Freakonomics Radio - 205. Could the Next Brooklyn Be ... Las Vegas?!
Episode Date: May 7, 2015Zappos CEO Tony Hsieh has a wild vision and the dollars to try to make it real. But it still might be the biggest gamble in town. ...
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Hey, podcast listeners, you are about to hear a brand new podcast, a tale of a great American
city, at least some people think it's a great city, that is in the midst of a most unlikely
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Let us know what you think. And Ogden Avenue and Las Vegas Boulevard North.
In Las Vegas, Nevada.
Nevada?
Nevada.
It is Nevada?
Nevada.
Oh, God, I had it wrong the whole time.
I always try to be so respectful of the way that a place is pronounced in the place where it is, like Oregon, I think.
Oregon?
No, I'm probably wrong on that.
No, you're right on that.
It is New Yersey, right?
No.
Okay.
And we're looking up at the Ogden.
Yeah.
The Ogden is a luxury condo building in downtown Las Vegas.
Not on the Strip, the famous part of the city with all the huge hotels and casinos and glitter.
The old downtown is about five miles north of the Strip.
But it's still Las Vegas,
still in the state of, say it with me, Nevada.
Apartments in the Ogden sell in the low to mid six figures.
You've lived there how long?
I've lived there a year and a half.
And you are?
Maggie Hsu, and I run business development
for Downtown Project.
The Downtown Project is, as the name implies,
a project to make downtown a thing again in Las Vegas, a vibrant area where a lot of people might
actually want to live. Vegas is a very unique market. You have a family, kids, animals. It's,
you know, less appealing to have an apartment downtown. So what we're really trying to do is
boost up the amenities. So you have a dog park nearby, you have restaurants within walking distance.
But as you'll hear, it's more than just that, more than just boosting amenities.
The downtown project, founded in January 2012, comes with a big vision and a big price tag,
which is being funded primarily by one man.
So the initial allocation of the project was $350 million,
fully funded as a for-profit entity by Tony Hsieh.
Tony Hsieh, that is H-S-I-E-H, is already a business iconoclast.
He founded Zappos, the online shoe and clothing retailer.
He's still the CEO, presiding over a corporate culture
that most corporations wouldn't recognize. Among his
priorities, having fun, empowering his call center employees, and making customers happy at almost
any cost. We've written about Shea and Zappos before, how, for instance, company meetings are
sometimes held in a bar, and why customer reps are encouraged to talk to a customer for as long as they want,
all without a script, and how they're authorized to settle problems without calling in a supervisor.
They can even fire a customer who makes trouble for them. And how Zappos gives new employees a
chance to quit their brand new job and even get a quitting bonus, about one month's pay,
because Tony Hsieh figures he would rather weed out anyone who doesn't
really, really, really want to work at Zappos.
All those gambles paid off.
In 2009, Amazon.com bought Zappos for about $1.2 billion.
Now Hsieh is using some of his money for an even bigger gamble to try turning downtown
Las Vegas into a very different kind of city.
So, in this episode of Freakonomics Radio, we'll do what most of you think about doing
whenever you visit Las Vegas, I'm sure.
We sit around a campfire and chat with Tony Hsieh and campfire-appropriate beverages.
I'm not really normally a beer drinker.
And this is your first PBR.
I think ever.
It tastes like beer.
We had a Burnett shot earlier for those of you just tuning in. From WNYC, this is Freakonomics Radio,
the podcast that explores the hidden side of everything.
Here's your host, Stephen Dupner.
Compared to the rise of Las Vegas itself, a gambling and entertainment mecca built in the middle of nowhere through the moxie of some Jewish gangsters,
Mormon bankers, and other colorful characters,
the downtown project that Tony Hsieh envisions
isn't quite so bold.
But for anyone who cares about cities
and about the future of cities,
it's worth paying attention to.
The idea for remaking downtown Vegas began
when Hsieh relocated Zappos headquarters
from Henderson on the southeast edge
of Las Vegas into downtown. But Shea, being Shea, didn't settle for some random address. Zappos
moved into the old City Hall. So today, the former Las Vegas City Council Chamber is now an auditorium
for Zappos' company meetings. The old jail has been converted into an employee gym.
