Worth doing, as longs as he collects good data to inform future efforts…


Billionaire Marc Lore outlines how he will build the inclusive, Utopian desert 
city Telosa
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/10/17/how-billionaire-marc-lore-plans-create-utopian-desert-city-telosa/5991523001/
(via Instapaper)

| USA TODAY
Marc Lore grew up wanting to be a farmer – reveling at the idea of "something 
growing from nothing" – all while watching his father unafraid to take chances 
with ambitious business ventures.

The 50-year-old billionaire developed his appetite for taking risks from his 
father, Peter, and it's that foundation in childhood that's propelling him to 
now focus on a spellbindingly ambitious endeavor that many experts and pundits 
are deeming near impossible.

Lore, the former president of Walmart e-commerce and co-founder of Jet.com and 
Diapers.com, is attempting to spearhead the conceptual and financial building 
blocks for Telosa, a Utopian city in the middle of the desert announced last 
month.

Telosa's location is being targeted in the Appalachia or American West desert 
with plans to shepherd in a reformed version of capitalism with a focus on 
societal inclusion over division. Lore envisions Telosa having equal access 
health care, excellent schooling and safe environments for families, regardless 
of income. Even further, he aims for Telosa to be a diverse place housing 
various races, genders, sexual orientations, religions and political 
affiliations.

But exactly how the "city of the future" is built is both risky and 
complicated. Experts and researchers have long maintained that too many 
financial hurdles can stand in the way, with one 2014 study arguing that "the 
ability of eco-cities to achieve their utopian ambitions may be limited by the 
realities of operating within a profit-driven, entrepreneurial planning 
environment."

Yet that's where Lore feels like Telosa can be different, and understanding the 
colossal "how" of the project means understanding the "why" for Lore.

Telosa's name derives from the Ancient Greek word telos – meaning "higher 
purpose." Conceptual art of Telosa looks like it's pulled from a science 
fiction movie. Nearly everything appears fueled by solar power energy, 
autonomous electric cars and high-speed public transportation. Designs from 
architectural firm Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG), the same company that created 
Google and Apple's headquarters, shows 150,000 acres of eco-friendly 
architecture, including a beacon-esque skyscraper known as the "Equitism Tower."

The headlines of Telosa last month honed in on the $400 billion objective that 
will take massive buy-in from key investors to even get the project off the 
ground. Factor in Lore's lofty goals that start with a first phase of 50,000 
living residents to be welcomed into the city by 2030, and the public 
skepticism is hardly hidden.

That's not lost on Lore, who sees the attempt – similar to those of his father 
growing up – just as important as the end goal.

"I'm not pursuing this to make money," said Lore, a co-owner of the NBA's 
Minnesota Timberwolves. "I'm doing this because of what it can mean for others 
and the future. If this entire attempt doesn't work, then hopefully there are 
things to learn from itand it will inspire others to take their shot."

A 'global standard for living'

Lore is cognizant of the optics that can come from attaching his name – and 
value system – to a city starting from the ground up.

But the entrepreneur said his role is mostly to provide a placeholder for the 
people to create the city's culture themselves. Telosa's official website 
promotes future residents always being connected to community and nature while 
setting a "global standard for living" with the goal of expanding "human 
potential."

"I don't want to be the ruler of the city; this is more of a public service," 
Lore said. "I'm wanting to give it a place to grow and flourish. It's not meant 
to be a private city; it's meant to be a city for everyone – with an innovative 
way we live."

Lore calls his model "equitism" and it would allow any Telosa citizen to build 
their home and sell it, while the city would retain ownership of the land 
that's underneath. By that set-up, in a dream scenario, Lore believes Telosa's 
desert land would eventually balloon in value to be worth $1 trillion. Lore 
said that land value, which could come out to $50 billion from investments and 
endowments, would go directly toward the city's funding to ensure that every 
family has equal access to health care, good schooling and a safe environment, 
regardless of income.

Top-down economic models present complications, but they've been achieved 
elsewhere. The concept of community-owned land on a large scale is on display 
in Singapore, where the government owns 90% of the country's land and then the 
proceeds are reinvested in the country. While there's skepticism, Lore's hope 
is to provide a blueprint for other future cities, noting that so many U.S. 
cities today have become ingrained in politics where bridges of trust have been 
fractured over time.

"The sole purpose of creating a city in the desert would be so it's owned by 
the community, basically take all the appreciation of the land and give it back 
to the citizens," Lore said. "Taxes paid will go back to the city for 
infrastructure – roads, tunnels and bridges – so everyone would know exactly 
where their money is going.

How does someone become a resident of Telosa?

The selection process for the first 50,000 in Telosa is yet to be determined 
but will likely be done by application. One thing Lore can promise is that 
inclusion of varying races, genders, sexual orientations and religions will be 
a top priority.

Still, selection could be one of the tallest hurdles for Telosa from a public 
perception standpoint. Simply naming qualifications for citizens can have a 
discriminatory connotation. One lure to draw people to Telosa will be a 
Lore-created venture capital fund that could house startups that relocate to 
the city. But what will the other careers of first citizens be?

"We can't create a city without some early nudging to move to the city," Lore 
said. "We'll have to kickstart in an unconventional way, but the hope is we'll 
position the people to grow a culture."

Lore said much of the framework for the first "settlers" will be sorted out 
with aid from his team of 50 volunteers and full-timers made up of architects, 
historians, researchers, economists, creatives, designers, engineers and 
climate experts.

Once the first phase begins in 2030, Lore said the hope of the equitism model 
is to let the people drive the creation of the city's culture and then 
accentuate the diversity through respect and an equal value system.

"How does a city have a soul?" Lore said. "It's not about buildings and roads, 
it's about the values and the city standing for something. We don't know what 
that is yet, but we want to find out."

Concerns of division, belief in inclusion

Lore said Telosa will be intentionally apolitical with its creation and 
potential launch.

"We want to involve Democrats and Republicans, people with differing opinions," 
he said. "How do we bring people together? It's always in the how. We intend to 
be transparent as one team with one vision."

One approach to zero in on an inclusive culture, Lore said, is by looking at 
future citizens from more of a psychological lens vs. a sociological lens – 
focusing on the nuances of what makes individuals tick vs. the semantics of the 
whole.

"One of the things I discovered working with (companies) was how much trust 
builds relationships and trust impacts culture," Lore said. "Something magical 
happens when people trust that you're living by a set of values and being 
honest about it. When I was at Jet, the directors made the same salary and that 
was known. The transparency and fairness mean something."

In conjunction with financial buy-in, there will be practical challenges to 
address. But Lore said he sees Telosa as an opportunity to test highly 
researched theories in a way that's not possible otherwise.

One of those concerns will be a sufficient water system in the desert. "It will 
require us to use technology in ways we're not today so that we can have a city 
live off of 80% less water per person. That can set up a future we're prepared 
for where water is more scarce."

This isn't the first time that a Utopian city has been attempted by a wealthy 
person. Bill Gates announced in 2017 plans to build a smart city outside of 
Phoenix on 2,800 acres. Millionaire Jeffrey Berns also bought 67,000 acres in 
Nevada for a smart city.

But Lore sees his vision as different.

"I'm very open to others' opinions and I want (Telosa) to be based on the 
collective thinking of people in the world," Lore said.

Lore has plans to step aside more if and when Telosa is off the ground. In the 
meantime, that childhood dream of creating something out of nothing is closer 
to coming to its fruition.

"I don't have all the answers," Lore said. "But each day I'm learning."



Sent from my iPhone

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