svs
January 11th, 2007, 09:50 PM
I found this Courtesy of Curbed LA. I thought the LA forumers would like to see it. Prepare for spam from the Inland cities that didn't even make the top twenty!!
The Center of the Universe
It's 2007, and the look and feel of the decade is in full swing. The idea behind the hub zeitgeist ranking is that at certain times in certain places, there is a veritable "center of the universe" a place where innovation, change and vibe combine to create the place of the moment. Earlier we looked at this from a historical perspective as we prepared our first ranking of hubs and their impact on hub culture. Yes, its arbitrary, and no its not scientific, but it does reflect a combination of influences on a global basis. It does not reflect ultimate power or coolness, but some combination that reflects "right now" better than anywhere. Presenting the 2007 Hub Zeitgeist List:
Hub Culture's 2007 Zeitgeist Ranking
1. Los Angeles
A controversial choice? Sure it's big, but LA is finally hitting on all cylinders: fashion, tech, entertainment, and overall groove. American Apparel is changing fashion with vertically integrated manufacturing. LA's skull and bones indie rock fashion dominates globally. Myspace culture is taken for granted, everywhere. New walking areas and urban regeneration projects, from downtown to Malibu to Hollywood, make the city much more palatable than before, despite the endless crush of traffic. Entourage and other shows, from the OC to Laguna Beach, have moved the collective consciousness west. All in this and more help make LA the city of the moment: the energy is positive, its power is on the rise, and people everywhere have LA on their mind.
2. Berlin
As contemporary art begins to dominate the mainstream, Berlin has emerged as the identity for a fun young Europe. With Merkel putting Germany on the mend and the World Cup of 2006 having shone the spotlight on the city, Berlin has spiffed up - a lot. Real estate is booming, but there is still an undercurrent of gritty, rough urban experimentalism that resembles London during its moment. It's rough, but richer. So hot its nearly establishment, but not quite yet, which makes it a serious contender for the top spot.
3. Mumbai
The center of global attention seems to have shifted off China and onto India, and Mumbai (or as we should say outside, Bombay) is the hot spot in India. Its mix of Bollywood and technology lend well to the Youtube era, and the rich, infectious Indian attitude is becoming a global cultural force. The clubbing in Mumbai continues to improve, but its the people who make it - the sense of optimism here dominates.
4. Istanbul
Somehow Istanbul has managed to balance its location with style and grace. Those in the know swear by the city, with its speedy speed boats on the Bosphorous, continually improving scene tempered by an ingrained respect for Islamic tradition. Istanbul is about the only place where Christian and Muslim seem to blend to create a sum greater than their parts - it is evocative of the world we want, and a symbol of where a truly global world can co-exist.
5. London
London is about to overtake New York in some areas of the financial world. On constant alert, it remains confident and open, unlike the American attitude. One of the most expensive cities in the world, it has come to dominate the international cultural life, and remains a center of the world in wide areas of business. London can feel a bit stale at times but its power is omnipresent, like New York before 911.
6. Buenos Aires
So hot! The Argentinian financial crisis has faded, but the incredible value of Argentina as a destination remains. This is fueling a buying boom in urban real estate as Europeans and North Americans establish summer homes and secondary residences here. Business remains slow, but BA is the hot spot of Latin America. Panama and Sao Paolo have heat, but BA sizzles. It's the hottest "second city" in the world.
7. Beijing
Beijing's big Olympic moment is not until next year, so the city feels like it is totally under construction. But its a wonderful moment for creative development and business risk taking in China's capital. Beijing always had a stronger underground feel than neighbor Shanghai, which has soaked up much of China's glory lately, but Beijing is very interesting - it is a cultural crucible in a darker, more definite way than Shanghai, and while quieter, its architectural projects, from the new CCTV tower to the Olympic bird nest stadium, are teeing up the city for its big moment to come.
