The Failed City: I Wrote a Book About What We Bury

I have been staring at a patch of asphalt in Jersey City for thirteen years. That is not a figure of speech. I mean that in late September 2013, I watched a road crew roll fresh blacktop over 150-year-old granite cobblestones on Baldwin Avenue in the Heights, and the image has not released me since. The cobblestones were ballast stones, carried across the Atlantic Ocean in the holds of empty cargo ships and dumped on American docks because the ships needed the weight for the crossing and needed to shed it to load American exports for the return trip. Those stones were repurposed as paving. They became streets. They outlasted the ships, the shipping companies, the trade routes, the empires that commissioned them. And in 2013, a man in a road roller buried them under asphalt because, as he told me with the patience of someone explaining gravity, cobblestones eat up tires.

That exchange is where the book starts. It is also where the book’s argument starts, because what happened on Baldwin Avenue is a precise physical enactment of a larger institutional habit: the preference for covering failure rather than studying it, for smoothing the surface rather than examining what lies beneath.

The Failed City: An Autopsy of Urban Collapse is now available from David Boles Books.

What the Book Does

The book conducts autopsies. Twenty of them, organized into five taxonomies of urban failure, spanning two millennia, three continents, and one diagnostic framework that I built to answer a question nobody in the urban planning literature seemed to be asking: why do we refuse to study the cities that died with the same rigor we bring to the cities that worked?

The five taxonomies are catastrophic erasure, economic exsanguination, the utopian misfire, slow municipal death, and the never-built city. Each describes a distinct mode of urban death. Each contains case studies drawn from published sources, government records, journalistic accounts, and in several cases my own observation. I have walked the streets described in this book. I have taught at the universities that serve them. The Jersey City Heights, Camden, Newark: these are places I know from the sidewalk, not from the satellite view.

Pompeii is in the book because it is the oldest and most complete case of catastrophic erasure in the Western record. Pripyat is in the book because it is the newest, a city of 49,000 people evacuated in thirty-six hours after Chernobyl and never reoccupied. Centralia, Pennsylvania, is in the book because the coal mine fire that started beneath it in 1962 is still burning, and because the state’s decision to bury Graffiti Highway under dirt is the most literal act of concealment I have encountered in any case study. Galveston is in the book because it was the largest city in Texas in 1900 and it is not anymore, and the reason it is not anymore is that Houston built a ship channel and absorbed Galveston’s port function, which meant that the hurricane that destroyed Galveston was fatal precisely because the economic function that would have justified rebuilding had already migrated fifty miles inland.

Gary, Indiana, is in the book because U.S. Steel built it in 1906 and then left. Cairo, Illinois, is in the book because its own governing class burned it down through a sustained campaign of racial violence so thorough that the city lost ninety percent of its population. Flint is in the book because the governance structure appointed to save money ended by poisoning the water. Pittsburgh is in the book because it did not die, and the reasons it survived expose the reasons the others did not.

Laurent, South Dakota, is in the book because it is the most instructive failure I have ever encountered. A planned Deaf community where more than a hundred families signed reservation forms and zero relocated. The idea was serious, the enthusiasm was real, and the distance between signing a form and packing a truck turned out to be the distance between a vision and a life. I have worked in the Deaf community for decades through HardcoreASL.com, ASL-Opera.com, and the CUNY-SPS ASL Program, and Janna Sweenie’s characterization of Laurent as a “Deaf Utopia” captures the arc perfectly: enthusiastic communal aspiration followed by collective inaction.

Where the Argument Came From

A colleague of mine at Rutgers-Newark, years ago, made a case for the publication of failure that I have carried forward as an intellectual commitment ever since. His field was research methodology, and his contention was that failed scholarship, research rigorously conducted that ended by disproving its own thesis, deserved publication with the same velocity and seriousness as research that confirmed its hypothesis. Journals published findings. Careers advanced on discoveries. The experiments that did not find what they were looking for were filed away, and the filing-away constituted a loss of the knowledge that the failure itself contained.

He was not a person I admired, and the reasons for that are his own business. But the argument he made that day was better than the person who made it. That fact is itself a version of the thesis this book advances: useful knowledge does not confine itself to attractive sources.

The Failed City applies that principle to urban collapse. Failed cities generate data. Abandoned plans produce evidence. Collapsed communities contain information about what went wrong, when it went wrong, and what the conditions were that made the failure possible. That data is as valuable as the data generated by the cities that succeeded. Our refusal to publish it, to study it, to assemble it into a systematic account, guarantees the repetition of errors that have already been committed and documented and then filed away.

