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From The Atlantic <br />March 2009 <br />The crash of ZOOS continues to reverberate loudly nationwide —destroying jobs, <br />bankrupting businesses, and displacing homeowners. But already, it has damaged some <br />places much more severely than others. On the other side of the crisis, America's economic <br />landscape will look very different than it does today. What fate will the coming years hold <br />for New York, Charlotte, Detroit, Las Vegas? Will the suburbs be ineffably changed? Which <br />cities and regions can come back strong?And which will never come back at all? <br />by Richard Florida <br />How the Crash Will <br />This article has been corze tad since it was published in the pant magazine. <br />Y FATHER WAS a child of the Great <br />Depression. Born in Newark, New Jersey, in 1921 to Italian <br />immigrant parents, he experienced the economic crisis <br />head-on. He took a job working in an eyeglass factory in the <br />cit3's ironbound section in 1934, at age 13, combining his <br />wages with those of his father, mother, and six siblings to make a single-family income. <br />When I was growing up, he spoke often of his memories of breadlines, tent cities, and <br />government -issued clothing. At Christmas, he would tell my brother and me how his parents, <br />unable to afford new toys, had wrapped the same toy steam shovel, year after year, and <br />placed it for him under the tree. In my extended family, my uncles occupied a pecking order <br />based on who had grown up in the roughest economic circumstances. My Uncle Walter, who <br />went on to earn a master's degree in chemical engineering and eventually became a senior <br />executive at Colgate-Palmolive, came out on top —not because of his academic or career <br />achievements, but because he grew up with the hardest lot. <br />