8. Dubai
Sure, it's a giant construction zone. Sure, the Palm is sinking and traffic is a nightmare. But Dubai is finally attracting the international professional elite in a serious way, and that's a very recent development. The city feels a bit like Hong Kong 20 years ago - where opportunity calls for young people hungry for a hit. One & Only, Jumeriah, and even the W are transforming the city into a sleek holiday party town, and despite the alcohol restrictions, it offers a different, more positive vision of the Middle East than is commonly accepted. It may be crass, but this city of the future is evocative.
9. New York
The big apple has its stride back, but it has been so sanitized that the cultural revival of the city feels as if it has been outsourced to Brooklyn. But Brooklyn is still part of New York, and New York still dominates in advertising, finance and international business. This hub of hubs seems to be following the leader - in architecture, in culture, and in innovation, but it is still completely critical for processing other advances into the mainstream, and as the city moves farther from its 911 nightmare, sprouts of change are seen... from the revival of the speakeasy to a sudden interest in poetry and drama to the new dominance of the Lower East Side over Meatpacking. One hopes that NYC can survive its own mallification.
10. Geneva
Geneva is an odd selection but here for a very real reason. Much of what people in hub culture have been talking about lately involves a search for authenticity - this rebellion against mass consumer culture and cookie-cutter cities. Quiet, laid back Geneva is just what it claims to be, and it is not trying to be much else. It's authentic and original, a city that refuses to go with the global grain. Somehow Geneva is evocative of this sense of authenticity, and deserves recognition. It is very in, without trying to be. Perhaps it is the fact that wealth is always in, and Geneva is certainly wealthy, but in an era of shouting from everywhere, Geneva's quiet reserve stands it in good stead.
So, that's the top 10... and following are the rest of the top 20 - cities that for various reasons stand out - from Shanghai's frenetic pace to Seoul's growing confidence and tech leadership (Cyworld cometh!), San Francisco's new role in Energy, Tokyo's rising yen, Hong Kong's outlying growth, Sydney's easy pace, Seattle's growing philanthropic leadership, Mexico D.F - so big and so crazy, and Rome - strangely hot after years of neglect.
11. Shanghai
12. Seoul
13. San Francisco
14. Tokyo
15. Hong Kong
16. Sydney
17. Seattle
18. Moscow
19. Rome
20. Mexico City
Owning the Zeitgeist
Harajuku Girls set Tokyo Alight
Shortly Hub Culture will release our first ever hub rankings - a list of the 20 cites in the world that own the moment, right now, and critically, in what order of influence. This idea came out of a series of conversations that began in Asia last year: Hong Kong and Bali, and which moved to London, Rome, Miami, and other places, in discussions with dozens of hub culture people. The idea was simple: Who Owns the Moment?
This idea also qualifies: owning the moment isn't just about power - New York and London and LA and Tokyo, despite their sheer power, are not always at the leading edge of CREATION - often they co-opt the real action and make it mass, but they are not always the center of authenticity in cultural development.
Throughout recent history it can be argued that certain locations have defined the spirit of the times; they are the proverbial place to be. Its the location that when you sit back and review (through rose colored glasses?) that you wish you had been. Rome with Romans, Jerusalem with Jesus. Oklahoma during the dust bowl. The hub that jumps out as the place where great things happened among people who had an idea they were onto something big, but which the wider world had not quite caught up with yet; the crucible that creates great ideas, great people, and world progress.
Of course, the very idea of a single hub defining the spirit of an epoch is a gross generalization, prone to contradiction and disagreement. It could even be argued, as many have said, that no single place now defines the age because so much happens everywhere. But it remains unsettlingly true that certain places at certain times just seem to capture it, and its our duty to call it. It is a combination of circumstance, a confluence, and very tough to put a finger on. Yes, we hear the limb we're out on cracking.
As we prepare for the release of the ranking, we thought it would be good to share our historical zeitgeist - hub culture's view of the last quarter century, to help give some context to the upcoming rankings.
Selection is based on a collection of impressions - "to own the moment" is to be on the way up but still a little underground, to be where things are being built, not already finished - to be not just part of the action but to be the action itself. It implies a dynamism and fresh, rebel outlook, but in a way that is on the verge - great, but not yet widely recognized. The white hot epicenter of the creative class.
