vacant property as St. Louis, but I think that this could still work on a smaller scale. I will discuss this
opportunity with the Albany Land Bank.
St. Louis butterfly garden initiative (“Milkweeds for Monarchs”) – I loved this initiative because it
accomplished so much with so little: it improved habitat for butterflies, brought the community together, and
educated the public. The City of Albany doesn’t have monarch butterflies, but a similar fun approach could
be used to get people to plant rain gardens or native plantings. I plan to discuss St. Louis’ success with the
Albany County Soil and Water District and the Sustainability Advisory Committee.
Cleveland’s Urban Ag Innovation Zone – the City of Albany does not have as much vacant land as
Cleveland, but there are opportunities to create a cohesive urban agriculture initiative on vacant land. I will
keep thinking about how Albany might do something similar to Cleveland.
Sustainable Cleveland yearly strategies and outreach materials – I was really impressed with Sustainable
Cleveland’s outreach materials and its yearly focus areas. I am definitely inspired to create better materials and
establish better messaging, including easy takeaways like Cleveland’s Climate Action Plan one-pager.
Cleveland’s vacant lot workbook – this workbook is a great resource. I would love to replicate something like
it for Albany in the future.
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 5
Burlington, VT Crystal Ball Report
Kirsten Merriman Shapiro, Special Projects Manager, Burlington, VT
This exchange was a very valuable opportunity to discuss sustainability issues with other cities that face
similar issues relating to being a post-industrial and a financially-strapped city. Advancing sustainability in a
city like Burlington, Vermont which is constrained for growth outward by other communities, presents
challenges such as only the properties for redevelopment are often the most challenging Brownfields to
redevelop and require active partnerships with the state, city, developer and often EPA.
This peer exchange provided the opportunity to discuss similar challenges with other legacy communities and
connect with other sustainability directors at these other legacy cities. This was a very useful exchange with a
great deal of value gained from other communities that were struggling with similar situations as legacy cities.
There is much that was learned from this exchange and can be brought back to Burlington to try some of
these ideas.
Anticipated Impacts and Actionable Agenda
ECO-Districts
This idea seems ripe for discussion in Burlington’s currently ongoing planning discussion for the south end of
the city (http://www.burlingtonvt.gov/planBTV/SE ). This area has been a focus of a variety of good jobs,
both blue and white collar jobs for Burlington. Burlington’s south end of the city has stormwater and waste
water capacity issues. I think seeing a modified eco district in Cleveland was inspiring.
Cleveland’s Climate Action Plan - yearly themes
Sustainable Cleveland yearly strategies and outreach materials inspired me to see Burlington develop better
outreach materials (simple actions and supporting info) and create a five year outreach effort with yearly focus
areas. Burlington has an adopted Climate Action Plan, but making this more real for individual citizens and
businesses along with coordinating with our current Stormwater efforts in the near term is critical. This may
be just what is needed to bring this to the forefront of the administration’s efforts and connect in discreet and
concrete ways with the community.
Enhancement of greenways that support plant and animal vitality and success in urban areas
Catherine Warner from St. Louis shared a successful community engagement and ecological restoration
project called Milkweeds for Monarchs. Burlington is not so clearly on the monarch butterfly’s migration
path, but it begs the question of what Burlington can be doing in terms of our Parks system and various
partnerships to be thinking about sustainability and resiliency for plant and animal ecosystems.
Green Building Tax Abatement
Tax abatements and different green standards that can be linked to them are always a tricky discussion,
however, it is clear that if communities engage in robust discussions about these benefits that an appropriate
community specific approach can be realized and potentially included into the new form based code.
Park Score
It seems like using Park Score over just proximity to green space is a higher quality indicator. I will be
encouraging Burlington’s Park’s department to look at this as they complete their master planning process.
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 6
Cincinnati, OH Crystal Ball Report
Larry Falkin, Director of Office of Environment and Sustainability, Cincinnati, OH
This exchange was a very valuable opportunity to discuss sustainability issues with other cities that face
similar issues relating to being a post-industrial and a financially-strapped city. Advancing sustainability in a
city like Cincinnati requires a persistent focus on solutions that make economic as well as environmental
sense, and take into account the limited assets of both the City and its private partners.
This peer exchange provided the opportunity to discuss similar challenges with other legacy communities and
connect with other sustainability directors at these other legacy cities. This was a very useful exchange with a
great deal of value gained from other communities that were struggling with similar situations as legacy cities.
There is much that was learned from this exchange that will be useful in Cincinnati, and personal
relationships were developed that will be useful in thinking through future initiatives.
Anticipated Impacts and Actionable Agenda
Cleveland’s Climate Action Plan - yearly themes
Cincinnati’s Sustainability Office often has the mindset that once we begin doing something, it is an
admission of failure to ever stop doing it. Cleveland’s focus on yearly themes is a great way of refocusing on
the natural lifecycle of an initiative, with a beginning, a middle, and an end. Cincinnati may emulate the
approach of selecting annual themes for its work, but will certainly be more intentional about sunsetting
programs when they are yielding diminishing returns.
Milwaukee’s BaseTerns
Like many legacy cities, Cincinnati is under a federal consent decree to address overflows from the combined
sewer system. Building structures to provide temporary holding capacity for stormwater can be expensive,
and out of character with the locations where the surge capacity is needed. Milwaukee’s model for converting
basement cavities from demolished structures into cisterns for holding stormwater has been shared with
Cincinnati’s Metropolitan Sewer District, and is likely to be utilized in Cincinnati in appropriate locations.
Scrappy Cities
There was considerable discussion about how to define the group of cities at this peer exchange. We spoke of
legacy cities, post-industrial cities, and weak market cities, among other potential labels. For various reasons,
none of these seemed appropriate as a branding device for Cincinnati. The phrase that most resonated was
“scrappy cities.” It carries an implication of toughness and resilience that fits Cincinnati’s personality. It
clearly communicates the lack of economic resources that is a constraint, while expressing pride in the
amount that is accomplished despite those limitations. The description of Cincinnati as a scrappy city will
likely be used in various discussions and presentations.
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 7
Cleveland, OH--Crystal Ball Report
Jenita McGowan, Chief of Sustainability, Cleveland
The City of Cleveland was pleased to host the USDN Legacy Cities Peer Learning Exchange. I thought the
exchange was quite valuable and there are some key takeaways that Cleveland will look into further.
Anticipated Impacts and Actionable Agenda
The Basetern
Matt Howard from Milwaukee shared an innovative use for basements of demolished houses. They retain the
foundation and then use the basement as a cistern for stormwater management. This treatment reduces the
need for fill when demolishing a house and reduces the costs of creating retention basins by using the existing
basin. Cleveland plans to share this design with the Northeast Ohio Regional Sewer District and a local
watershed group that is doing land acquisition, demolition and green infrastructure projects in riparian zones.
