World Class — What Would It Take?

Reader N.T. poses an interesting question:

I enjoy reading your blogs. Here’s a good topic. What will it take to make Charlotte a “World Class City”? Charlotte is a great city with potential to become world class. City Leaders need a broader vision. They also need to prepare the city for the next 30 years, not five. Here are a few of my suggestions.

An education system that provides quality education for all students, in a comfortable environment, and with educators who are professional and qualified to teach all students. An education system that focuses more preparing students for a career and life, not just passing EOG tests.

Better roads and parking; a law and/or medical School; become a 24-hour city; a diverse leadership team; international facilities (schools, parks, banks, businesses) in prime areas such as uptown and South Park. World Class Cities embrace the world.

Once some pieces are in place the city will attract more businesses and cultural attractions.

What’s your answer? Here’s mine:

Charlotte should stop trying to be a “world-class city” and just try to be a great place to live.
A world-class city has layers of history that reveal themselves to visitors and residents. Charlotte isn’t old enough yet, and too much of what could have become its first layers of history has been torn down. That’s got to change.

A world-class city has enough people concentrated in the center to create not only the sense of excitement that good cities offer, but to create a market for stores, museums, businesses and all the other things that over time help create those layers of history.

In time, 50 or 100 years maybe, Charlotte might become a world-class city – if its leaders think long-term as well as short-term, if more of its residents support the arts (name a world-class city that doesn’t have great art) and will invest public money in great parks and museums (name a world class city that doesn’t have them), if its schools stay strong (because bad schools mean a dying center city), if its luck hold up, if the creek don’t rise …

Right now Charlotte’s civic persona is so desperate to be “world-class” that it comes off like a teenaged boy who want so desperately to be popular that he runs for class president every year and tries out for all the teams. To want something that nakedly just works against attaining it.

So I think Charlotte should worry less about “world-class” and relax more.