Mapping the FEW-Nexus Across Cascading Scales: Contexts for Detroit from Region to City
Authors: Geoffrey Thün , Tithi Sanyal , and Kathy Velikov
Book: TransFEWmation: Towards Design-led Food- Energy-Water Systems for Future Urbanization
Editor: Rob Roggema
The food energy water (FEW)-nexus implicates intersecting human and biological systems, flows, and exchanges that operate at multiple and often nested scales. For designers working on transforming FEW-systems it is therefore important to think across these scales and their interrelationships. Multiscalar consideration enables insight on effectiveness and impact of strategies and also provides the ability to recognize synergistic opportunities, barriers to be overcome, and externalities necessary to be considered. Additionally, in a multilevel governance context of the United States, many policies that impact food, energy, and water are defined and administered at the sub-federal state level, creating a heterogeneous terrain of approaches, applications, and opportunities, depending on locale. This study aims to describe a model for thinking and apprehending FEW-systems across nested and cascading scales. Cartographic visualization is positioned as a key component. The study uses a series of thick mappings paired with contextual narratives that cascade from the ecosystem scale (region) to the jurisdictional scale (state) to the operational scale (city) as a means of apprehending FEW systems and identifying differentiated opportunities that emerge across scales of consideration. Through a study of the Great Lakes Megaregion, the State of Michigan, and the City of Detroit, divergent opportunities and constraints are articulated for developing FEW-nexus based urban design and policy-based interventions in Detroit. The work enables the revelation of connections and imperatives for local opportunities that are embedded in the environmental contexts of the region’s broader ecosystem. The ecosystem scale avails views to alternate energy futures and water policy beyond those defined by the state. The jurisdictional state-scale reveals the impacts of policies and the constraints produced through their intended and unintended consequences. It points to excesses that might be leveraged to produce new economies and ecologies. At the scale of the city, the unique opportunities and challenges can now be rethought in light of broader contexts. In some instances, alignment between local interventions and region-wide imperatives might help to reinforce the primacy of a given strategy. In others, the local context might argue for special exceptions to jurisdictional frameworks whose underlying principles are without traction. The work aims to outline an approach that is portable and may be translated to other urban contexts.