Milkweeds for Monarchs
Catherine Warner from St. Louis shared a successful community engagement and ecological restoration
project called Milkweeds for Monarchs. Cleveland is also on the monarch butterfly’s migration path and this
could be a great initiative to replicate in 2017, our Year of Vibrant Greenspace. We like this idea because with
just a little support, a broad group of Clevelanders could easily participate and make an impact. We could do
this in collaboration with an annual event we have called Garden Walk Cleveland and provide yard signs for
residents and businesses that participate.
Green Building Tax Abatement
We had a robust discussion about tax abatements and different green standards that can be linked to them. In
Cleveland one of our next steps will be updating our standards to the more recent Enterprise Green
Communities. We may also look into adding other standards such as Living Buildings which is what
Cincinnati accepts for their green building tax abatement.
Park Score
In Cleveland, we measure proximity to greenspace in our indicators dashboard. However, after a discussion
with this group, I think that Park Score is a better indicator in terms of measuring true access to greenspace,
not just proximity.
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 8
Milwaukee, WI Crystal Ball Report
Matt Howard, Sustainability Director, Milwaukee, WI
In May 2015, sustainability directors from the cities of Northampton, Cleveland, St. Louis, Albany,
Cincinnati, Milwaukee and Burlington met in Cleveland for a USDN Peer Exchange among post-industrial
and/or legacy cities. Prior to the peer exchange we reviewed a literature scan and prepared presentations to
share. During the peer exchange we viewed presentations, toured relevant projects and areas in Cleveland,
and had opportunities to get to know our peers better in an informal setting.
Anticipated Impacts and Actionable Agenda
• Direct learning and information exchange from/with peer cities is valuable: While national level peer
exchanges are important and provide their own value, it is critical for cities of similar size, socio-
economic backgrounds and industrial legacies to be able to discuss unique experiences in urban
sustainability and redevelopment faced by the peer group.
• Successful models/approaches immediately transferable to Milwaukee: Related to the first take-away, this
unique setting for peer exchanges often leads to easily transferable models of sustainability programs and
initiatives that can have an immediate impact in one’s city.
• Need more visibility for Post-Industrial and Legacy City successes and innovations: Post-Industrial and
Legacy Cities have achieved many successes and sustainability innovations, yet these accomplishment are
often overlooked by national media and peer groups in favor of work being done along the coasts and/or
in the more well-known sustainability cities of North America. This lack of visibility and recognition can
inhibit critical investments and capital needed to keep momentum in these cities that overcame
substantial socio-economic hurdles to develop viable sustainability policies and programs.
• Never enough funding for programs/projects: Post-industrial and Legacy Cities are battling massive loss
of property tax base, industrial base and population shift which leads to ever-shrinking resources for
“non-essential” municipal functions. With better highlighting of successes in these cities, more national
funders would be willing to invest in our peer group and maintain momentum for sustainability programs
and initiatives.
Recommendations/Next Steps
Develop a Legacy City User Group which can better address and coordinate on issues unique to this peer
group; develop a Legacy group innovation and/or media outreach fund to tell the story of this peer group
nationally and continue to fund sustainability innovations of national importance; and schedule regular peer
exchanges amongst the Post-Industrial and Legacy Cities group.
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 9
Northampton, MA Crystal Ball Report
Wayne Feiden, Director of Planning and Sustainability, Northampton, MA
Northampton has successfully undergone a painful transition from an economy heavily dominated by
industry and mental health facilities to a successful, although still challenged, economy dominated by
education, medical, and services. While we have emerged from that transition without some of the problems
that plague some post-industrial cities (e.g., high unemployment and vacant and abandoned properties) we
share some of the other problems (e.g., industrial legacy waste, obsolete infrastructure, and most of all
virtually no growth to drive building new infrastructure). Seeing and hearing how other communities have
addressed those problems was extremely useful.
Anticipated Impacts and Actionable Agenda
Art on Electric Transformers and Traffic Controllers to support transformation
Northampton has a strong focus on the arts, with an Arts and Culture Department and an Arts Council, a
vibrant arts sector, and a downtown whose revitalization began 35 years ago centered in part on the energy
that emerging artist brought to the downtown. Sometimes, however, our focus on arts is about arts for art
sake and we lose track of the transformative nature of arts. I have seen art on electric transformers and traffic
controllers in Boston, Sacramento, and South Lake Tahoe, but sometimes the art is generic and nothing more
than a canvas. I appreciated Cleveland’s thinking about this kind of art as one small step in their effort to
transform uptown—not just art for art’s sake but as a tool for transformation. As a result of these exchange,
Northampton has already begun the effort to do this on a key gateway to the city that we are currently
working on (Pleasant Street).
Incubators and Incubator Landings
Northampton has been fortunate that private sector investments, with very modest strategic public sector
investments, have provided incubator and next-step incubator landings. From the private-sector rehabilitation
of post-industrial brick mill, warehouse, and office space providing market informal incubators to formal
shared workspace providing slightly more formal incubators and to a public sector created industrial park for
next-step incubator landings, the city has been able to limit the need for its investments. Viewing Cleveland’s
Midtown Tech incubator landing and hearing about other incubator efforts makes it clear, however, that our
approach leaves some gaps that we should address.
Gentrification and Displacement
Every successful community, including Northampton, grabbles with how to get reinvestment, higher
property values, and wealth creation (all part of gentrification) without the social and economic displacement
that comes from it. In most of the participating communities this is less of a risk than in communities with
rapid growth and transformation (a former Cleveland planning director addressed us and reported that “there
is no gentrification anywhere in Ohio”), it is clear that in every participating community there are is unequal
distribution of gains and winners and losers. Reflecting on this helps me think more about how do add to
property values and wealth and make sure that all our residents truly benefit.
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 10
St. Louis, MO Crystal Ball Report
Catherine Werner, Sustainability Director, St. Louis
In May 2015, sustainability directors from the cities of Northampton, Cleveland, St. Louis, Albany,
Cincinnati, Milwaukee and Burlington met in Cleveland for a USDN Peer Exchange among postindustrial
and/or legacy cities. Prior to the peer exchange we reviewed a literature scan and prepared presentations to
share. During the peer exchange we viewed presentations, toured relevant projects and areas in Cleveland,
and had opportunities to get to know our peers on a casual basis.
Key Takeaways/Impacts
Finding time to connect with colleagues who are undertaking similar projects and/or are experiencing similar
constraints, is incredibly powerful. I saw numerous parallel situations in Cleveland as there are in St. Louis –
both in terms of assets and opportunities, but especially in terms of challenges and obstacles. It was
significant to both view successes in the face of the challenges and to build rapport with others who are
facing them on a daily basis. Working as a sustainability director in a legacy city is clearly very different than
trying to advance triple bottom line sustainability in strong markets/wealthy(ier)cities. I came away from the
peer exchange with some good ideas (such as the Kinsman community kitchen and eco food truck), plenty of
inspiration (such as the Health Line and the University Circle), and learned about effective
products/programs (such as Base Tern and Innovation Urban Ag project). Perhaps most of all, however, was
having the opportunity to build a solid relationship with my peer legacy city sustainability directors. I would
feel completely comfortable asking for their advice, tapping in to them for suggestions, and would be
delighted to share any ideas or resources I have available, in turn. I came away feeling I have much more in
common with legacy city sustainability directors, such as these, than any that I have met through 5 years of
active involvement with USDN.
