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Smart(ish) Cities

A Grist special series on unexpected urban progress


12 May 2008
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Smart Cities: A Grist special series
Hear the phrase "smart growth" or "green city," and chances are you'll think of one place: Portland, Ore. That progressive pocket of the Northwest has become synonymous with sustainability, landing atop many a list and capturing more than a few hearts and minds along the way. Not far behind, other stars of the Northwest and Northeast vie for the top spot -- places like Seattle, Vancouver, Boston, New York, and Washington, D.C. All have made great strides toward making life cleaner and greener for their residents -- and all are, as one planner put it recently, the "honor students" of urban sustainability.

So what about the C students?

We dedicate this series to them. To cities that have faced more than their share of problems, that have been written off because they've fallen prey to sprawl, or post-industrial depression, or a general lack of glamour. These are places you won't see in a Top 10 list of green cities anytime soon -- but it doesn't mean they're not trying. Over the course of this week, we'll take a look at unexpected progress happening in unexpected places. Places like Phoenix, Cleveland, and Atlanta.

Don't scoff. These cities, and others like them, are discovering that if they do their homework and stay awake in class, they might just ensure themselves a brighter future.

At the very least, they'll expand their role in the nationwide -- and, indeed, global -- effort to reduce the major impact that cities have on climate change. To top it off, better planning and innovative solutions not only means fewer emissions, it means a healthier, more satisfying life for the people who call these cities home.

Stay tuned as we explore the following topics -- and let us know what your own city is doing to get greener.

Day One: Smart(ish) Cities

Day Two: The Southwest

Day Three: The Southeast

Day Four: The Midwest

Day Five: Going Forward



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Go 'Cuse

Number 17 by Popular Science (http://www.popsci.com/environment/article/2008-02/america ...)

Go, 'Cuse!

Pretty low bar

Portland sustainable? Obviously you haven't spent any time there. There are a few city dwellers on the public transit and riding bikes, but they are almost all poor people. The suburbanites (most of the Portland-area population) go everywhere by car only. The only people who walk are orthodox Jews on Sabbath. There are almost no sidewalks and the traffic laws are unenforced (ride at your own risk). If the police do write a traffic ticket, it is to a cyclist for rolling a stop sign or riding on a sidewalk (to avoid the speeding SUV). Let's not forget the Superfund listed Willamette River that oozes through the heart of the city. There isn't even decent train service to other Oregon cities.

Maybe Portland is less brown than some cities, but it most certainly is not green. It is as car-dependent as Houston, but it has better PR.

Burlington citywide Low Carbon Diet campaign

The 'Kitchen Table Collaborative...Coming Together To Cut Carbon' is the name of a campaign in Vermont's Queen City, Burlilngton.  Some citizen-activists from VT Interfaith Power & LIght (NOT an electric utility), Seventh Generation, Alliance for Climate Action convinced Mayor Bob Kiss to participate in an effort to cut 25% of the city's CO2 emissions by 2025 using the "Low Carbon Diet" (LCD), a process designed by David Gershon.

On March 20, 2008, the Mayor hosted a dinner at his home at which LCD activist Wes Sanders trained 22 volunteers to organize and run EcoTeams.  We're calling these EcoTeams the First Wave.  Our intent is to go geometric and then viral with this campaign, reaching at least 60% of the households in the city.

Already, in the Greater Burlington Area and other Northern Vermont communities, EcoTeams constituting over 100 households have cut more than 600,000 pounds of CO2 since October 2006.  The average reduction our collective 'carbon footprint' so far has been 23%.

Great series

Thought the attention to cities not always underlined as sustainable was refreshing. Wrote about it as a blog post for the Seattle Daily Journal of Commerce here

http://www.djc.com/blogs/BuildingGreen/2008/05/15/do-you- ...

Thanks!

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