The Center of the Universe
It's 2007, and the look and feel of the decade is in full swing. The idea behind the hub zeitgeist ranking is that at certain times in certain places, there is a veritable "center of the universe" a place where innovation, change and vibe combine to create the place of the moment. Earlier we looked at this from a historical perspective as we prepared our first ranking of hubs and their impact on hub culture. Yes, its arbitrary, and no its not scientific, but it does reflect a combination of influences on a global basis. It does not reflect ultimate power or coolness, but some combination that reflects "right now" better than anywhere. Presenting the 2007 Hub Zeitgeist List:
Hub Culture's 2007 Zeitgeist Ranking
1. Los Angeles
A controversial choice? Sure it's big, but LA is finally hitting on all cylinders: fashion, tech, entertainment, and overall groove. American Apparel is changing fashion with vertically integrated manufacturing. LA's skull and bones indie rock fashion dominates globally. Myspace culture is taken for granted, everywhere. New walking areas and urban regeneration projects, from downtown to Malibu to Hollywood, make the city much more palatable than before, despite the endless crush of traffic. Entourage and other shows, from the OC to Laguna Beach, have moved the collective consciousness west. All in this and more help make LA the city of the moment: the energy is positive, its power is on the rise, and people everywhere have LA on their mind.
2. Berlin
As contemporary art begins to dominate the mainstream, Berlin has emerged as the identity for a fun young Europe. With Merkel putting Germany on the mend and the World Cup of 2006 having shone the spotlight on the city, Berlin has spiffed up - a lot. Real estate is booming, but there is still an undercurrent of gritty, rough urban experimentalism that resembles London during its moment. It's rough, but richer. So hot its nearly establishment, but not quite yet, which makes it a serious contender for the top spot.
3. Mumbai
The center of global attention seems to have shifted off China and onto India, and Mumbai (or as we should say outside, Bombay) is the hot spot in India. Its mix of Bollywood and technology lend well to the Youtube era, and the rich, infectious Indian attitude is becoming a global cultural force. The clubbing in Mumbai continues to improve, but its the people who make it - the sense of optimism here dominates.
4. Istanbul
Somehow Istanbul has managed to balance its location with style and grace. Those in the know swear by the city, with its speedy speed boats on the Bosphorous, continually improving scene tempered by an ingrained respect for Islamic tradition. Istanbul is about the only place where Christian and Muslim seem to blend to create a sum greater than their parts - it is evocative of the world we want, and a symbol of where a truly global world can co-exist.
5. London
London is about to overtake New York in some areas of the financial world. On constant alert, it remains confident and open, unlike the American attitude. One of the most expensive cities in the world, it has come to dominate the international cultural life, and remains a center of the world in wide areas of business. London can feel a bit stale at times but its power is omnipresent, like New York before 911.
6. Buenos Aires
So hot! The Argentinian financial crisis has faded, but the incredible value of Argentina as a destination remains. This is fueling a buying boom in urban real estate as Europeans and North Americans establish summer homes and secondary residences here. Business remains slow, but BA is the hot spot of Latin America. Panama and Sao Paolo have heat, but BA sizzles. It's the hottest "second city" in the world.
7. Beijing
Beijing's big Olympic moment is not until next year, so the city feels like it is totally under construction. But its a wonderful moment for creative development and business risk taking in China's capital. Beijing always had a stronger underground feel than neighbor Shanghai, which has soaked up much of China's glory lately, but Beijing is very interesting - it is a cultural crucible in a darker, more definite way than Shanghai, and while quieter, its architectural projects, from the new CCTV tower to the Olympic bird nest stadium, are teeing up the city for its big moment to come.
8. Dubai
Sure, it's a giant construction zone. Sure, the Palm is sinking and traffic is a nightmare. But Dubai is finally attracting the international professional elite in a serious way, and that's a very recent development. The city feels a bit like Hong Kong 20 years ago - where opportunity calls for young people hungry for a hit. One & Only, Jumeriah, and even the W are transforming the city into a sleek holiday party town, and despite the alcohol restrictions, it offers a different, more positive vision of the Middle East than is commonly accepted. It may be crass, but this city of the future is evocative.