Recommendations/Next Steps
My assessment of all legacy city sustainability programs is that they are: (1) doing more with less; and (2)
doing things in very innovative, creative, collaborative ways. I call this being “scrappy.” However, advancing
sustainability on a shoestring, without sufficient support or resources, is incredibly demanding and draining.
And big efforts for legacy cities often lack the sizzle that wealthy cities can develop. Legacy city sustainability
directors can continue to find mutual support in looking to their peers, and I hope there are additional peer
exchanges to continue the conversation. I also suggest that USDN provide infrastructure and financial
support for legacy cities. A Legacy City User Group and a Legacy City Quick Fund would be two
recommendations I have to better position sustainability directors in legacy cities to implement sustainability
programs in the face of the considerable challenges they face.
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 11
Literature Scan
Wayne Feiden, Director of Planning and Sustainability, Northampton, MA
In the United States, the legacy cities are primarily, although certainly not exclusively, in the Northeast and
the Midwest, where the heavy pre-World War II industry was concentrated. Yet these areas contain
unparalleled education and medical institutions, infrastructure, strong culture, and human capita (Mallach,
2012B).
There are four unifying element for the declining and shrinking cities to be successful. They need to change
physically, to accommodate smaller populations, restore both key institutions and city centers or downtowns
as urban anchors, develop change-oriented governance and leadership, and develop stronger urban and
regional partnerships (Mallach, 2012B and Mallach & Branchman, 2013).
The 110th American Assembly (Mallach, 2012B) stresses the need to revitalize American legacy cities, in part
because of the huge sunk investments, the enormous human capital, and because the US needs these
communities to be competitive in the global marketplace, among other reasons. Legacy cities may have
declined, but they have enormous assets. The Assembly’s strategy starts with the need for communities to
work with all of their citizens to develop an informed vision. Such community visions should support
strategies based on market realities and local strengths that focuses on human capital, dense urban cores, and
a positive investment climate. To make this happen, communities must develop civic and governance
capacity, with leadership at all levels, strong and transparent institutions, and improved information
infrastructure. Finally, such visions can only work with supportive partnerships with state and federal
governments and regional partnerships.
The Revitalizing the Legacy Cities of Upstate New York convening (2012) came up with somewhat similar
recommendations, but included a specific action agenda crafted to the small and medium size legacy cities in
that region. Those recommendations include a stronger focus on export economies and international trade
and better workforce development and “cradle-to-career” education, all supported by state government. Such
efforts need to develop a stronger innovation and entrepreneurial culture, replacing the “can’t –do culture” of
line and long time workers. The recommendations highlight the needs to focus on getting vacant properties
back into productive use and to generally implement smart growth, mixed use, and denser urban uses. State
government partners need to reform property tax statutes to make it more expensive to speculate in vacant
land and easier for cities to foreclose. Finally, the recommendations stress that successful cities must be more
sustainable, denser, and with strong anchor institutions.
Many post-industrial cities have population decline and/or economic decline (hence shrinking city) or have
stable none growing populations, but many have turned a corner and are growing. Urban decline may be
primarily, although not exclusively, in large urban areas, as in Great Britain, or in smaller cities, as in France
(Cunningham-Sabot and Fol, 2009), or it may be in both, as is apparent in some US cities.
For all the discussion about how the Internet setting us free and let people live where they want to, well-
educated professionals in both Europe and the United States have been flocking to large and medium cities
or clusters where there better employment options, restaurants, service and retail, and intellectual clustering
than small cities (Renn, 2013). In Denmark, with a very slow growth rate, the Copenhagen metropolitan
region and the Aarhus to Vejle corridor are getting almost all of the growth, and other small cities and towns
throughout the country, industrial centers and rural market towns alike, are shrinking (Peder Duelund
Mortensen, personal communication). Quality of life and economic opportunities are typically the most
important drivers, with the most dramatic growth in the most successful cities and the least growth or decline
in less successful cities, often smaller and post-industrial cities (Renn, 2013) .
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 12
Many post-industrial cities have to address huge challenges of fewer jobs, fewer people, less economic
activity, more vacant parcels, but on-going fixed costs (e.g., bond debt and pension costs). In most states, a
decline in the value of property automatically leads to a decline in property tax receipts. This means that the
communities that need taxes the most to provide services to a smaller population and to invest in
revitalization are the most fiscally stressed with structural fiscal imbalances. During the Great Recession, these
issues were compounded by losses in revenue at the state level, leading to a reduction in local aid and state
transfers to local governments. Add to that the huge vacancy rates and decreases in income and spending
caused by shrinking populations and economic activities in many post-industrial cities, again leading to less
property and other local taxes, and it is truly a perfect storm. An accounting of all of these losses in ten small
post-industrial cities in Pennsylvania and Delaware is unremittingly depressing, with lower wages, lower
property values, lower economic activity, huge structural fiscal imbalances, and inadequate funding of
community development needs (Wardrip, 2014). The same story could be told of many legacy small, medium
and large cities. To make matters worse, of course, the most stressed cities have the highest borrowing costs.
Wardrip uses seven indicators that can be applied to any city to allow a standardized comparison. All the kind
of questions that debt rating agencies use:
1. Adequacy of city revenue (taxes, fees, grants, inter-government transfers) to cover expenses (ratio
revenue to expenses per capita). This is a measure of solvency, the ability to pay for needed services.
2. Adequacy of city rainy day fund (ratio of unreserved balance to general fund revenues).
3. Amount of city debt relative to city assets (debt to asset ratio).
4. Amount of city debt relative to population (net direct per capita debt).
5. Budget dedicated to covering debt (ratio of current debt service to total government expenses).
6. Funding of fund pension obligations (pension funded ratio).
7. Budget consumed by pension (ratio pension and retirement expenditures to general fund expenditures).
Legacy cities have, for the most part, a structural imbalance based both on their history and on the way urban
finances are structured. These issues threaten to leave the cities behind, with little hope for the residents and
no economic vibrancy for the nation- a dystopian view for our cities and our nation (Mallach and Scorsone,
2011).