And once Zappos made over City Hall,
Tony Hsieh began to wonder if downtown itself might need a makeover.
One of his main inspirations was a Harvard economist named Ed Glazer,
who four years ago published a manifesto called Triumph of the City,
how our greatest invention makes us richer, smarter, greener,
healthier, and happier. So let's start there. Professor Glazer.
Hi, Stephen. How are you?
I'm very well, thank you. How are you?
Great, thanks.
And where are you today?
I'm in Paris, France.
Poor fella. How are things there?
It is a spectacular April day in Paris, France. Poor fella. How are things there? It is a spectacular April day in Paris.
And now we should just establish for the record, you do not live in Paris. So just give us quickly your geographical bona fides.
Usually I live outside of Boston and I'm currently on sabbatical attempting to civilize my children by taking them to a variety
of different cities. Very good. And you have a particular interest in cities, do you not, sir?
I do indeed. I do love cities very much. I've spent almost all of my adult life studying cities
and that's also one of the reasons why I'm here in Paris.
So, Ed, you grew up in New York City, so you may be biased, but just rank for me, if you don't mind, your five, let's say, favorite cities in the world.
Oh, come on. That's like ranking your favorite children. That's a highly unfair thing to do.
Well, you don't have that many children, so it's probably a little easier. Certainly, I love New York and I love Boston and I'm very, very fond of Hong Kong.
And I think Singapore still remains the best-run place on the planet.
And Europe is filled with wonderful cities full of charm and history that I also love very much.
If you had to pick one, since you're in Paris right now, maybe it would be Paris.
If you had to pick one Western European city to make your top five list, what would it be?
Oh, you know, certainly Paris is great.
I also, you know, I just spent a month in Barcelona, which I also love.
And look, I'm passionate about London as well.
You've shared with us your five or seven favorite cities, noting that what makes them your favorite is not
necessarily universal. Where on your list, and this list can be as long as you want,
of cities in the world, where would Las Vegas rank on that list?
Again, I gave you cities that I loved. I'm not sure that I'm comfortable making any sort of a list, but certainly there's a lot to like about the dynamism in Las Vegas.
Las Vegas was one of the fastest growing American cities for many decades.
It was a place that until the boom succeeded marvelously, as many American Sunbelt cities do, at providing vast amounts of affordable housing for ordinary income Americans, and that's
terrific. It cannot be faulted for its pro-business policies. All of these things are to be loved.
It is true that when people often think of as the core of Las Vegas, the Las Vegas Strip,
which is really in the unincorporated city. That's a thing which,
as a lover of cities, I may marvel at. But it's hard to sort of fall in love with it.
I think historically, the great weakness of Las Vegas has been education, so much so that in,
you know, my earliest work documenting the connection between education and urban growth, Las Vegas was an obviously huge outlier because it grew so quickly and had so little of a base in terms of share of the population with a college degree.
And in the city, you still have about 21 percent of the Las Vegas adults with a college degree, which is a lot closer to Detroit, you know, which is about 12% than it is to
Seattle, which is about 50%.
And I continue to think that that is, you know, Las Vegas's greatest challenge is making
itself attractive to, you know, a wider range of skill categories.
This message, the need to attract highly educated people, got through to Tony Hsieh and the other architects of the Downtown Project.
One of them is Zach Ware, who's a general partner at Vegas Tech Fund, the venture capital arm of the Downtown Project.
The work that we first found that really, I think, sowed the seeds for what would become the Downtown Project was Ed Glazer's book.
I was very flattered when Tony reached out to me.
He read my book and seems to have been excited by it.
It's deeply flattering, obviously.
And Zappos paid me to come out and give a talk to their workers.
And I got to spend about three days with Tony
hanging out in the downtown area of Las Vegas.
I thought it was fascinating what he was doing.
And I thought it always seemed like it was an uncertain bet. The bet was whether Tony Hsieh could use his fortune to reshape downtown.
Not, however, by building big attractions that draw visitors, but rather by reconfiguring things
for the locals. Zach Ware again. So in Tony's case, he set about on the real estate side to acquire a fairly large contiguous area of land.
