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A Good Place to Do Business

The Politics of Downtown Renewal since 1945

Roger Biles, Mark H. Rose
Barcode 9781439920817
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Original price £119.04 - Original price £119.04
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£119.04
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Release Date: 28/10/2022

Genre: History
Sub-Genre: Business & Finance
Label: Temple University Press,U.S.
Language: English
Publisher: Temple University Press,U.S.
Pages: 362

The Politics of Downtown Renewal since 1945.

How six industrial cities in the American Rust Belt reacted to deindustrialization in the years after World War II

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The “Pittsburgh Renaissance,” an urban renewal effort launched in the late 1940s, transformed the smoky rust belt city’s downtown. Working-class residents and people of color saw their neighborhoods cleared and replaced with upscale, white residents and with large corporations housed in massive skyscrapers. Pittsburgh’s Renaissance’s apparent success quickly became a model for several struggling industrial cities, including St. Louis, Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago, and Philadelphia. 

In A Good Place to Do Business, Roger Biles and Mark Rose chronicle these urban “makeovers” which promised increased tourism and fashionable shopping as well as the development of sports stadiums, convention centers, downtown parks, and more. They examine the politics of these government-funded redevelopment programs and show how city politics (and policymakers) often dictated the level of success. 

As city officials and business elites determined to reorganize their downtowns, a deeply racialized politics sacrificed neighborhoods and the livelihoods of those pushed out. Yet, as A Good Place to Do Business demonstrates, more often than not, costly efforts to bring about the hoped-for improvements failed to revitalize those cities, or even their downtowns.