Short term solvency requires balanced operating budgets, but if thriving cities also need capital expenditures
in infrastructure and large investments needed for the quality of life that residents and investors need as an
investment in the future. Post-industrial cities, however, tend to have obsolete infrastructure built a long time
ago for a larger city that has to be paid for by far fewer residents in a community with lower property values
and many vacant properties, creating an unsupportable burden on the remaining and often already struggling
residents and businesses. The “solutions” often suggested of cost cutting, restructuring, or better
management do not address the structural issues of fewer people, less economic activity, large amounts of
vacant properties, and lower property values supporting the infrastructure of a much larger city. Those
fundamental issues must be addressed and restructured to help legacy cities thrive (Mallach and Scorsone,
2011).
The service sector is growing worldwide, and post-industrial cities are no exception. The challenge in weak-
market cities is that the service sector is not growing fast enough to replace the lost jobs and economic
activity associated with manufacturing. Hence the rise in social problems, from unemployment to welfare
dependency (Ploger, 2012).
The recovery process is almost always a very long process. Communities are in recovery when they can report
that “the worst is over,” that there is an accepted and consensus new vision, a sense that the future is in our
hands, and no longer a population simply waiting for the old good days to return. A shared vision may take
many different forms (policy statements, statutory plans, aspirational plans, but it is the hope and the shared
mission that starts moving communities forward (Ploger, 2012).
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 13
These visions can be home grown but many cities build on the ideas of prominent scholars. For example,
Leipzig, Germany (Michael Porter’s viable economic clusters), Saint-Etienne, France (Richard Florida’s
creative class and the need for talent, technology, and tolerance), and Bilbao, Spain (Manuel Castell’s
networks and hubs in a globalized world) (Ploger, 2012).
Such visions are actually implemented through a variety of techniques, with some form of public-private
partnership becoming a dominant paradigm. Such partnerships are very effective, but of course the devil is in
the details. (Ploger, 2012).
Large scale project have been embraced to put a community “back on the map.” These include the
Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao (sometimes referred to as the Bilbao effect, the search for the wow project
that will transform a community), new metro and new airport in Bilbao, winter Olympics in Turin, Titanic
Quarter in Belfast. The projects are almost always controversial because of concerns about the investment
risk and who actually gains (Ploger, 2012).
There have been some great success stories in the United States at both the city-scale (e.g., Providence,
Pittsburgh) and at the project scale. Europe, dealing with many of the same post-industrial challenges and also
often dealing with demographic decline, provides some excellent lessons.
Although Europe generally has a stronger social welfare system, willingness to spend, and commitment to city
center than the United States, making some aspects of regeneration easier, many if not most of the lessons
from Europe are useful to the United States. First, most American cities should be denser and more compact,
providing the interactions that make cities efficient. Even in shrinking population cities the urban core areas
should be denser, even if there are more parks and open space to absorb decreased populations. Second,
public space and the public realm should be higher quality, providing the quality of life that residents and
investors crave. Third, the environment, from parks to clean water and air, needs to be improved. Fourth,
cities need higher standards of urban design. Fifth, urban transit systems need to work better to provide
opportunities for urban workforce to work in any newly created projects (Cadell, Falk, and King, 2008).
British-funded research examined three continental European partial success stories (Cadell, Falk and King,
2008), with some similarities to American post-industrial cities large and small.
Norra Älvstranden in Gothenburg (500,000 people) Sweden, a major shipbuilding yard that closed in the
late 1970s and now generates more housing, jobs and living environment than the site ever did as a
shipyard, obviously benefiting from being a waterfront area.
Kop van Zuid in Rotterdam (600,000 people), the Netherlands, a dock area abandoned when the port
moved that has become a vibrant mixed-use waterfront.
Roubaix (100,000 people) in the Lille metropolitan area (1.1 million people) in France, a former textile
town which became run down with the collapse of the industry in the 1970s, and is similar to some US
post-industrial cities where the entire economic engine collapsed. Its regeneration effort was likewise
broader, focusing on a tax-incentivized Enterprise Zone, and spending to improve housing, the retail
core of the city, the public realm, and culture.
A separate study looked at seven British and European cities (Power et al, 2009 and Power, Ploger and
Winkler, 2008), that were previously industrial powerhouses dominated by a few very large firms and
industries, with industrial collapse, population decline, and abandoned and decaying surplus market and
public housing in the 1970s and 1980s, a similar story line to some of the larger American post-industrial
collapses:
Sheffield, England, UK, previously dominated by steel, cutlery, and tools, which largely collapsed with
the collapse of coal and steel industries in northern England. It is investing in its urban core with a
number of building restoration projects and public transit to restore the city center as the center of
vibrancy.
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 14
Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK, dominated by the world’s largest ship building firm, now failed, and
exacerbated by the sectarian and political Troubles in Northern Ireland. It has built housing and cultural
spaces in the neutral (not divided by sectarian divide) former industrial waterfront.
Bremen, Germany, previously dominated by two huge building firms, which both closed, with core
elements of its former medieval center. It has invested heavily in technology and education and in the city
center.
Leipzig, Germany, a former manufacturing center, has restored its dramatic railway station, invested in
the city center and in inner city housing, to make the city attractive to live in again.
Torino, Italy, a former car manufacturing center, with its Baroque city center remaining. It hosting of the
2006 Winter Olympics was its big bang investment but at the other end of the spectrum it has invested in
business incubators to support start-ups and university spinoffs.
Saint Étienne, France, an industrial center dominated by arms, bicycle and other manufacturing. Its
creation of a Design Village as a redevelopment builds on its unique industrial history and its investment
in public transit makes it an easier city to navigate.
Bilbao, Spain, dominated by an industrial working port, with most of the industries and users now closed,
with elements of its former medieval city center remaining. It has relied heavily on cultural investment;
the now much copied Bilbao effect that began with the Guggenheim Museum, the Calatrava Bridge and
city center and transit investments.
The magnitude of the overbuilding of public housing, on the fringes of urban areas instead of in them, is
perhaps slightly different than the United States where housing was more scattered and slums and blight
effects public housing and to a large degree private housing, but the problems of decaying slums and blight
are remarkably similar except for the tenure. Most of the cities studied experienced political unrest, for
economic reasons in all of the cities, and additional political reasons in Northern Ireland (sectarian and
political) and in Spain (separatist movements). Although the nature of the stress is somewhat difference, the
political unrest has much in common with racial unrest and violence in the US. Likewise, all of the
communities, as in the US, were left with a large degree of obsolete and often undesired infrastructure and
contaminated public resources, especially brownfields (hazardous releases) and waterways (hazardous releases
and nutrients). As a result, almost all of the communities made investments in workforce training and, with
mixed success, in trying to reintegrate marginalized populations.