And his perspective was, I don't necessarily need to build everything.
I don't want to. I don't want to program the neighborhood.
I'm not someone who can do that.
But what I can do is be a force as best as I possibly can.
So our secret weapon, if we wanted to have restaurants, bookshop,, bars, co-working spaces, and so forth sort of coexisting together, our secret sauce was that Downtown Project owned all the property. that happens in those places is as a result of random encounters and conversations with people
you otherwise wouldn't know to reach out to, couldn't reach out to, didn't know existed.
They have a word for this. Collisions. Collisions are one of the most important metrics that Ware
and Shea have in mind. It's engineering an environment to support collisions,
to inspire collisions, and being very mindful that a master plan, single idea can be
very, very risky, that letting the neighborhoods revolve itself is what makes our minds long-term
magic happen. Ed Glazer says this vision is very different than most visions about how to build
or grow a city. When you look at the globe and what, you know, building cities usually means, it means that somebody has come up with a couple billion dollars to build some form of project, a convention center, a sports stadium, maybe something to do with transportation. And sometimes it works. At least half of the time it doesn't.
But it's very much of a view that what cities are physical structures and let the people, you know, follow that.
Shea was remarkable because his view was that the structures should actually follow the people. And that's a view I largely share, that actually focusing on the real heart of the city, which is always the humanity that's dwelling in that city, is the right thing to do. And it was very much a view that the neighborhood would grow organically,
that it would originally be housed in older buildings and have businesses housed in things
like shipping containers. It would focus on the social networks, on the bumping into each other
of different people. It was a very exciting vision. Now, I think it's hard to make a dense downtown area work in Las Vegas, right? I mean, the entire Sunbelt area in the U.S. on a Tuesday in February. Vegas was just recovering from a cold
snap. It had gotten into the 40s. There'd been snow on the surrounding mountains. Zappos had
been planning a charity event featuring Britney Spears and a bunch of zoo animals. Britney Spears
was still going to show up, but the zoo animals were kept at home because of the cold. So we're
at the very beginning of the Downtown Project here in Las Vegas and Ogden. So if collision, colliding and collidability and collisionability,
et cetera, are what you're after, it's, you know, prime time, late afternoon, and we're the only
people on the corners. And there are 200 cars within eyesight. So they're all colliding, or not
colliding, but interacting with each other. how much more urban does it need to get
before the stuff that you want to happen starts to happen?
Yeah, and I think it's a mix of increasing the residential density
but also increasing walkability.
And so Las Vegas is a very car-centric culture,
and people are used to driving places.
There's nothing surprising in this.
All of the world's urban areas are built around the transportation technology
that was dominant in the era in which they were being produced.
So, you know, the Western cities, which are post-war typically, were built around the car, Las Vegas as much as any.
So the Che vision of sort of a denser walking area was always a little bit at odds with that, although Las Vegas was always somewhat quirky because of the desire of tourists to be able to walk places.
So it always had more density, more walkability
than, let's say, Phoenix did or Oklahoma City.
And I think the attempt to sort of creatively reuse old space,
the attempt to focus on social connections,
all of that seemed exciting and visionary, if indeed something of a gamble.
The Downtown Project is now one of the biggest landowners in downtown Las Vegas.
It directly employs more than 250 people and estimates that it has helped create at least
900 jobs through its startup investments. It owns and operates some properties like the Container Park,
an open-air shopping and eating and entertainment zone, a grocery store, a boutique hotel,
and the Gold Spike. That's a bar and restaurant that also serves another function.
So this is the Gold Spike. It used to be a casino with Dollar Strip, Blackjack, and
lots of other interesting games.
And we converted into a co-working space.
So you'll notice power outlets, free Wi-Fi.
It's actually a great place for startups that don't have offices to meet and have meetings.
So are these guys over there co-working or are they just drinking?
So the gentleman in the far corner actually runs our food and beverage operations.
And so he's having a meeting, a little bit of both.
The gold spike is perfectly inviting,
but only a handful of people had taken up the invitation,
at least on this one weekday afternoon.
It felt a little bit like a really nice model home version of a bar.
