Description

For a century, Arizona has pursued prosperity through outward expansion of its urban areas. In metropolitan Phoenix and elsewhere, “growth” has meant developing raw land with new houses, new shopping centers, and new industrial parks--and the metropolitan “frontier” has moved

For a century, Arizona has pursued prosperity through outward expansion of its urban areas. In metropolitan Phoenix and elsewhere, “growth” has meant developing raw land with new houses, new shopping centers, and new industrial parks--and the metropolitan “frontier” has moved farther outward from downtown every year. This has not been uniformly true, of course. Some cities--Phoenix, Tempe, and Scottsdale especially--have been grappling with the question of revitalizing older urban neighborhoods for many years. But the “outside game” has been the predominant development pattern in the Valley of Sun for many decades. And the Phoenix region has played this game better than one might think, creating many high-quality master-planned communities, protecting lots of open space, using impact fees to build good infrastructure. In other words, Phoenix has used the “outside game” to create a region so attractive it continues to be one of the fastest-growing metropolises in America. But in order for cities to play a good inside game, Arizona must get serious about urban revitalization. And that will require big changes.

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Details

Title
  • Playing the Inside Game: The Challenge of Urban Revitalization in Arizona
Contributors
Date Created
2004-11
Resource Type
  • Text
  • Identifier
    • Identifier Value
      ASU 12.2:P 51
    Note
    • Report for Valley Partnership By Morrison Institute for Public Policy.
    • The support of the following public- and private-sector organizations made this report possible: APS/Pinnacle West, City of Phoenix, Ryan Companies, Downtown Phoenix Partnership, Phoenix Community Alliance, City of Scottsdale, John F Long, Smith Pipe and Steel, Valley Forward, Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, CB Richard Ellis, Salt River Project.
    • Includes bibliographical references (p. 32-33).
    • Copyright by the Arizona Board of Regents for and on behalf of Arizona State University and its Morrison Institute for Public Policy

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