Small cities are inherently different than large cities, especially in their ability to galvanize national attention
and attract capital. In a study of 13 small cities in the Third Federal Reserve District (Delaware, New Jersey
and Pennsylvania), however, the outcomes of small heavily industrial cities (over 25% in manufacturing at its
peak) looks very similar to that of large heavily industrial cities. 13 industrial cities that were dominated by a
single industry or business and cities that were much more diversified declined dramatically, with major loss
of the existing population (sometimes backfilled by immigrants moving in) and existing economic activity,
leaving behind cities with low skill levels, high unemployment, low income, low property values, and much of
the remaining economic activity moving away from the central cities to the suburbs. Even where significant
amounts of specialty industrial activity remains, it tends to be productive businesses with relatively few
employees. With white flight to the suburbs, and people of color and new immigrants being left behind, the
communities are increasingly become poorer minority majority communities (Mallach, 2012A).
Some of the small industrial cities Mallach (2012A) examined are “rebounding,” driven in part by locational
advantages. Some are “declining but stable” with much smaller populations but less of the social deprivations
typically associated with precipitous declines. Some are “coping” with relatively strong downtowns and the
potential to grow economically. Finally, some are “struggling,” suffering on most indices of deprivation and
few hopeful signs on the horizon.
For all their uniqueness, post-industrial cities large (Mallach & Brachman, 2013) and small (Mallach, 2012A)
have some consistent needs to achieve economic and social stability and health:
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 15
1. Regenerate the vibrancy of downtowns and city centers.
2. Regenerate neighborhoods throughout cities.
3. Repurpose vacant land, as development, parks or other uses, but not simply as vacant land.
4. Make cities competitive and the center of economic activity, rebuilding economic, social, and cultural ties
within their metropolitan areas.
5. Rebuild the middle class, with more economically diverse, skilled, and competitive workforce, built by
education and communities of choice that people want to live in, instead of simply being stranded
behind.
6. Integrate new immigrant and migrant populations to address racial and ethnic disparities. Newcomers
bring diversity and new energy, but may add to the racial and ethnic divides and add new strains to
already severely stressed communities, unless active integration is encouraged.
7. Leverage private investment with city assets, public resources and partnerships. Partnerships must
provide some real benefits to those with the greatest needs.
8. Build and sustain leadership and partnerships at all levels, political, social, economic, cultural, to take
control of the narrative and move the community forward.
9. Reform state and federal policies to help address the structural imbalances and market failures.
Post-industrial cities cannot possibly fund all the investments needed, but they can and are using public
investments to build momentum and catalyze private investment. Private investment may have less immediate
trickle down benefits for the most socially marginalized populations, but none of the cities can recover
without huge private investments. All of the cities are still struggling, but less so than at the time of industrial
collapse.
There are a few common lessons that apply to post-industrial cities (for example, Cadall, Falk & King, 2008;
Power, Ploger & Winkler, 2008, Mallach & Brachman, 2013)).
First, and perhaps most importantly, the every city, but especially struggling post-industrial cities, need to find
their unique niche and culture and build on their own unique assets. Every city needs to embrace that they are
a distinctive place, and not simply try to create a generic city or adopt the cool approach that worked
somewhere else. Culture is perhaps the most cross cutting aspect of regeneration, of making a city “cool” and
finding its own niche. Culture can’t be simply focus on bringing culture to the masses but on finding that
unique voice that resonates with the community and gives the community ownership of its narrative. It can
also be one of the great equalizer in cities that will always have significant economic differences.
Second, urban regeneration efforts that bring in footloose and wealthy residents and businesses to a
revitalized downtown and/or urban waterfront are critical investment that provide jobs and density. There
are very few, if any, examples of communities that have thrived without these investments. At the same time,
however, these steps are not enough to regenerate a city to serve the entire population. Investments in cities
need to always include education and employment skills, from specific work skills to development of
entrepreneurial skills, neighborhood revitalization, and clear community benefits for the entire city.
Community benefits agreements often part of redevelopment projects in the United States and are enshrined
in British law (Section 106 Town and Country Planning Act). They are often a part of urban redevelopment
in the US, but perhaps not often enough.
Third, no community can thrive as a sustainable and healthy urban area without a vibrant city center, a place
where the community comes together and where economic and social encounters and magnified.
Fourth, social cohesion and inclusion and the need to view the city as one city, not divided by race, ethnic
divides, or geography, requires a wide variety of approaches, from ensuring that all benefit from development,
including work force training, to thinking about shared culture and excitement. (See for example
Derry~Londerry’s One Plan).
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 16
Fifth, recognize that cities are in competition at all levels. Investments that make a specific area more
desirable for residents, investors, economic activity, and visitors are great, but cities are in competition and
cities need to be restructured to attract capital and economic activity that would otherwise go to other cities
and to create wealth that would otherwise not be created. Identifying the source of that capital and economic
activity and how to attract it is critical.
Sixth, focus on cooperation and working together. Although cities compete, metropolitan regions rise and fall
together and need to work together. Likewise, within each city, it is critical to build cooperation across city
departments and agencies, non-profit/third sector, and private sector. Sometimes this will require tax-base
sharing, shared infrastructure, or support for regional taxing mechanisms. In the United States in particular
cooperation is needed for transportation resources that are controlled by metropolitan planning organizations
(MPOs). Cooperation is critical at both the metropolitan areas and with state and national entities.
Seventh, political leadership, civic leadership and engagement, risk taking and community buy-in is required
for real success. If political and civic leadership, very broadly defined across the community, is not at least
engaged and involved, projects can only have partial success. Buy- in is at every level, from real decision
making authority at the city government level to very active citizen engagement and empowerment.
Eighth, create attractive and balanced residential neighborhoods and ensure that the benefits of economic
development are shared throughout the community. In almost every American city there is already a
renaissance in downtowns and waterfronts, although often that renaissance is very narrow and does not
spread out from a narrow geographic area. Improving all neighborhoods should be part of any strategy, while
understanding that private sector projects are going to focus on those areas with the greatest return so
benefits will not be equal. Improving neighborhoods must include protection against displacement of those
who live in those neighborhoods. Part of this is ensuring that investments are not seen as one-time projects
but an on-going process and that neighborhoods benefit, for example, from rising tax revenues even if not
from initial private sector investments. Building political, technical, financial and political capacity so first
pebbles in the pond create waves that keep expanding.
Ninth, and perhaps the greatest success that has occurred in those areas undergoing local renaissance is to
invest in high quality infrastructure and public realm, from parks to streetscape to transit. Redevelopment and
recovery is expensive, although far less expensive than letting a city and its residents go to waste, and requires
focus on transit, transport, building stock, and the public realm in all its forms.
Tenth, a strong focus on sustainable development and community resilience, with attention to environmental,
economic, and social resiliency is absolutely critical for cities to work and avoid the next bust cycle.
Environmental legacies (e.g., flooding risks, polluted water, hazardous waste, noise, light), social legacies (e.g.,
a workforce with a narrow skill set and often no-longer socially intact) and economic legacies (e.g.,
concentration of employment in just a few industries and employers and in technologies that are shrinking
and not growing) must all be addressed.