It doesn't have to be perfect when you first open it.
It was intentional, so being able to understand how people use the space.
And the best example is the backyard.
So the backyard.
So the backyard actually was a parking lot when we first opened.
And one day someone said, why not build an ice rink?
So we built out what we called the cold spike.
And we had ice rink.
These were all decorated as gingerbread houses.
Not many people went ice skating.
And so we decided to retool.
And what really stood out in the Yelp reviews and customer feedback was these giant games. And so we decided to get rid of the ice rink and build this area
full of giant games. There were indeed a bunch of giant games out there, including the classic
backyard contest known in some parts of the country as cornhole. It is basically a beanbag toss toward a sloped board with a big hole in it.
How do you score? In the hole is something and on the board is something or no?
In the hole is three, on the board is one.
Okay, and where do we shoot from?
We can go from this line.
Okay. What's our wager?
A one-bedroom apartment in the Ogden?
Is that too much?
I was going to say a Furnette shot.
Over the Airstreams later.
Okay, it's a deal.
Okay, you go ahead.
Okay.
Oh, beautiful shot.
That's three.
All right, so a total of four?
Yeah.
Okay.
Uh-oh, zero.
Oh!
We tied!
Sudden death? Sudden death. I have to do another one. Oh! We tied! Sudden death?
Sudden death. I have to do another one.
Oh!
Yay!
Congratulations.
I owe you a shot of Tony's vile Italian liqueur.
After Cornhole, the tour continued.
So on the west side of the street is the Fremont Experience.
And it's a business improvement district, a mix of casinos and restaurants.
Long predates to Don't Have Projects, right?
A lot of it was the original strip, and I think Adam might know.
Okay. And then over here?
We're calling this East of Fremont East, for lack of a better name.
But many of these restaurants and bars were around, have been
around for several years and existed before Zappos moved downtown. And they were kind of
this unique spot where the bartenders and the owners of the restaurants would go to other
people's restaurants after work. And so it was this naturally supportive community.
And what Tony saw there was something that, you know, had the beginnings
of a really great, unique space across here, like a Brooklyn or an Austin.
If you know Brooklyn or Austin, it might seem impossible to remake the old downtown section
of Las Vegas in their image. But remember, the Downtown Project has a secret weapon, an urban economist,
Ed Glazer, who believes that the key to an effort like this is to attract a certain kind
of entrepreneur. Ed, you wrote a paper back in 2009 called Clusters of Entrepreneurship,
and it seems as though Tony is following this plan quite closely. I'll read you the beginning of your abstract.
Employment growth is strongly predicted by smaller average establishment size, both across cities and across industries within cities.
And Tony, as you know, is trying to import a lot of or trying to start up and encourage a lot of small businesses, restaurants, shops, bookstores and so on.
Talk about that for a minute.
Obviously, you think that's the right way to go. Why is that the right way to go? How does that work in cities?
Well, you know, I think this is maybe best illustrated by the counterexample, which is
Detroit. So Detroit goes from being one of the most entrepreneurial places on the planet in the
1890s, right, which is filled with a cluster of smart people just trying to do the new,
new thing, a lot like Silicon Valley in the 1960s.
And it succeeds so well that it creates these massive, massive automotive companies that
provide fantastic wages, are incredibly productive.
I mean, it has a 70-year run that is almost unimaginable in terms of its
urban triumph. And yet the very success of those companies basically kills off the tradition of
entrepreneurial human capital. It trains people who make superb company men, but not scrappy
entrepreneurs. And entrepreneurship, like anything else that matters, is a skill. It's something
that's built. And if you've spent your life working for General Motors, you're not likely to be the right person to start up some, you know,
scrappy new electronic greeting cards company if General Motors falters. And that's really,
I think, what that paper is about and what the sort of long litany of evidence trying that shows
the sort of role of proxies of entrepreneurship as predicting urban success.
