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Turn a quarter of Detroit into "semi-rural" farms?

The city of Detroit is proposing to give over a quarter of its land to be turned into “semi-rural” fields and farms, with the surviving neighborhoods standing in “pockets in expanses of green.” The proposal is politically charged (serving a death-sentence on a whole neighborhood is bound to be controversial) but the idea of “downsizing” Detroit seems to have wide acceptance.

And yes, this entire thing was predicted by David Byrne in 1988 in the song “(Nothing But) Flowers” on the final Talking Heads album Naked.

Operating on a scale never before attempted in this country, the city would demolish houses in some of the most desolate sections of Detroit and move residents into stronger neighborhoods. Roughly a quarter of the 139-square-mile city could go from urban to semi-rural.

Near downtown, fruit trees and vegetable farms would replace neighborhoods that are an eerie landscape of empty buildings and vacant lots. Suburban commuters heading into the city center might pass through what looks like the countryside to get there. Surviving neighborhoods in the birthplace of the auto industry would become pockets in expanses of green.

Detroit looks at downsizing to save city

(Thanks, Rigel!)


(Image: Garden grows, a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike image from Payton Chung’s photostream)

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