Finally, an all of the above strategy is often needed. Invest in big catalytic projects, rebuild waterfronts,
developer town centers and downtowns, identify unique cultural and place-making projects, invest in
neighborhoods, and invest in people.
Much of the literature and community experience highlights the potential transformative nature of art and
culture in post-industrial cities. Art can be transformative and change people’s mental image about their city
or someone else’s city. Creating art adds to the uniqueness, vitality, and vibrancy of the city. The Community
Partnership for Arts and Culture (2008) stresses that art can help post-industrial communities rebuild their
damaged brand, attract other residents and businesses, add an economic niche, and help property values and
the sense of place. Post-industrial communities are uniquely attractive to artists and artist-based community
development (ABCD) because of the lower cost of living, the abundant, interesting, and affordable work
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 17
spaces, and the strong arts and culture networks that already exist. Although lower rents and available space
make it easier for artists, it is still important to ensure that regulatory systems, affordable housing and artists’
space, markets, and community and political support networks all support artists (Community Partnership for
Arts and Culture (2008).
While the “Bilbao approach” can become a white elephant if not carefully applied, art and culture are clearly a
critical part of every success story. Art and culture that are generic, however, don’t ring true and can fail to
ignite people’s imaginations. Communities must build on their own stories. They can only thrive by finding
their unique history, story, and attribute that attract people to that community (e.g., Renn, 2013; Parker
personal communication 2015).
Urban renewal, urban redevelopment, and urban regeneration have a mixed reputation. Some trace the first
urban redevelopment efforts to Robert Moses, the master builder in New York (e.g., Trueman et al, 2013).
Yet Moses was narrow-mindedness in his focus on redevelopment and transportation systems, displacing
thousands of people from low end but intact neighborhoods in the process. Likewise, the urban renewal
process of the Great Society Program led to some great urban renewals, but it also led to devastating and
massive clearance of intact neighborhoods, in the name of slum clearance, often with no viable plan to
replace that housing and destroying vast tracts of urban America in the process. Urban redevelopment (as it is
used in the US) or urban regeneration (as it is used in Europe) is typically far better than those urban renewal
processes of the 1950s and 1960s. There remains a bias, however, towards big exciting projects in urban
centers over multiple local-serving projects in local neighborhoods and serving residents in outlying areas. If a
project is to be successful, the identity of place, the urban streetscape, and the promotion of physical, mental,
and social wellbeing have to reinforce each other and serve those who live, work, shop, and play. It is this
connection that is most often missing in post-industrial city redevelopment (Trueman et al, 2013). A project
without the rich soul of the city is not contributing to urban health.
Other communities have focused on neighborhood revival, for example Baltimore, Philadelphia, and
Pittsburg as a way to directly improve the lives of many as the building blocks of a community. The effect
may be better living conditions but not necessary any improvement in fundamental social-economic and
racial segregation. (Ploger, 2012).
Skill-training is often a part of response. The challenge is that providing specific training is eminently doable
and effective when a specific job identifies a need or to attract new employer, but providing a new full new
skill set and approach can be more difficult. (Ploger, 2012)
Urban redevelopment and regeneration often is driven by economic models of what may help restore the city
economically. When the benefits of a project are not spatially distributed throughout a community and is not
serving inequities in the greater community, however, it raises questions of whether public dollars are going to
benefit a limited audience with our addressing the needs of all the residents (Agness et al, 2014). Agness
assess projects that are helping small post-industrial cities rebound (Bethlehem and Lancaster, Pennsylvania,
and Wilmington, Delaware), evaluating to what extent development is equitable development with a fair
distribution of benefits.
Arguably, any project that rebuilds a community adds jobs, community economic activity, and wealth
creation. So many redevelopment projects have cleared intact neighborhoods, social systems, and buildings in
the interest of some greater good, creating a healthy cynicism. The best approach is to consider equity from
the beginning of a project, with honest accounting, assessing, and monitoring (Agness et al, 2014). This does
not mean that all projects need to serve all communities or that Not in My Backyard (NIMB) parochial focus
is reasonable. It does mean, however, that objectives should include a “first do no harm” and complete
transparency.
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 18
In planning circles, one of the earliest advocates of such “equity planning” was Norman Krumholz, who as
Cleveland’s planning director (1969-1979) coordinated the Cleveland Policy Planning Report, a plan focused
on concepts of advocacy and equity without the typical spatial focus of most plans at the time. The plan was
required reading for many a planning student and helped promote an equity focus. It did not, however, lead
to more desperately needed investments in Cleveland. The never ending tension is planning circles remains
how to promote equity and encourage investments that strengthen the economy, jobs, and produce wealth.
With income inequality growing the United States, the focus on equity is perhaps on the rise again in planning
circles.
One approach (Agness et al, 2014) to assess equity is to evaluate three areas, inclusive and progressive
community leadership, economic security and opportunity, and stable and supportive quality of life, using
indicators that they created for the project. Other approaches are to use existing indicators developed by third
party assessment tools (e.g., STAR Communities assessments) or other assessment tools (Feiden with Hamin,
2011). Not surprisingly, Agness found that the projects examined (high-end waterfront improvements in
Wilmington, casino at the former Bethlehem Steel site in Bethlehem, and arts as a catalyst for downtown
place-making) had varying degrees of equity benefits, and perhaps less than some other alternative strategies.
They did not examine, however, the amount of public investment and leveraging of private investment for
these projects versus alternative projects that might have greater equity benefits.
Therein lays the tension. Trickle-down economics usually has very little trickle, but it may have great
transformative benefits in creating new investments, and those little trickles hopefully add up.
Some argue that there is a distinction between urban redevelopment (US term) and regeneration (European
term) and urban renewal. Redevelopment or regeneration makes urban centers sustainable and resolves
fundamental structuring challenges of market failures, job loss and disinvestment. Renewal, on the other
hand, focuses on the facelift, usually downtown or on waterfronts, which is not usually equitable, with
gentrification, expensive and exclusive development, privatization of public space, making urban areas less
hospital to the poor, and no change in the quality of life of those left out of the new private economic engine.
Making highly desirable areas desirable again will attract wealth and young creative professionals, but it will
actually reduce the diversity of the city, gentrify desirable areas, drive up the price of housing, and not
fundamentally help a city restructure. Redevelopment and regeneration, on the other hand, add to the
economic diversity of and diversity of uses in a city and provide a more fundamental restructuring (Granger,
2010).
13% of urban regions in the US (and far more individual cities within urban areas) and 54% or urban regions
in the European Union have lost population (Wiechmann and Pallagst, 2012). While many cities have
experienced a hollowing out of their downtown while populations grow in the suburbs, shrinkage in entire
urban areas indicates more fundamental population shrinkage. Driven in the United States by economic and
migration patterns and in Europe by economic and demographic changes, the effects are the same
(Wiechmann and Pallagst, 2012).
