Industrial cities praised for staging 'dazzling comeback'
Former European industrial centres, including Sheffield and Belfast, which were facing disaster after the decline of their traditional manufacturing bases are experiencing a remarkable turnaround,
according to a report published today.
The two-year study by the London School of Economics (LSE) examined seven cities which appeared to have a bleak future 20 years ago but have made a "dazzling comeback" by combining a focus on their
economies with improvements to the environment and helping people back to work.
As well as Sheffield and Belfast in the UK, the research examined changes in Leipzig, Bremen, Bilbao, Turin and St Etienne.
The team found all seven cities used a similar blueprint for successfully rebuilding themselves. They said this included bidding for high-profile sporting and cultural events, cleaning and
renovating the street environment, restoring major landmarks and new skills training.
Their strategies also relied on mixing funding from public and private sources.
According to the LSE report, this has resulted in all seven cities seeing a development of hi-tech businesses and a halt in the depopulation of inner cities.
Report author Professor Anne Power said: "These former industrial cities have proved far more resilient than many people dared hope.
"During the 1980s and '90s they lost up to 80% of their manufacturing jobs and this led to polarised neighbourhoods, crumbling city centres and creaking public transport, schools and
healthcare.
"Their very future was in question.
"Our report shows a pattern book of recovery that the cities used to fight back.
"They adopted multiple strategies which didn't only focus on their economy but also involved improving the urban environment and helping their disadvantaged populations back to work. It's clear
that cities cannot recover without mixing all three of these elements."
Transforming Cities Across Europe by the LSE's Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion is an interim report. The project has been funded by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, the Academy for
Sustainable Communities and the Department of Communities and Local Government. The final report will be published next year.
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