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January 6, 2010

Five Phenomena of the Century (so far)

The first decade of the 21st century has come to a close.  For the first blog post of the new decade, I decided to ponder the most significant trends of the past decade related to cities or affecting urban spaces.

Below are the five most significant happenings, in no particular order because they are all somewhat interrelated.

1. Widespread recognition of how industry clusters work and the importance of focusing on those in furthering an urban economy. For a while, every city tried to attract every type of industry.  In the late 20th century leaders of cities everywhere wanted bio tech companies, an auto plant, the next Microsoft, fashion designers and the movie industry to flourish in their town.  More recently, city government and business groups have spent time examining the industries where the region has a comparative advantage over other places: sectors where they have more jobs on average and likely some ingredients or a history that gives the industry an authenticity in the community.  Such strengths can then be used to attract more people and organizations in that cluster.

2.  Richard Florida’s publishing of “Rise of the Creative Class.” The book helped explain the human dimension behind why clustering works and how cities need to foster a mix of “talent, tolerance and technology” in order to attract and retain knowledge-based industries and workers.  The book spawned new ways that planners, developers, business leaders, and scholars think about cities (whether they agree or not, everyone has to respond to these ideas).

3. Rise of Asian cities as global commercial, manufacturing and financial hubs:

4.  The Green Revolution – not the agricultural one, but the shift to more sustainable urban construction and sustainable design.  10 years ago, as the US Green Building Council began promoting “green” construction and its LEED rankings, everyone laughed.  They said the private sector and institutions would never build LEED office buildings because it couldn’t make financial sense.  Today in Canada’s major cities virtually every major project, private and public sector, is being built to LEED or other environmental sustainability standards, not only because doing less harm to the environment is good but because private firms have learned that green makes employees feel better, take fewer sick days and be more productive.

5. Re-birth of urban-style living and the start of a shift away from suburban lifestyles.  Individuals, couples and families in North America are increasingly choosing to live in townhouses and apartments in or near the urban core (even if they can afford a spacious suburban home).  Not everyone, not everywhere, but enough people to make this a trend and likely one that will help define the 21st century in North America (whereas suburban style automotive culture defined and shaped how people lived in the 20th century).  This shift is related to a green consciousness, the rise of women to become the dominant gender in the workforce, the rising price of gasoline, escalating house prices.

Your comments? and what would you add or subtract?

Topics: urban history |

7 Responses to “Five Phenomena of the Century (so far)”

  1. Five Phenomena of the Century (so far) | All About Cities Image Says:
    January 7th, 2010 at 12:22 am

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  3. uberVU - social comments Says:
    January 7th, 2010 at 6:08 am

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  4. Paul Says:
    January 7th, 2010 at 8:44 am

    Isn’t the Urban shift also related to a huge drop in crime in cities like New York, Chicago, and L.A.? I suspect that if crime in those cities were to return to their levels in the 70’s and 80’s, we would see another round of flight from cities.

  5. thelady Says:
    January 7th, 2010 at 1:39 pm

    I think the main thing making people want to move back to the city is the gas prices and the housing crisis.

  6. Wendy Says:
    January 7th, 2010 at 2:57 pm

    Paul — good point. And crime is related to demographics (it tends to be higher when there are lots of young males about).

  7. links for 2010-01-07 « tunny traffic Says:
    January 7th, 2010 at 5:46 pm

    […] Five Phenomena of the Century (so far) | All About Cities (tags: creativeclass cities) […]

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