Watch Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson's best plays through 7 weeks of the season. Watch Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Marquise Brown's best plays through 7 weeks of the season. Quarterback Lamar Jackson talks about the issues with protection and the running game after a loss to the Bengals. Wide receiver Marquise 'Hollywood' Brown talks about the issues on offense and rookie Rashod Bateman's game.
Baltimore Ravens QB Lamar Jackson rips off a yard run on third down to put the Ravens near the goal-line at the end of the first half. The Ravens have to limit the Bengals' big plays, get the passing game humming and win the receiver battles outside. General - Video. Watch every touchdown by the Baltimore Ravens through 7 weeks of the season.
Running back Devonta Freeman scores on a 1-yard touchdown to tie the game in the second quarter. Latest Videos. We are trying to work with cities on identifying their strengths and how they focus on moving their economies toward this model of development.
Katz : Yes, but urban form is critical to this. Economy shaping is going require a new kind of placemaking. That will clearly have a huge effect not only on the city but regional level. Katz : On the city level, it will create what we call innovation districts. If you take the major research institutions and tech clusters that are being created, how do you take them and arrange them in a purposeful way with mixed use housing and amenities that attract talent but work for industry?
Boston is doing this and Barcelona is clearly doing this. San Francisco and Detroit are doing this also. These cities are creating places that let all of these sectors work in a derivative way and form starting at the economic level. By doing this the form follows these sectors that drive wealth. Katz : I am actually very bullish on Detroit. If you look at the Woodward corridor downtown to midtown, what you see is the growth of some tech-oriented industries with Quicken Loans and Compuware and Henry Ford Medical and Wayne State.
What you have are some major institutions being the platform of both residential growth, which is happening, but also the growth of business incubators. I think the core of Detroit, with focused public and private sector investment, could be very different. You also have the added bonus of seeing Canada from Detroit. The growth from that in the way that we see in Europe across national lines could really change how Detroit grows in the future.
Katz : Detroit has the possibility to do that, yes. Detroit also has some real problems that need to be addressed, but with what is going on there the entire core could be an innovation district.
Katz : The cities that will flourish are the ones that are on the vanguard of policy. Historically, New York and Chicago have the ability to adapt and flourish because large cities are essentially co-governed. Private capital and institutions work with city governments to create physical forms and policies that perpetuate this type of growth. Katz :The tech we should focus on is not just Facebook tech or Google tech but rather manufacturing tech, green tech.
This is well within our grasp. We have the ability to be the leaders if we just focus our attention. This is not just about advanced telecommunications. That it is part of it. But most of our new patents come form manufacturing. We need to stay on the forefront of this. Given the current political climate, is this possible? Can we even have the discussion? Katz : If you really want smart cities, you do not want government to get of the way, you want it to get into the game.
You can really integrate technology across places and spaces throughout cities if the government is working with the tech sector to make it happen. It takes local political leaders and private capital to make it happen.
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