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From Rip Rapson, the pathbreaking president of the Kresge Foundation in Detroit, comes a lively, entertaining, and highly personal collection of stories describing innovative approaches to confronting the full sweep of some of the most intractable challenges facing American cities, drawing on his career in both Minneapolis and Detroit.
About the author
Rip Rapson is president and CEO of The Kresge Foundation, a private, national foundation that invests more than $180 million annually to improve the economic, social, cultural, and environmental conditions of urban life, including in Kresge's hometown of Detroit.
In Detroit, the foundation played a central role in funding and implementing the "Grand Bargain," which propelled the City's emergence from municipal bankruptcy in 2014.
Rapson began his career as a legislative assistant to U.S. Rep. Don Fraser, where he oversaw development and passage of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness Act of 1978, which brought full wilderness protection to the million-acre lake country of northern Minnesota. After leaving Washington to attend Columbia University law school, Rapson joined the Minneapolis law firm of Leonard, Street & Deinard in Minneapolis, where he practiced law in the 1980s.
Rapson served as the deputy mayor of Minneapolis from 1989 to 1993. He was the primary architect of its neighborhood revitalization program, a 20-year, $400 million effort to strengthen the city's neighborhoods. He also directed a comprehensive redesign of the municipal budgeting process and oversaw the mayor's initiatives to support families and children.
In 1993, Rapson was named a senior fellow at the University of Minnesota's Design Center for American Urban Landscape, where he led an interdisciplinary project to examine challenges facing aging first-ring suburban communities.
Rapson was appointed president of the McKnight Foundation in Minneapolis in 1999. McKnight became a national leader in early childhood development, metropolitan growth policy, and wind energy and launched the Itasca Project, which developed a comprehensive regional business agenda for the Twin Cities.
Rapson earned a bachelor's degree from Pomona College and a juris doctorate from Columbia University Law School. He is the recipient of dozens of philanthropic and civic honors and accolades, including a 2017 induction into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and recognition as Michiganian of the Year by
The Detroit News.
He has co-authored two books: "Troubled Waters," an account of the Boundary Waters legislative battle, and "Ralph Rapson: Sixty Years of Modern Design," a biography of his father, a globally renowned architect.