Once a thriving metropolis on the banks of the Mississippi, St.
Louis, Missouri, is now a ghostly landscape of vacant houses,
boarded-up storefronts, and abandoned factories. The Gateway City
is, by any measure, one of the most depopulated, deindustrialized,
and deeply segregated examples of American urban decay. "Not a
typical city," as one observer noted in the late 1970s, "but, like
a Eugene O'Neill play, it shows a general condition in a stark and
dramatic form.""Mapping Decline" examines the causes and
consequences of St. Louis's urban crisis. It traces the complicity
of private real estate restrictions, local planning and zoning, and
federal housing policies in the "white flight" of people and wealth
from the central city. And it traces the inadequacy--and often
sheer folly--of a generation of urban renewal, in which even
programs and resources aimed at eradicating blight in the city
ended up encouraging flight to the suburbs. The urban crisis, as
this study of St. Louis makes clear, is not just a consequence of
economic and demographic change; it is also the most profound
political failure of our recent history."Mapping Decline" is the
first history of a modern American city to combine extensive local
archival research with the latest geographic information system
(GIS) digital mapping techniques. More than 75 full-color
maps--rendered from census data, archival sources, case law, and
local planning and property records--illustrate, in often stark and
dramatic ways, the still-unfolding political history of our
neglected cities.
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