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Shinier, Happier PeopleHow three Rust Belt cities are changing15 May 2008
For more on Rust Belt cities, see our full feature on sustainability initiatives underway in Cleveland.
It may not be intuitive to link an area historically associated with steel mills, coal mining, and automobile assembly lines to sustainable development. But green growth is catching on in the Rust Belt, long an economically unendowed area of the country -- and its manufacturing-heavy past is coming in handy in emerging fields like biotech, nanotech, and hydrogen cars. Here's what three cities are doing to green up their acts.
A new Destiny emerges in Syracuse.
Image: destinyusa.com
Pittsburgh: good intentions, bad air.
Photo: nps.gov
Milwaukee, Wisc. Once known as "the beer capital of the world," Milwaukee has lately seen an explosion in other types of comestibles. With the state seeing a 92 percent increase in organic production from 1997 to 2001, the city has built up its local food network; it now boasts several inner-city community-garden projects, a downtown public market, an annual campaign to encourage residents to follow a 100-mile local-food diet, and citizens' groups -- both organized and ad hoc -- pushing local food to the fore. A New Urbanist surge -- largely attributable to former Mayor John Norquist, now president and CEO of the Congress for the New Urbanism -- has seen downtown housing grow at a rate comparable to that of the 'burbs, with affordable options an important part of the mix. Current Mayor Tom Barrett's Green Team is working to keep sustainability at the fore, and has partnered with the Apollo Alliance to bring clean-tech jobs to the area. We'll drink to that. |
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A Moment in the Sun. How three Southeast cities are changing.
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