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Rust Belt Tour '09: Braddock, PA and Radical Utopianism

Rust Belt Tour '09: Braddock, PA and Radical Utopianism

Released Tuesday, 8th September 2009
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Rust Belt Tour '09: Braddock, PA and Radical Utopianism

Rust Belt Tour '09: Braddock, PA and Radical Utopianism

Rust Belt Tour '09: Braddock, PA and Radical Utopianism

Rust Belt Tour '09: Braddock, PA and Radical Utopianism

Tuesday, 8th September 2009
Good episode? Give it some love!
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In 2009, the wasting steel town of Braddock, Pennsylvania hit international newspapers as an example of how post-industrial ruins could be transformed into utopian spaces after the mayors' plea for dedicated urban homesteaders to relocate to Braddock's abandoned houses. Braddock left behind a model of redevelopment pursued elsewhere, a model of urban clearances and arson that required the eviction of the urban poor. In contrast, Braddock and its mayor, John Fetterman, were lauded as pioneering a new model, based in community gardens, interracial collaboration, and public art.

Scholar Jo Guldi and activist Simon Strikeback traveled to Braddock to see the evidence of artist-directed redevelopment in the landscape. What they saw raised questions about race and economic flows in American cities.

This conversation, recorded on the road in western Pennsylvania, offers an on-the-fly description of three different models of economic regeneration in Rust Belt cities. The interlocutors compare corporate redevelopment in Homestead, PA; land-bank community gardens in Flint, MI; and community regeneration through the arts in Braddock, PA.

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