SG: No, no, no! Thatâs not a good answer.[Laughs.]MB: If I could speak Turkish, Istanbul. IfI could speak Japanese, Tokyo. If I couldspeak German, Berlin. If I could speakFrench, Iâd think about Paris, but Parisis a little bit small.SG: What made you name those spots?MB: Cosmopolitan cities. Istanbulreally is. Tokyo is less so but excitingâthereâs just so much going on. In Berlineverything is open; if youâre a prude,you shouldnât go there. But to me, NewYork has got everything you want. Farand away the best government job inthe whole worldâif you know how touse itâis the mayor of New York City.You have what is essentially a large armyin the NYPD. You have a budget biggerthan the GDP of most countries. Culture:There are great museums in London andParis and a few other places, but NewYork can stand up with any of them.SG: As people flock to cities, what hap-pens to the people who are squeezedout by gentrification?MB: Iâve always thought that cultureattracts capital more than capital attractsculture. So if you want to bring Detroitback, you get young artists to move thereand then people will follow them. Takea look at Greenwich Village; it used tobe an artsy community, but no artistcan afford to live there anymore. Iâmsympathetic to people who get pushedout, and what I tried to do was build morehousing and improve transportationto make this city better for everybody.SG: Whatâs an example of the kinds ofthings cities can do to become moreenvironmentally friendly?MB: The press made fun of me when Iwas on the flat roof of a five-story build-ing with Al Gore and we painted the roofwhite. They had a field dayâthis bozois doing this! But take a look next timeyou drive across the Queensboro Bridgeor fly out of LaGuardiaâevery buildingroof is painted white now. And if oneisnât, I guarantee itâs an empty building.of the worldâs population willlive in an urban area by 2050.``````cities will havemore than10 million inhabi-tants in 2030, upfrom 31 in 2016.
66%4110Susan Goldberg, Editor in Chief``````SG: Why do you paint the roof white?MB: Because it reflects the heat andreduces your electricity bill by 25 percentinstantly. Forever. For the cost of twocans of paint. And they just laughedand made fun of Gore and myself, butthe public isnât stupid.``````SG: Are there other simple fixes thatindividuals can do?MB: Sure. I can buy a more fuel-efficientcar. I can convert my incandescent bulbsto LEDs. I can put some insulation in.I can turn off the air conditioner whenIâm not home. Thereâs a little bit ofaltruismâI want to save the worldâbutI think economics are really what drivethese decisions.``````SG: Talk about the role that citiesâ bigemployers play in the environment.MB: Why will a corporation be envi-ronmentally friendly? Today, if you goand recruit on campus for the best andbrightest, they interview you. They ask,What are you doing for the environment?Employees want to work for an environ-mentally friendly company. And thenthere are the investors. If you talk tothe managers of the big pensions andendowments, they want socially respon-sible investing: We donât buy coal stocks,gun stocks, tobacco stocks.``````SG: Who is making the biggest impactin creating sustainable cities?MB: All this progress is not made bythe federal governmentânot the lastadministration, certainly not this ad-ministrationâand not made by the stategovernments. There are a handful thatdo a little bit; [California governor] JerryBrown has tried to do some real things.But itâs the local governments, the localcompanies, and the local nonprofitsâthatâs where the progress is made.***Thank you for reading NationalGeographic.``````people will beadded to thepopulation of Delhi,India, by 2030,for a total of moreMILLIONthan 36 million.
martin jones
(Martin Jones)
#1