Rebuilding New Orleans as Venice? -- Most of the tourist districts like  the French Quarter are above sea level, so they should be back in business  reasonably fast, unless the EPA shuts the whole place down permanently for  contamination. But the poor neighborhoods were built below sea level and have  been sinking even farther down over decades, so rebuilding them as they were  seems irresponsible.
 Assuming that much of the below sea level housing is unsalvageable, what shall  we do? Maybe it doesn't make sense to rebuild New Orleans at all, but, then  again, America is so lacking in other cities with urban charm that New Orleans  has a chance to become economically viable, although perhaps on a reduced scale.  If so, then it might be smart to rebuild it as a city that embraces water rather  than merely tries to huddle away from it behind levees.
 Maybe we should rebuild the flooded part of town near the tourist district as an  American version of Venice, with canals instead of streets. Over the  generations, this American Venice would merge with the old part of town to  create a tremendous tourist attraction, which, frankly, seems to be the only  plausible economic future for New Orleans.
 You could bulldoze the ruined houses down, then dredge the streets out deeper  into water courses with a decent draft for pleasure boats. Take the mud you've  dredged up from the streets and heap it up on top of the rubble so the next  generation of houses are built above sea level. No streets, just canals and big  sidewalks. (I'm sure an engineer would know a better way to do it. but you get  the general idea: instead of everything being 5 feet below sea level, make half  of it 15 feet below and half of it 5 feet above.)
 In Los Angeles, the Venice neighborhood near the beach south of Santa Monica was  built with canals instead of streets in the early 20th Century. It proved to be  a bust, and many of the canals were paved over, but in recent years, the main  canal has made a comeback and is now lined with new luxury homes with a big boat  tied up to each dock. Similarly, Orange County's residential islands for boaters  like Balboa are  doing very well.
 As for the rest of New Orleans, dig out a big lake for pleasure boating and  fishing (which is huge down there, as Humberto  Fontova's books illustrate), and use the dirt to elevate other areas. In the  more outlying working class and middle class neighborhoods, build five story  high apartments buildings and townhouses, so residents can outlast the worst  floods by going up to the top stories. Put the parking garage on the street  level of each five story townhouse so a ten foot flood wouldn't do much damage.
 By raising the density of residential neighborhoods, you can make a lot of  ruined below sea-level neighborhoods into parks and golf courses that can afford  to be flooded. For example, the only way the San Fernando Valley came through  the two big rainstorms last winter without significant damage was because the  1400 acre Sepulveda Dam Recreation Area, which contains 54 holes of golf and  lots of other outdoor attractions sorely needed in overpopulated LA, filled up  ten feet deep with water for a few days. Golf courses are a lot cheaper to fix  after a flood than are buildings.
 Anyway, I'm just spinning ideas off the top of my head. The way to check out  whether any plan makes sense is to see how much private investment they can  attract. I suspect private interests would invest a fair amount of money in a  plan to turn New Orleans into a smaller but wealthier city.
 Of course, the political response might be highly negative to this, not just  from Democrats, but from the general public in surrounding states, who, I  suspect, will want the underclass refugees to go home to New Orleans as soon as  possible. I've already gotten a half dozen emails from people concerned about  schemes to put up refugees in their hometowns, and what their impact will be on  crime, schools, and taxes (in a word, negative).
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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