Generate single title from this title Greenways Are Reviving American Cities. Some Say They Could Be Improved in 70 -100 characters. And it must return only title i dont want any extra information or introductory text with title e.g: ” Here is a single title:”

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On a gray, blustery November afternoon in Detroit, John Kish watches vigilantly as his four-year-old grandson, also named John, frolics on a towering play slide. If the day was sunny, there might be a line to use it, but given the weather, they have it to themselves. 

“It’s a long climb, but it gives them something to do,” Kish says, laughing, as the youngster carefully crosses a bridge within the structure. 

The playground sits at the West Warren Avenue stop on the Joe Louis Greenway, a network of bike paths, walking paths, playgrounds, and activity centers that’s planned to connect 23 Detroit neighborhoods. Once its 27.5 mile length is complete, it also will pass through Dearborn, Hamtramck, and Highland Park, Mich. and conclude at the Detroit riverfront. 

The best known is the High Line in New York City. Built atop a long-abandoned freight rail line, it opened in four stages from 2009 to 2019. It has become a popular attraction, with an estimated 8 million visitors a year, about one-third of them city residents. 

Along with walkers, cyclists, diners and concert-goers, the High Line has given birth to gardens and spurred economic development along its 1.45 mile path, with apartment buildings facing the pathway and the Hudson River.

That bucolic scene has yet to be replicated in Detroit, but it’s one city officials hope may occur. 

Detroit recently received $20.7 million in federal funds to link the project to the Iron Belle Trail, a 2,000 mile walking and cycling path that runs from the western end of Michigan’s upper peninsula south to the Motor City. But Perkins says many more public and private partners are needed to make the greenway a success. “It can’t just be one entity,” she says. 

In New Orleans, the Lafitte Greenway is about to celebrate its 10th anniversary. Built for a relative bargain of $7.8 million along an abandoned rail corridor, the 2.6 mile project stretches from the French Quarter to City Park, passing through historic neighborhoods such as Treme, Mid-City and Lafitte, which provided its name.

Adjacency to the greenway was a deciding factor for Jeff Hinson and Breanna Kostyk, when they opened Flour Moon Bagels two years ago. They were frequent customers at Hey! Coffee, which was the first shop to open on the greenway in 2018. 

Flour Moon’s patio is directly opposite the greenway, and diners can look outside the shop’s windows to see cyclists and walkers passing by. “We feel like the greenway is the front porch of the bagel shop. From day one, we’ve had so many guests stop in, biking or walking,” Hinson says. 

Still, cities need to take more steps to make greenways user friendly, says Anne Lusk, a lecturer at Boston University who has studied greenways for decades.

Many are lacking enough amenities like bathrooms, benches and playgrounds, like the one built in Detroit, that could make them more useful to residents and visitors, especially seniors. 

Lusk says she would also like to see cities build more protected bike lanes on their streets leading to greenways, turning them into seamless transportation systems. 

“The greenway would then serve as the main interstate highway for people using the bike to get to work, the grocery store, the drug store, or take kids to school,” she says.

Another concern, Lusk says, is the impact of climate change on the projects. Lusk would like to see greenways canopied with trees, which are scarce in the industrial corridors where projects are taking place. 

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On a gray, blustery November afternoon in Detroit, John Kish watches vigilantly as his four-year-old grandson, also named John, frolics on a towering play slide. If the day was sunny, there might be a line to use it, but given the weather, they have it to themselves. 

“It’s a long climb, but it gives them something to do,” Kish says, laughing, as the youngster carefully crosses a bridge within the structure. 

The playground sits at the West Warren Avenue stop on the Joe Louis Greenway, a network of bike paths, walking paths, playgrounds, and activity centers that’s planned to connect 23 Detroit neighborhoods. Once its 27.5 mile length is complete, it also will pass through Dearborn, Hamtramck, and Highland Park, Mich. and conclude at the Detroit riverfront. 

The best known is the High Line in New York City. Built atop a long-abandoned freight rail line, it opened in four stages from 2009 to 2019. It has become a popular attraction, with an estimated 8 million visitors a year, about one-third of them city residents. 

Along with walkers, cyclists, diners and concert-goers, the High Line has given birth to gardens and spurred economic development along its 1.45 mile path, with apartment buildings facing the pathway and the Hudson River.

That bucolic scene has yet to be replicated in Detroit, but it’s one city officials hope may occur. 

Detroit recently received $20.7 million in federal funds to link the project to the Iron Belle Trail, a 2,000 mile walking and cycling path that runs from the western end of Michigan’s upper peninsula south to the Motor City. But Perkins says many more public and private partners are needed to make the greenway a success. “It can’t just be one entity,” she says. 

In New Orleans, the Lafitte Greenway is about to celebrate its 10th anniversary. Built for a relative bargain of $7.8 million along an abandoned rail corridor, the 2.6 mile project stretches from the French Quarter to City Park, passing through historic neighborhoods such as Treme, Mid-City and Lafitte, which provided its name.

Adjacency to the greenway was a deciding factor for Jeff Hinson and Breanna Kostyk, when they opened Flour Moon Bagels two years ago. They were frequent customers at Hey! Coffee, which was the first shop to open on the greenway in 2018. 

Flour Moon’s patio is directly opposite the greenway, and diners can look outside the shop’s windows to see cyclists and walkers passing by. “We feel like the greenway is the front porch of the bagel shop. From day one, we’ve had so many guests stop in, biking or walking,” Hinson says. 

Still, cities need to take more steps to make greenways user friendly, says Anne Lusk, a lecturer at Boston University who has studied greenways for decades.

Many are lacking enough amenities like bathrooms, benches and playgrounds, like the one built in Detroit, that could make them more useful to residents and visitors, especially seniors. 

Lusk says she would also like to see cities build more protected bike lanes on their streets leading to greenways, turning them into seamless transportation systems. 

“The greenway would then serve as the main interstate highway for people using the bike to get to work, the grocery store, the drug store, or take kids to school,” she says.

Another concern, Lusk says, is the impact of climate change on the projects. Lusk would like to see greenways canopied with trees, which are scarce in the industrial corridors where projects are taking place. 

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