As we embark on Cohort III of the City Accelerator, five cities will serve as living laboratories of how communities can undertake significant infrastructure improvements in today's challenging financial climate.
Providence
Pittsburgh
Fifty years ago, Pittsburgh served for a time as the object of scorn for urban critics. As an unrivaled success story during the age of heavy industry, perhaps no city fell harder when the economic tides turned – Detroit being the possible exception. My city, Chattanooga, often benchmarked ourselves against Pittsburgh as leaders worked to rise from the ashes of Industrial Era urban decline. Pittsburgh boasts early achievements with projects such as Three Rivers Park, which has inspired improvements of other cities’ downtown waterfronts. But the city is topographically challenged with rivers cutting through downtown and steep hills that make development difficult. As part of its City Accelerator project, Pittsburgh plans to reconstruct the numerous stairways that serve the walking public. It is certainly a unique infrastructure problem, but an excellent subject that requires an innovative financial solution.
San Francisco
San Francisco is one of those cities that is so easy on the eye it’s tempting to overlook its problems. Yet I can recall sitting in the San Francisco airport on one of my first visits and feeling the Earth shake. Even casual visitors are most certainly aware of the city's history with earthquake damage, destruction and fire – not to mention the “big one” that looms somewhere in the future. Beyond the threat of earthquakes, perhaps more immediate concerns are the rising tides and unpredictably intense storms of climate change. San Francisco is a city that must set new standards for resiliency in infrastructure and employ innovative ways to pay for it.
St. Paul
Washington, D.C.
And then there is Washington, D.C. Some of us might remember when the area surrounding our most important government buildings in our nation’s capital was a dirty, dingy and dangerous wasteland. It was a national disgrace. While it’s now an example of urban renaissance – something to visit and proudly show the world – the white marble structures and statues still overshadow some of the most perplexing infrastructure issues in the country. There are few cities with such a mix of rich and poor citizens along with political issues that arise from being a special district. Nothing is simple about infrastructure in the District of Columbia. The city has basic infrastructure issues from schools to street lights that must be met and, fortunately, the will and inherent skill to take on the problem of finance.
The specifics of each community are spelled out in their individual presentations, built using ESRI's Story Maps platform, and posted on the City Accelerator. I encourage you to invest a few minutes to grasp the details of their proposals.
The greatest challenge is how to finance all that needs to be done in a way that will not harm citizens already struggling with poverty. The City Accelerator recognizes the complexity of today's financial environment and is betting that somewhere among that complexity lies new and innovative solutions. Fortunately, we have creative cities with courageous leadership willing to take on the challenge. The best sort of problem is one that absolutely must be solved. This is one of those problems.
HAVE YOUR SAY: REVIEW AND RANK THE CITY PITCHES
• Pittsburgh, PA
• Providence, RI
• San Francisco, CA
• St. Paul, MN
• Washington, D.C.