It suggests that just as normal human capital share the population with a college degree is
very predictive of which areas do well, measures of other types of human capital, like the amount
of entrepreneurial skill in the area, also predict urban success. And I think that's what Tony Hsieh
is trying to do, is trying to create enough of a cluster of entrepreneurship, both because those
entrepreneurs will themselves create employment, but because some of that entrepreneurial skill
is likely to be infectious, that people will learn from each other, and you'll create an
overall cluster of this. And that's why the Downtown Project is helping fund all kinds of
small entrepreneurs. So far, it has put money into more than 50 businesses and through the Vegas Tech Fund, 100 tech
startups. Here again is Zach Ware. In our case, we said, hey, there's an amazing chef who wants
to start a restaurant. How can we get behind that? Here are two or three really awesome tech
company ideas that we think are really awesome companies to invest in. Let's do that. And the
idea for us has always been create value by creating diversity. Try not to bet on one thing, but rather have 100 amazing ideas or interesting ideas where 20%, 30%, 40% can fail.
And you still have a very diverse, active economy and ground activity rather than choosing one big, gigantic thing like know, or a big building that can fail.
And when it fails, the whole neighborhood goes down with it.
The epicenter of the downtown project, the densest small business incubator, feels like
a cross between an outdoor mall and a county fair.
So this is looking like, I don't know what to describe this, like a public plaza, playground-y.
There are kids and people climbing on stuff, but shops and llama signs.
So what is this?
This is the container park.
It was an old Motel 6 that we tore down.
Wanted to build both a retail space, retail incubator for first-time entrepreneurs,
as well as a space for families and children.
And so both components were equally important. So you have around the outside a lot of first-time
owner-operated small business owners that can test out their concepts in a small space.
And if they succeed, they can move to standalone brick and mortar or they can shift locations. So
we actually had a few stores go from second floor to first floor because they were so successful and they needed more square footage. And then at the same time, we had this
giant Swiss family Robinson tree house in the middle with three slides, a play space for children,
and we can actually take a walk around the park. So just, and just, if you would just look around
and tell me the name of some of the shops here and if the name doesn't contain what they do tell us what they do sure um so big earns barbecue is a barbecue shop and the
owner is a gentleman named ernie and he was working at the call center at zappos and his passion was
barbecue so was another small business investment funded him he was going out of the back of his
truck for a while and this was his first ever store and i believe
he's now you know the the top or second grossing food and beverage outlet in the entire park and
when the park opened he got up on stage and i remember he was crying and this was a life-changing
opportunity um and then we'll go into the toy store kappa toys um so lizzie and her husband
trevor are from austin tex Texas And they were at a toy store
Several of us were there for South by Southwest
Stumbled upon the store
And they were actually going out of business
And so we said, you know, why not open a toy store in downtown Vegas?
What do you think about that?
It seemed like a really natural fit with the kids
And they've been here ever since And they're absolutely amazing what they can do.
Hi! Hi!
Hi!
We're doing a little podcast.
Oh, awesome! Cool!
So they're the actual owners, Lizzie and Chavio?
Yes, you found us both. This is right there.
Steven, nice to meet you.
Nice to meet you. How do you do?
Explain to me just a little bit, are you a subsidized business then? How does it work?
I don't know if subsidized would be how I would explain this business specifically,
because we are part of that fully funded autonomous group.
So we are a small business.
I would almost call it, I see it as venture capital,
which I don't see as subsidy so much as investment risk.
So what's it feel like to be the business owners in that scenario?
And what are you thinking about is like, how do you measure success? And how long can you go without being as successful as you might be if you didn't have that backup?
Yeah, we've done small business for 10 years now, specifically in the toy industry.
And one of the biggest difficulties in such a weird niche industry, especially since the whole banking crisis, has been finding capital.
And so what we've really appreciated overall from working before is a huge pressure is off.
Like, we can focus on what we do best and we're not constantly stressed.
And we're not constantly having to also learn how to like find funding and organize everything like it's in a funding that we can you know really work on the business and not constantly freak out about where our next line of
credit is coming from you guys are a couple you have kids no why is that so funny um everyone
everyone asks it and yeah i think this is the best birth control you can ask
we get really cute kids in and i love them and every time i start thinking seriously about it
we'll get a little nightmare in and all of a sudden i'll add another year onto our waiting
period we've started discussing this but but we're a few years out yeah i think dog first
what are your big sellers here toy wise everything yeah i mean, we really set it up so that we keep in stuff that sells well
and there's not much we have that doesn't move.
