Government

Don’t Flatten the Curve on Urban Innovation

Just because an end to Covid is in sight, mayors and cities shouldn’t abandon the bold ideas and actions that made a recovery possible.

City halls have a unique ability to amass broad-based support from business, civil society and residents.

Illustration: DrAfter123/Digital Vision Vectors via Getty Images

Over the past year, cities have been the source of an extraordinary amount of innovation borne out of crisis — local leaders transformed hundreds of miles of streets and civic spaces, mobilized food-delivery systems, passed eviction moratoriums and procured PPE from every corner of the world in order to protect first responders.

That’s because, as Richard Florida and Carlo Ratti recently observed, the pandemic left city leaders “with little choice but to adopt a fast-paced, trial-and-error approach.” In other words, mayors innovated as if their residents’ lives and livelihoods depended on it — because they did.