Visiting Maple Street to visit the Maple Street Bookstore is my first true introduction to the history of New Orleans. Walking in the block of New Orleans - or generally walking anywhere - in fact - gives different views rather than driving the blocks alone. The house of New Orleans has a distinctive taste, and the house of John Kennedy Tour who passed through the corner shows that even if he is a great writer, it is as normal as any other person It is.
New Orleans is a city worth learning. The hotel, food, music, and diversity never die in the hearts of all those who have experienced New Orleans. In commemoration of this town, even if New Orleans is not in the city today, it will remain in my memory forever.
Like other big cities, New Orleans has many aspects. New Orleans is a colorful carnival city, jazz, French Creole architecture, and prosperous shops and restaurants. Then the poor people live in the dark side of New Orleans - mainly in the lowland flood zone. Because most of New Orleans is under the sea surface, catastrophic flooding is inevitable. How do you protect historical buildings, protect people, and how to prevent another devastating flood? Many urban planners believe that the secret of urban construction lies in the fast, efficient and clean transportation system. They believe that New Orleans needs a network of bus corridors that connects communities, promotes business, and stimulates diverse economies. Traffic can pass through the edge of the city, making the interior community more pedestrian friendly. Justin Davidson of the news day writer is proposed by Curitiba in Brazil as a model of such a city
It is not because New Orleans has not recovered since Hurricane Katrina. According to a data center based in New Orleans, 21 communities in the city now have an active residence address before Hurricane Katrina. The population of some communities has been far below the marks in front of Hurricane Katrina, but they were mainly demolished and replaced by smaller mixed income developments. There is also a new $ 15 billion dam in New Orleans, but the engineers say they may not have much impact if hurricane Katrina hits again. Most importantly, Louisiana has recently completed a coastal master plan which he hopes to offer an additional cushion for extreme events - ironically, the majority of the plan is due to the recent Mexican Gulf Coast Disaster, oil spill of BP