Brody is a personal favorite.
I've worked with this company for years.
So they're bouncy ponies.
They're made in Italy.
They're beautiful.
So you see that design.
They're over 30 years old.
Both of them are safe to 400 pounds.
So even though it's a kid's toy, it's totally adult-friendly, and there's so many drunk
grown-ups on them every Saturday night.
Okay.
All right.
Oh, I guess we're leaving.
Onward and out.
You can come back.
We won't be here.
You can bother the employees.
Well, thank you so much.
No, it's fine.
Nice to have met you.
Good luck with everything.
Yeah, appreciate it.
Maggie, Shu, and I head out of Container Park, where the density falls in a hurry.
So, as neat as all this is, we're encountering very few actual humans.
Is that because of time of day, day of week, and temperature?
It's still less dense than you would find in many other cities and downtowns.
But you'll notice that what we've tried to do is build block by block.
So, the Container Park a year ago would have even less traffic. So we built that extra block. You walk
the extra block to the container park. We've started activating further down. We're about to
walk to the bookstore and we'll see a few more people. So, you know, we're making that journey.
And the thought is as we build more of that out. So we're building a music area on the right with
the bunkhouse, which is a music venue,
the wheelhouse, which will be a wind-powered stage, and a record store.
So once that opens, you have even more people.
And so it's this one-block, one-block strategy.
And part of that strategy is to attract technology startups.
I asked Ed Glazer what kind of tech startups downtown Vegas should be thinking about.
If there was some tech cluster that you could clone or import or steal, what kind of tech cluster would it be?
If you could transplant something, would it be like a Silicon Valley or Route 28 corridor or a Provo environment?
Or do you want a different kind of industry represented than the kind of current traditional tech industry?
What would you bring in to Vegas if you could bring in anything that you think would help it to succeed?
I would think the more that you go towards things like Silicon Valley where you're focusing on making faster and faster transistors, I can't imagine that that has any synergies with Las Vegas.
That being said, think about what Tony Hsieh found attractive about the Las Vegas
area for Zappos. It was the consumer-oriented workforce, people who came out of working in
the hospitality industry, people who came out of the entertainment industry, people who were
fantastic manning the phones for Zappos. Now, the question is, what other sort of consumer service tech companies could potentially take advantage of that?
To what other areas are there synergies with the traditional strengths of Las Vegas?
You know, maybe that's another angle to play.
But if Tony Hsieh wants the downtown project to do more than just make life a bit more interesting for Zappos employees, that is a much bigger challenge.
I think it all depends upon whether or not there's going to be enough entrepreneurship that he can attract into the area and particularly enough educated entrepreneurs.
I think this feels fairly central to me is whether or not he can attract more people like himself into the area and probably not just people who are in service industries.
He needs to get something more of a chain of tech people who decide that this is a whole lot cooler and a whole lot cheaper than other places that they could move into.
Let me propose something where we'd be killing,
where Tony Hsieh could be killing a couple birds with one stone.
What would it take for you to bring your family to Las Vegas,
to Downtown Project, for, let's say, three years to establish a kind of triumph of the city urban institute, where you'd be the star attraction, and you'd work
there and live there, and then the other IQ would flow. How much does Tony Hsieh need to pay you per
annum? Well, I don't know about money. I mean, I think the problem is that my welfare function
depends critically on having people who are smarter than I am around me. And I would need
to make sure that my kids also had a lot of people who are smarter than they were around them. And
if you can guarantee me that, you know, it's I think I'd be willing to go. That in some sense
is the challenge that you face in starting a new city
is to sort of attract a cluster of, you know, cluster of talent that can then feed on itself.
I don't know how well, how feasible that is or whether or not that will be achieved. But if you
judge the project in the abstract, I mean, if it were me doing it, I'd be pretty sure that I would
screw it up, right? I mean, but he is a remarkable guy with a remarkable track record who is, you know, deeply charismatic in many ways.
So you would have lost money in the past betting against Tony Hsieh.
So I'm not sure I would be ready to start betting against him now.