The Diagnostic

The book builds a diagnostic framework with three levels: the baseline condition (what the city had before the crisis), the triggering condition (what initiated the decline), and the cascade (the self-reinforcing cycle that follows). The framework is offered as a tool. It works for every case study in the book, and I suspect it works for cases the book does not examine. The Prairie Voice article I published alongside this book, “The Other Side of the Blacktop,” argues that the same framework applies to rural collapse with equal precision. Any rancher in western Kansas who has watched the feedlot close and the equipment dealer follow it and the diner follow that can diagram the cascade on a napkin.

Jane Jacobs and the Missing Half

Jane Jacobs wrote The Death and Life of Great American Cities in 1961. The title promises a study of death and life. The book delivers overwhelmingly on the life. It is one of the great books of the twentieth century, and I assign it in every course I teach that touches urban questions. It is also a book that does not deliver on the first word of its own title. Jacobs studied what makes cities work. She did not study what makes them die.

The Failed City is the death half of the equation, the book that Jacobs’ title promises and her text does not deliver. Jacobs remains one of the great urbanists. The gap in the literature remains real. No comparable book exists. The field has single-city studies (Sugrue on Detroit, Gillette on Camden, Gordon on St. Louis) and academic shrinking-cities literature, but no cross-taxonomic diagnostic framework for a general readership. The Failed City is, as far as I have been able to determine, the first.

The Cobblestones

The cobblestones are still there. Under the asphalt on Baldwin Avenue, under the dirt that covers Graffiti Highway in Centralia, under the grass that grows over the graded roads of California City. The evidence of failure is more durable than the surfaces we lay on top of it. Asphalt cracks. Dirt erodes. Grass thins. And the substrate will still be there, waiting to be examined by anyone willing to look at what lies beneath the blacktop.

The answer is beneath the blacktop. It has been there the whole time.

#bolesBooks #book #camden #city #cityLife #cobblestones #davidBoles #diagnostic #failedCity #failures #fireDepartment #janeJacobs #jerseyCity #newJersey #photography #technology #university #writing

Il Tempo: Infortuni, Confartigianato presenta i nuovi accordi al congresso dei consulenti del lavoro Piemonte-VdA

Torino, 21 mar. - (Adnkronos) - Anche il tema della sicurezza sul lavoro al centro del congresso interregionale Piemonte Valle d'Aosta dei consulenti del lavoro, alle Ogr di Torino. "Questa interessante manifestazione ci ha permesso di portare a conoscenza di tutti i consulenti del lavoro le attività delle organizzazioni di rappresentanza datoriali, in questo caso Confartigianato, per quanto riguarda gli accordi sui protocolli d'intesa sulla sicurezza nei luoghi di lavoro- afferma Claudio Napoli, segretario di Confartigianato Imprese Piemonte - Noi l'abbiamo appena sottoscritto a gennaio: questo tipo di protocollo prevede organismi paritetici a livello regionale e provinciale con la possibilità di indirizzare i lavoratori a fare formazione".
"Una formazione mirata - aggiunge - supportata dagli organismi bilaterali; ma soprattutto, anche per quanto riguarda le intese che andremo a definire con l'organismo dei consulenti del lavoro a livello provinciale, e poi io mi auguro anche a livello regionale, che si vuole portare a conoscenza di tutti i consulenti del lavoro e poter poi quindi dare un servizio alle imprese per quanto riguarda la sicurezza nei luoghi di lavoro e formare i lavoratori anche mediante gli enti di formazione professionali che sono stati istituiti già dal duemila in Italia". Per Claudio Varisellaz, presidente di Confartigianato Valle d'Aosta, "questa è stata un'ottima occasione naturalmente per affrontare i temi della sicurezza e salute sul lavoro, sia dei lavoratori che dei datori di lavoro".
"Per quanto riguarda le iniziative che sono state prese in Valle d'Aosta - dice Varisellaz - mi preme ricordare un accordo quadro che è stato siglato con varie parti sociali, tra cui organizzazioni di categoria, istituti scolastici, Asl, Vigili del Fuoco, consulenti del lavoro e professioni tecniche mirato proprio a promuovere la cultura del lavoro in tema di salute in ambienti confinati e a rischio di inquinamento. Questo accordo ha avuto un ottimo successo di partecipazione da parte dei consulenti del lavoro e di tutti gli appartenenti alle altre categorie, e ci spinge a proseguire su questa strada per ampliare l'offerta formativa ai colleghi consulenti del lavoro in tema di sicurezza del lavoro, che è un tema fondamentale e vitale per la nostra categoria".

Injuries, Confartigianato presents the new agreements at the congress of labor consultants Piedmont-VdA.

Turin, March 21 – (Adnkronos) – The issue of workplace safety was also at the center of the interregional congress of Piedmont and Aosta Valley labor consultants at the OGRs in Turin. “This interesting event has allowed us to make all labor consultants aware of the activities of the employer representation organizations, in this case Confartigianato, regarding agreements on memoranda of understanding on workplace safety – states Claudio Napoli, secretary of Confartigianato Imprese Piedmont – We just signed it in January: this type of protocol involves parity bodies at the regional and provincial level with the possibility of directing workers to receive training.”