9. New York
The big apple has its stride back, but it has been so sanitized that the cultural revival of the city feels as if it has been outsourced to Brooklyn. But Brooklyn is still part of New York, and New York still dominates in advertising, finance and international business. This hub of hubs seems to be following the leader - in architecture, in culture, and in innovation, but it is still completely critical for processing other advances into the mainstream, and as the city moves farther from its 911 nightmare, sprouts of change are seen... from the revival of the speakeasy to a sudden interest in poetry and drama to the new dominance of the Lower East Side over Meatpacking. One hopes that NYC can survive its own mallification.
10. Geneva
Geneva is an odd selection but here for a very real reason. Much of what people in hub culture have been talking about lately involves a search for authenticity - this rebellion against mass consumer culture and cookie-cutter cities. Quiet, laid back Geneva is just what it claims to be, and it is not trying to be much else. It's authentic and original, a city that refuses to go with the global grain. Somehow Geneva is evocative of this sense of authenticity, and deserves recognition. It is very in, without trying to be. Perhaps it is the fact that wealth is always in, and Geneva is certainly wealthy, but in an era of shouting from everywhere, Geneva's quiet reserve stands it in good stead.
So, that's the top 10... and following are the rest of the top 20 - cities that for various reasons stand out - from Shanghai's frenetic pace to Seoul's growing confidence and tech leadership (Cyworld cometh!), San Francisco's new role in Energy, Tokyo's rising yen, Hong Kong's outlying growth, Sydney's easy pace, Seattle's growing philanthropic leadership, Mexico D.F - so big and so crazy, and Rome - strangely hot after years of neglect.
11. Shanghai
12. Seoul
13. San Francisco
14. Tokyo
15. Hong Kong
16. Sydney
17. Seattle
18. Moscow
19. Rome
20. Mexico City
Owning the Zeitgeist
Harajuku Girls set Tokyo Alight
Shortly Hub Culture will release our first ever hub rankings - a list of the 20 cites in the world that own the moment, right now, and critically, in what order of influence. This idea came out of a series of conversations that began in Asia last year: Hong Kong and Bali, and which moved to London, Rome, Miami, and other places, in discussions with dozens of hub culture people. The idea was simple: Who Owns the Moment?
This idea also qualifies: owning the moment isn't just about power - New York and London and LA and Tokyo, despite their sheer power, are not always at the leading edge of CREATION - often they co-opt the real action and make it mass, but they are not always the center of authenticity in cultural development.
Throughout recent history it can be argued that certain locations have defined the spirit of the times; they are the proverbial place to be. Its the location that when you sit back and review (through rose colored glasses?) that you wish you had been. Rome with Romans, Jerusalem with Jesus. Oklahoma during the dust bowl. The hub that jumps out as the place where great things happened among people who had an idea they were onto something big, but which the wider world had not quite caught up with yet; the crucible that creates great ideas, great people, and world progress.
Of course, the very idea of a single hub defining the spirit of an epoch is a gross generalization, prone to contradiction and disagreement. It could even be argued, as many have said, that no single place now defines the age because so much happens everywhere. But it remains unsettlingly true that certain places at certain times just seem to capture it, and its our duty to call it. It is a combination of circumstance, a confluence, and very tough to put a finger on. Yes, we hear the limb we're out on cracking.
As we prepare for the release of the ranking, we thought it would be good to share our historical zeitgeist - hub culture's view of the last quarter century, to help give some context to the upcoming rankings.
Selection is based on a collection of impressions - "to own the moment" is to be on the way up but still a little underground, to be where things are being built, not already finished - to be not just part of the action but to be the action itself. It implies a dynamism and fresh, rebel outlook, but in a way that is on the verge - great, but not yet widely recognized. The white hot epicenter of the creative class.