Coming up on Freakonomics Radio,
we finally get around the campfire with Tony Hsieh himself to hear what he's got in mind.
A lot of city revitalization projects are really top-down, master-planned,
and we're really anti that.
It's really more about backing the entrepreneurs and their passions.
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After our tour of the downtown project, we head to the outskirts of the area.
The streets here are very quiet.
Sidewalk's empty.
It's getting dark now.
We turn right and come upon a guard shack.
We get waved through.
We're with the band.
And now we find ourselves standing in what looks to be a very funky trailer park.
So we're walking on a very nice astroturfed, not trademark astroturf,
but artificial grass walkway with colored lights and a kind of canopy.
And the structures are some airstreams, but also a lot of... Tumbleweed tiny houses.
Tumbleweed, is that a name brand?
It's a trademark.
Tumbleweed tiny houses?
Tumbleweed tiny homes.
And how many residences or how many buildings are there here?
There are about 20 airstreams and 10 tumbleweeds.
And are they all full?
It's a mix.
One of the residents is Tony Hsieh,
the founder and CEO of Zappos,
the man who is putting his own money into
the downtown project. We began
as apparently many get-togethers
begin with Tony Hsieh, with a shot of
his favorite drink, brunette.
That is
an Italian liqueur that's
soaked in 40 herbs including ginseng, myrrh, chamomile, anise.
It tastes and smells like Chinese medicine.
60 seconds after you drink it, it coats your stomach.
It's a digestif.
It actually gets rid of nausea, so it's like a healthy...
Do you like it in the cup or no?
I'm not fancy.
Okay.
Cheers.
Cheers.
Cheers.
Cheers.
This is delicious. I'm not fancy. Okay. Cheers. Chin chin. Cheers. All the time. Cheers. Everything.
This is delicious.
I felt like I hurried through it just out of being the only one with a bottle.
Okay.
But you'll see throughout the night as it evolves.
As you evolve.
Want to go talk?
Yeah.
Do you want to do this outdoors?
I don't know what's easier for...
Because there's a great spot up there.
On top of the Airstream?
Yeah.
Cool.
Or we can do next to the campfire so he can get the crackling every once in a while for background.
I like that.
Tony, can you just kind of set the scene, like say where we are and what happens here uh we are in a uh half a city block and so this was just a
completely empty lot uh three and a half months ago and a bunch of us decided to move in as a
living experiment right and the original idea was let's see what happens if we do an urban
version of burning Man. Right.
I think there's probably 15 or so of us that live here,
but then we also have a whole bunch that are set up as guest airstreams and guest tiny houses.
You're living here now? You sleep here every night?
I've been here over three months now. Oh.
Since November 4th.
Oh, no kidding. Okay.
I used to live there in the obden right and so
do you when you say you see you literally don't live there anymore you kind of moved out of there
this is this is temporary right uh no this is really yeah i've probably been back there five
times wow this whole time so you keep all your stuff you have an airstream yeah it's uh the one behind that one uh-huh okay so maggie
walked us around and um it was great and baffled that you've been able to do what you've done so
far and even more baffled that you wanted to do what you've done because it seems like such
a massive undertaking not just physically and logistically and financially, but psychically.
So that's what I kind of want to talk to you about is where did the psychic part, like what made you
want to reinvent a part of a city and where did that, where'd the desire come from?
I guess for me, it wasn't really about reinventing Like this area we're in near Fremont East, which is an area that most tourists don't know about, already existed.
And just by magical coincidence, it was a few blocks from the former city hall, which is now Zappos headquarters.
So you didn't have any desire or idea to do this until Zappos moved there?
So originally, actually, we were looking to do what a lot of corporate campuses do,
where we're looking to buy a big plot of land and then kind of build our own little community for the company.
So we actually toured campuses like Apple and Nike and Google that have these amazing campuses
and then asked our employees for ideas for what to have in Dream Campus.
And we literally got hundreds and hundreds of suggestions where we realized it was going to be physically impossible to fit all those things. Actually, the number one request we got from employees
was actually doggy daycare,
which ranked significantly higher than human daycare.
Is that because more of your employees have dogs than kids
or they care more about their dogs than kids?
