“White Elephants”: Commercial Structures Emptied in the Past, Destined to be Repeated
August 25, 2008
The wonderfully cynical (and fairly accurate) Mish posts in his blog about the constructions of boom-busts prior (of companies and suburbs more than national or global economies).
I have very little to add to his post. It is fascinating to me though, based on the descriptions of the failed attempts to rejuvenate the derelict Motorola supercampus (his first subject, described directly at The Chicago Tribune) and the condition of the long-abandoned shopping mall, Dixie Square, in Harvey, Illinois.
It pains and confuses me that these multi-million dollar investments should be allowed to decay and fall to ruin rather than be utilized in some constructive way. Could a mall be refitted to be a volunteer-run community center? Could utilities be convinced to allow for free energy and water use for such a facility? Would it save the community money for building a needed center elsewhere? Would it save the decay and preserve the structure, so the mall could continue to provide some objective value, even in an asset/market sense? Would it help involve young people in their community through volunteer opportunities that directly enrich their neighborhoods? Would there be more need than just a few full-time (or even part-time) public administrators to provide an anchor for these projects? Would it help improve property values by keeping young people engaged in healthy pursuits (engaging in training, or helping train other young people)?
Will this issue rise to import in that minor, oft-ignored, community-level once the current recession consumes the shopping malls peppering our current sprawling suburbs?
These are one of the many issues that benefits from my nerd’s imagination: How would elitist, liberal, snobby space invaders (you know they’re out there, watching… judging…) evaluate our culture based on how much we allow bureaucratic and administrative impedance to stop us from making a rejuvenated shopping mall, the setting of so many happy memories for the community, a place for the rejuvenation of those in the community who suffer from the same inflictions that brought down the mall?
There can be poetry even in bureaucracy, sometimes. But someone killed all the poets.
… and the cow goes moo
John Robb of Global Guerrillas touches my heart
August 19, 2008
Part of my daily required reading is the magnificently creative and throughful 4th Generation Warfare (4GW) blog, Global Guerrillas.
In a strange departure (unless you’ve been reading the GG blog for a long time), John Robb just posted on how the sea freight shipping system was revolutionized with a new platform (and describes the term, excellently).
Part of the post’s appeal is that it makes me think about The Wire, and I really do miss that show. Even though Brother Mouzone was a cartoon character, Simon Templeton never was expanded beyond a character outline and seemed mostly to be a collection of stereotypes, and that the second ‘working class white crime’ season most relevant to JR’s post was the weakest season…
The REAL reason why the post could be interesting to many people is that it shows how such a simple conceptual change (standardization of container dimensions, and their ability to be moved from land to sea transport and vice versa without modification) could lead to such a modern revolution. There are so many gross inefficiencies in the world that just need a bit of logical and surprisingly low-tech thinking to correct. Of course, implementation requires some heft, however all that is really required is for an organization or person with ‘heft’ to ask any old idiot how things could be improved, and revolutions like that of the containerized shipping industry can be had.
Sad that I get all excited about a short blog posting about shipping containers. But John Robb deserves all the shout-outs he can get.
… and the cow goes moo