Several researchers (Wiechmann and Pallagst, 2012 and Cunningham-Sabot and Fol, 2009, among others)
argue that the growth-centered planning paradigm has been dominant for so long that it is sometimes difficult
for communities to shift their thinking to a “shrinking smart” paradigm. In Germany in particular, until a
decade ago the focus was on growing shrinking areas, even in the former East Germany where most cities
have been shrinking rapidly since reunification. In the US, they argue, the stigma of shrinking cities makes it
hard to shrink smart. Pittsburg, for all its successful focus on shrinking gracefully, also employed at traditional
redevelopment strategy (e.g., Pittsburg’s south side), trying to attract growth even in a shrinking time.
Youngstown, Ohio, has accepted that it will be a smaller city and it should focus on quality of life, not
growth.
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 19
Perhaps a shrinking gracefully (or first admit you have a problem) is the real challenge. Jenita McGowan,
Cleveland’s Chief of Sustainability, refers to it as upside down economics. Not the upside down economics
that the newspapers discuss, where total Wall Street bonuses were double the salary of all full-time minimum
wage workers in the United States (Anderson, 2015), but an upside down economics where the kind of great
urban growth that is private-sector driven in many communities will not happen naturally without help. In a
world of upside down economics and a dramatically smaller populations, Cleveland struggles with how to
keep critical urban densities in its urban core, while accepting lower density, urban gardening, and restored
natural areas in other neighborhoods, using its sale of tax-foreclosed properties through a city-run land bank
as one of its stronger tools (Krohe, 2011).
Some communities have committed to the graceful shrinkage. Youngstown Ohio, for example, has a specific
goal of being a “smaller, greener, cleaner” city (Krohe, 2011). So much so that it has become part of the
circuit of planners traveling internationally to explore solutions for post-industrial cities. (I first heard of
Youngstown’s efforts from a Rotterdam planner at a conference in Pittsburg.) The focus on preventing blight
(Krohe, 2011) is a key part of shrinking gracefully, but even cities not shrinking so gracefully (e.g., Cleveland
and Detroit) have put demolition of abandoned units high on their list. Unlike the urban renewal periods
were intact, albeit desperately poor and bad housing stock, were demolished to make way for the better (that
often never came), this demolition is removal of slums and blight that are not going to be restored.
Baltimore’s “Selling City Owned Properties Efficiently” focuses on putting reclaimed lots back into the
private market, but being strategic so that the lots don’t end up being held speculatively while investors
simply wait, while doing nothing to address blight. Likewise, Cleveland has focused on thinking about where
lower density works and where it does not (Krohe, 2011).
The cautionary tale, however, is that while communities can’t live in the past and must be ready for change,
we are not always good at predicting the future, and such predictions can lead to policies that make
undesirable futures come true. In 1976, New York City was 7.5 million people, with abandoned and failing
neighborhoods and predictions that those neighborhoods would die and the city could shrink to below 5
million. Some advocated a large clearance project to remove intact buildings to avoid abandonment
(Shiffman, 2005/2006). Fortunately, those policies were not adopted and the city is now 8 million.
In many communities in the United States, cities are either not shrinking or not shrinking as fast only because
of immigration into those communities. Ironic that in some areas there is anti-immigration feelings when that
immigration is one of the most important pieces preventing the cities from further shrinking and generating
economic activity, especially in the core and street car suburbs.
The issues are very well studied (for example, the “Shrinking Cities International Research Network” or the
work by the German Marshall Fund). The issues in smaller and medium size cities have received less attention
in the literature, even though that is where a majority of the population lives (Gosalvez & Horta, 2011).
As in the studies discussed earlier, experiences in Europe’s rust belt can provide lessons for the United States.
In Germany, 19 cities in Saxony-Anhalt worked to highlight the “less is future” experiences of small and
medium size cities. Different opportunities in each city, but common lessons: First, shrinking populations
require changes to the physical structure of the cities, reuse in new less growth focused ways of available
space. Second, shrinking populations allow a better balance between natural and human-built systems than
when the cities where industrialized. Third, shrinking cities must embrace a paradigm that they cannot simply
grow their way out of their challenges and educational and cultural opportunities. Fourth, historic
preservation projects are critical for community integrity and uniqueness, but absent strong growth pressures
these cannot be totally private-sector driven. Finally, maintaining and enhancing the unique identify if critical
(Gosalvez & Horta, 2011).
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 20
The Ruhr Valley, Germany’s coal and steel heartland, has much in common with the coal and steel regions of
the Midwest. The decline of those industries, as much extraction and manufacturing was shipped overseas
and as the industries became increasingly mechanized and automated, has been devastating. Stakeholders can
become “locked-in” on doing things the old ways, unwilling and unable to accept a fundamental change
(Hospers, 2004):
1. “Economic lock-in” that freezes economic structures and makes it hard to switch from historically
successful strategies. Communities often want new investments to bring back failing industries,
employees are not trained to engage in new skills needed in the market place, and entrepreneurial spirit to
search for new approaches is lacking.
2. “Institutional lock-in” when businesses, politicians, workers, and other stakeholders fight to preserve the
old-ways and resist change. For example, in when higher education was suggested as a way to restructure,
“What we need…are muscles, not brains.”
3. “Cognitive lock-in” when local stakeholders are waiting for the legacy businesses to come back,
convinced it will, while those on the outside are uninterested in doing business in or visiting an area with
pollution and a unidimensional economy and workforce.
In the Ruhr Valley, success wasn’t possible until there was a realization that a different approach was needed
and a “neo-industrialization,” looking at building on the skills and capacity to identify new industry, kicked in,
but not trying to change radically into an approach with no local precedent. The vision for the city became
“strengthen what is strong, invest rather than subsidize and initiate pilot projects in public-private
partnerships.” These new industries became possible by capitalizing on new opportunities (Hospers, 2004):
1. Service sector, with the grown of service sectors everywhere in western economies and the demand for
new services to meet the needs of the existing economy
2. Industries that could capitalize on the need of the Ruhr Valley, from environmental sector first to clean
the environment and renewable energy, to meet the demands of the remaining heavy industry. Both
industries grew to meet the local demands and then capitalized on those skills for export.
3. Tourism, capitalizing on both a much cleaned environment and the heritage of the area.
Of course, much of the above presupposes that there is a consensus for moving forward. Yet that is often
not the case. The period of some of worst decline of traditional coal and steel and other heavy industries
came at the tail end of some of the worst race riots in the United States, where parts of central cities literally
burned and there was one of the largest periods of white flight to the suburbs, hardly a situation where there
was unanimous consensus for rebuilding inner cities. The resurgence in 2014 and 2015 of reactions against
police led violence with community violence has shown that these divided cities and lack of understanding
have certainly not left us forty years later.