“Targeted training – he adds – supported by bipartite bodies; but above all, regarding the agreements we will define with the provincial labor consultants’ organization, and then I hope also at the regional level, which we want to make known to all labor consultants and then be able to provide a service to companies regarding workplace safety and train workers through vocational training institutes established since 2000 in Italy.” For Claudio Varisellaz, president of Confartigianato Valle d’Aosta, “this was a great opportunity, naturally, to address the issues of safety and health at work, for both workers and employers.”

“Regarding the initiatives taken in Valle d’Aosta – says Varisellaz – I want to recall a framework agreement that was signed with various social partners, including trade organizations, educational institutions, ASL (local health authorities), Fire Department, labor consultants, and technical professions, specifically aimed at promoting a culture of work in the context of health in confined and polluted environments. This agreement had excellent participation from labor consultants and all members of other categories, and pushes us to continue along this path to expand the training offer to colleagues labor consultants on the topic of workplace safety, which is a fundamental and vital issue for our category.”

#Confartigianato #Piedmont-VdA #Turin #Piedmont #AostaValley #ClaudioNapoli #Italy #ClaudioVarisellaz #Valled’Aosta #Varisellaz #FireDepartment

https://www.iltempo.it/adnkronos/2026/03/21/news/infortuni-confartigianato-presenta-i-nuovi-accordi-al-congresso-dei-consulenti-del-lavoro-piemonte-vda-46920306/

Infortuni, Confartigianato presenta i nuovi accordi al congresso dei consulenti del lavoro Piemonte-VdA

Torino, 21 mar. - (Adnkronos) - Anche il tema della sicurezza sul lavoro al centro del congresso interregionale Piemonte Valle d'Aosta dei consulenti ...

Cronaca: Esercitazione notturna congiunta: vigili del fuoco e Croce Bianca

Una simulazione per rafforzare la collaborazione tra i soccorritori. Durante il corso di base per gli interventi tecnici, vigili del fuoco volontari e Croce Bianca si sono esercitati insieme per migliorare il coordinamento nelle emergenze

Joint nighttime exercise: Fire Department and Red Cross

A simulation to strengthen collaboration among rescuers. During the basic course for technical interventions, volunteer firefighters and the Croce Bianca (Red Cross) trained together to improve coordination in emergencies.

#FireDepartment #RedCross #CroceBianca

https://www.altoadige.it/cronaca/esercitazione-notturna-congiunta-vigili-del-fuoco-e-croce-bianca-1.4316330

Esercitazione notturna congiunta: vigili del fuoco e Croce Bianca

Una simulazione per rafforzare la collaborazione tra i soccorritori. Durante il corso di base per gli interventi tecnici, vigili del fuoco volontari e Croce Bianca si sono esercitati insieme per migliorare il coordinamento nelle emergenze

Alto Adige
Step into Woodland Oaks (11/22/2017) — a surreal walk caught on camera where a girl feigns being unwell and the fire department steps in. Raw, odd, and eye-opening on public response. Great find on PeerTube — watch the real-world moment unfold! #PeerTube #CaughtOnCamera #PublicSafety #FireDepartment #CitizenJournalism #UrbanFootage #English
https://piped.chrisco.me/videos/watch/b5dd90f8-10af-4c79-90d9-5e868b219ed6
11/22/2017 Woodland Oaks walk - Girl pretending to be crazy with fire department

PeerTube
In 1919, records show Manuel “Cy” Saenz receiving $10 or $252 (adjusted) monthly to store the City’s fire truck in his garage at Ince and Washington Blvd. Volunteers fought fires during this time and one involving the then-Mayor's garage led to the start of the #FireDepartment. #photography #americana #wa #california #architecture #californication #culvercity #colorphotography #blackandwhitephotography #travel #trivia

New station on the way for Summerside Fire Department as city awards tender
City council chose a firm to build the new station in hopes that it can be finished within the next couple of years.

#construction #firedepartment #Summerside
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/prince-edward-island/pei-new-summerside-fire-department-tender-awarded-9.7074104?cmp=rss

Boy, 14, mauled to death by crocodile in front of horrified school friends

https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/boy-14-mauled-death-crocodile-36504367

Gas line rupture in Castaic prompts 5 Freeway closure

Southern California Gas Co. crews on Sunday worked to repair and determine the cause of a rupture in…
#NewsBeep #News #Headlines #castaic #chp #door #firecaptainbriankight #firedepartment #freewayclosure #gaslineexplosion #order #p.m. #pinecrestplace #resident #ridgerouteroad #shelter #UnitedStates #Us #USA #vent #window
https://www.newsbeep.com/339481/