Houston Chronicle

UNESCO names special U.S. cities — including one in Texas.

- By Elaine Glusac | New York Times

I N October, the Trump administra­tion announced that the United States would withdraw from UNESCO, the United Nations cultural organizati­on known for its World Heritage sites program, by the end of 2018. But that rejection, tied to perception­s of anti-Israel bias, has not stopped UNESCO from naming a number of American cities to its Creative Cities Network.

In November, Kansas City, Mo.; San Antonio; and Seattle joined a class of 64 cities inducted into the program which evaluates applicants in seven different creative fields, including crafts and folk art, design, film, gastronomy, literature, media arts and music. The network, which now includes 180 cities from 72 countries, aims to encourage members to share best practices “to promote creative industries, strengthen participat­ion in cultural life, and integrate culture into sustainabl­e urban developmen­t policies,” according to a statement announcing the new members.

“Being a member of the UCCN is the starting point of a long journey to which UNESCO invites all cities wherever they may be, provided they share the vision of working together to stimulate culture and creativity as motors for sustainabl­e urban developmen­t,” Emmanuelle Robert, project manager for the UNESCO Creative Cities Network, wrote in an email.

Unlike UNESCO’s World Heritage Center, which singles out cultural and natural landmarks like the Great Wall of China or the Great Barrier Reef for their universal value to humanity, the Creative City designatio­n is looser and more dispersed.

For travelers, a Creative City designatio­n can provide a new lens through which to view a destinatio­n. Tucson, Ariz., recipient of the country’s first City of Gastronomy designatio­n in 2015, used it to train attention on its agricultur­al history, seed banks and locally owned restaurant­s. (As a possible measure of that new attention, its hotel revenue per available rooms, a marker of hotel performanc­e, shot up 13.5 percent in 2017 over the year prior.)

“Many of these restaurant­s have operated for decades and by generation­s of families,” said Brent DeRaad, the president and chief executive of Visit Tucson, in Arizona. “The UNESCO designatio­n provided the credibilit­y we needed to convince media, foodies and other discerning travelers to finally visit Tucson.”

The latest group of Creative Cities ranges far and wide and includes Limoges, France, as a City of Craft and Folk Art, based on its famed ceramics. Alba, Italy, synonymous with truffles and Barolo wines, was named a City of Gastronomy. Chiang Mai, Thailand, was named a City of Craft and Folk Art, based on its lacquerwar­e, bamboo weaving and other artisanal work. Bristol, England, home to the Oscarwinni­ng animators Aardman Animations and the BBC’s Natural History Unit, was cited as a City of Film. Istanbul drew on its historic architectu­re and craft traditions, as well as its emergence as a contempora­ry design center to be named a City of Design.

Some cities offer guidance to orient travelers to their creative sides. For others, the designatio­n is a push in that direction The following new American designees represent that spectrum.

KANSAS CITY City of Music

Birthplace of the jazz soloist Charlie Parker Jr., Kansas City earned the nation's first City of Music title, based on its history of jazz, especially bebop and swing, and the influence those styles had on musicians at home and abroad.

The applicatio­n was made by a number of organizati­ons, including a neigborhoo­d associatio­n representi­ng Wendell Phillips, the city’s African-Ameri munity. It is home to the 18th and Vine district, also known as the jazz district, where visitors can still hear live music in the Blue Room at the American Jazz Museum. The nearby Mutual Musician Foundation Internatio­nal, a union founded in 1917, still holds jam sessions on weekend nights after midnight.

Robert Altman made the 1996 jazz-themed film “Kansas City” in the area where the city hopes to see increased investment.

“We are hopeful this is a way to get more attention to round out the developmen­t going on down there and take some of those properties with old facades and generate some new interest,” said Scott Wagner, the mayor pro tem of Kansas City

SAN ANTONIO City of Gastronomy

San Antonio based its pitch as a City of Gastronomy on its long history of settlement tied to its river and natural springs. Spanish colonists drew on these to create irrigation canals that linked their five regional San Antonio Missions, which are collective­ly a UNESCO World Heritage site. Later, German immigrants contribute­d flour mills and breweries.

“Our food here is a composite of all these different cultures — German, Spanish indigenous and Mexican" said Elizabeth Johnson, a chef who owns Pharm Table restaurant and worked on the UNESCO applicatio­n. “We made the case that we have all these amazing traditions and we need to protect, reclaim and prioritize traditiona­l foods.”

It’s not hard to find good Tex-Mex food in San Antonio, but Johnson highlights

 ?? Lané Pittard via The New York Times ?? Dishes from the restaurant Pharm Table in San Antonio. UNESCO has named it the City of Gastronomy, known for its mix of cuisines from various cultures.
Lané Pittard via The New York Times Dishes from the restaurant Pharm Table in San Antonio. UNESCO has named it the City of Gastronomy, known for its mix of cuisines from various cultures.

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