Northern Ireland post-industrial cities had much of the same divide. In Northern Ireland it was sectarian and
political, but ultimately it was also a fight between working class families on who would get the limited
resources during a post-industrial period of severe economic collapse. The model for peacekeeping recovery
is typically sustained dialogue, whether driven by a deliberative outside imposed process or an organic
community driven process. It was this process that led to the rebuilding of Derry, Northern Ireland’s central
city after years of violence heavily damaged that area and virtually ended all investment. Diametrically
opposed individuals and groups coming together to build trust and shared projects (Acheson and Milofsky,
2011). Elements of this are at the heart of some of the most successful efforts in the United States. Shared
purpose and trust building are a critical part of the process.
Ultimately, without huge public subsidies, redeveloping commercial properties in legacy cities has to make
sense as a business deal. Government partnerships and aid can tip the balance and broaden the projects that
make sense a bit, but they can’t totally remake the marketplace. What public projects can do is create a
perception and a reality of change and help investors and communities understand that they are at the tipping
point. As in any urban project the usual source of funding applies. Private sector projects are usually driven
by a combination of equity financing and bank and pension fund loans. Public private partnerships can take
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 21
almost unlimited forms, from the public sector providing land and buildings and below market value to a
range of local government loan and grant funds, often using CDBG pass-through funds. Other government
funding includes New Market Tax Credits, EPW Brownfields funding, Economic Development
Administration grants, and both affordable housing and historic preservation federal tax credits. Foundation
and corporate largesse is important for many community projects and the latest form of funding, crowd
source funding, is growing. Finally, the host of local options, which varies from state to state, such as
Business Improvement District (BID), Special or Betterment Assessments and District and/or Tax
Increment Financing (DIF and TIF) (Epping & Brachman, 2014).
In any redevelopment, the most important first steps are developing a clear community vision and consensus.
Redeveloping Commercial Vacant Properties in Legacy Cities (Epping & Brachman, 2014), is possibly the
best step-by-step manual for what follows the vision and consensus when working with vacant commercial
properties. It takes planners through the steps from understanding properties, markets, challenges, and
unique attributes, to creating a strategy and market analysis, to implementing the strategy. Vision first, then
action.
Credit and Disclaimer
The literature scan was supported by a German Marshall Fund of the United States Urban and Regional Policy Fellowship in
addition to the Urban Sustainability Network Directors Peer Exchange Grant. The findings and conclusions, however, are
strictly those of the author and not of the German Marshall Fund or USDN.
References
Acheson, N., & Milofsky, C. (2011). Derry exceptionalism and an organic model of sustained dialogue. In R.
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Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 24
Final Agenda: Post-Industrial and Legacy Cities Peer Exchange
Final schedule for Kate Lawrence, Kirsten Merriman Shapiro, Larry Falkin, Matt Gray, Jenita McGowan,
Matt Howard, Wayne Feiden, and Catherine Werner. (Coordinated by Jenita McGowan, City of Cleveland)
Sunday May 17, 2015
7:00 PM Dinner (East 4th Street, Cleveland)
Discussion of Literature scan: Post-Industrial and Legacy Cities Best Practices
Participants will have read Literature Scan prior to the exchange
Discussion of reactions to Literature Scan and informal conversation (facilitated by Wayne Feiden)
Monday May 18, 2015
8:30 AM Downtown and Commercial Revitalization Part 1
Strategic Investment Initiative, (Joel Ratner, Exec Dir, Cleveland Neighborhood Progress)
o http://www.npi-cle.org/cdc_services/grantmaking/
9:30 AM Walking and Bus Tour Cleveland Healthline and Health Tech Corridor
Focus on best practices from Cleveland downtown and current and former industrial area
Tour led by Tracy Nichols, Cleveland Director of Economic Development, Joe Calabrese, CEO,
GCRTA (www.healthtechcorridor.com), Chris Ronayne, Executive Director, University Circle
1:00 PM Downtown and Commercial Revitalization Part 2
Urban Infill Strategies (Matt Howard, Milwaukee)
Sustainable Economic Development Incentives (Larry Falkin)
(Buy and bag lunch to bring to the session)
2:00 PM Vacant Land and Brownfields Part 1:
● Brownfield Strategies (Kirsten Merriman Shapiro, Larry Falkin, Matt Gray)
Renewable Energy Site Screening (www.sustainablecleveland.org/renewablescreening/)
Landbank Strategies (Kate, Larry and Jenita)
o Cleveland Landbank (www.city.cleveland.oh.us/CityofCleveland/Home/Government/
CityAgencies/CommunityDevelopment/LandBank)
6:00 PM Dinner
● Lessons learned and next steps to take home to our communities (facilitated by Kate Lawrence)
Tuesday May 19, 2015
8:30 AM Vacant Land and Brownfields Part 2:
● Urban Ecology and Vacant Land Re-visioning and Re-use (Catherine Werner)
9:30 AM Tour of the Urban Agriculture Innovation Zone and Kinsman EcoDistrict
Green/Blue line Rapid from Tower City to the E 79th Street station as a group.
Walking Tour (10:00) Led by Erick Rodriguez of the Burten Bell Carr CDC
o Kinsman EcoDistrict: http://www.sustainablecleveland.org/wp-
content/uploads/2013/12/Kinsman_EcoDistrict_Climate_and_Sustainability.pdf
o Urban Ag Innovation Zone: http://www.bbcdevelopment.org/development/social-
enterprise/urban-agricultural-innovation-zone/
o Cornucopia http://www.bbcdevelopment.org/cornucopia-bbcd/
Working Lunch at Cornucopia Cafe in Kinsman Neighborhood
o Take-home lessons and next steps for our communities (facilitated by Wayne Feiden)
1:20 PM Adjourn (Green/Blue line to Tower City. Transfer to Red Line Rail to airport)
Legacy and Post-Industrial Cities USDN Peer Learning Exchange 25
Final Budget Report
Peer City Hotel Travel
to CLE
Ground Food Totals Reimburse
Kate Lawrence Albany NY $277.28 $477.19 $32.00 $786.47 $509.19
Kirsten Shapiro Burlington, VT $331.28 $642.85 $29.50 $1,003.63 $672.35
Larry Falkin Cincinnati, OH $290.23 $62.12 $0.00 $352.35 $62.12
Jenita McGowan Cleveland, OH $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
Matt Gray Cleveland, OH $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00 $0.00
Matt Howard Milwaukee, WI $277.28 $374.20 $153.96 $805.44 $528.16
Catherine Werner St. Louis, MO $277.28 $478.70 $80.25 $836.23 $558.95
Wayne Feiden Northampton,
MA
$277.28 $305.50 $81.53 $664.31 $2,520.65
RTA rail day pass for entire team $40.00 $40.00
Breakfast pastries for entire team $42.00 $42.00
Two dinners for entire team $320.99 $320.99
TOTAL $1,730.63 $2,757.80 $362.99 $4,851.42 $4,851.42
Budget $5,192.00
REFUND $340.58 $340.58