Do you know?
I'm guessing more people have dogs than kids.
But as we got all these requests,
we realized that it was going to be physically impossible
to fit all of them under one roof.
And the other thing we realized
was that all those other campuses that we had looked at
were great for employees, but were actually really insular
and didn't really integrate or contribute to the surrounding community.
And so we started thinking, what if we actually turned the entire concept inside out?
And rather than just focusing on ourselves, we took an approach that was more analogous to NYU,
where the campus blends in with the city and you don't really know where one begins and the other ends.
Why did you care about that?
I mean, aesthetically I understand, and I personally happen to agree with it, that it's a nice idea.
But there are all these other corporations.
I mean, the typical corporate campus throughout history has been very segregated from where people live.
What made you think that was worth doing?
I think it was based on a lot of just different research reports I'd read.
So we were talking about Ed Glazier earlier,
and then there's also Jeffrey Moore that's done research on cities.
And every time the size of a city doubles,
innovation and productivity per resident increases by 15%.
But the opposite generally happens with companies.
As they get bigger, innovation and productivity per employee generally goes down.
So part of it was wanting to avoid that fate
and really think about how do we, over time,
get Zappos to function more like a city
and less like a typical bureaucratic...
How much of that, from your end, was a desire for business growth
and how much of it was a desire,
like a kind of aesthetic choice for you like you thought it would be better nicer cooler if your company could be like that as opposed to
necessarily the project productivity and the things um it was a few different things there's
the productivity part of it and then there's also the uh attracting and retaining employees part of it. If employees that we're looking for want to be part of an urban environment, then that was definitely part of the motivation.
But then the other interesting research is that most innovation actually comes from something outside your industry being applied to your own. And so I think kind of companies that are just in four walls ultimately end up being less innovative
because they don't have the interactions with people from other industries and so on, or on a typical suburban campus.
Most people who know you and know who you are and know what you've done would consider you an innovator. I mean, that's kind of, in addition to being a success at business,
that's what you're known for. Do you think that having been an innovator in business necessarily
has inherently turned you into an innovator in this kind of thing, this kind of social urban experiment? I mean, are they, is it one in the same? Is it necessarily related? Or is it just something
that's kind of an outgrowth of who you are as a person and what you like to do?
I think it's more about, because I was never interested in anything related to urban
revitalization or anything or real estate until relatively recently. And for me, 10 or 15 years ago, I used to throw a lot of parties
and I would think about how do you design the space
so that people collide with each other and interact with each other.
And so, for example, if there's two bars at a party,
then I would shut down the first bar that's closest to the entrance and then
everyone eventually finds the alcohol and and then maybe an hour or two later open up the first bar
and then that promotes the circulation and then within an office environment at Zappos culture
is really important to us we want people to have those equivalent of water cooler conversations. And so we do a lot of thinking about how do you create more collisions.
So we would do weird things like in our Henderson office in the building I was in,
the parking lot was behind the building and the previous tenant actually had all,
there were doors on all four walls of the building
and employees would go in and out whichever door was most convenient.
So we actually shut down those doors and had everyone actually walk around the entire building and come in the front entrance,
which ended up making the reception area this collision point where guests and employees would collide.
And do you have evidence that that leads to better outcomes?
Part of it is just personal experience and anecdotal.
I mean, do you really care if it's empirically a lot better?
Because, you know, when I talked to Levitt about you recently,
he said that as much as he is, you know,
kind of a slave to the data at the end of the day,
like if he's trying to do something as a consultant with a business or with an NGO or with a government,
he's going to take, even if there's a 1% advantage in scenario A over B,
and that might require doing something that most people think unpopular,
he's going to do it because it's going to be better.
And he said that Tony doesn't care at all about anything like that.
He said,
Tony just cares about people being happy and people having a good time.
And with Zappos,
it's been incredibly successful,
but Levitt,
like for instance,
wasn't sure if the success was due to that happiness or maybe orthogonal to
that happiness.
So do you know, do you care?
I do care.
And I guess I'd be interested in whatever data research that, you know,
maybe you guys can come up with.
But if you read books like Good to Great or Tribal Leadership,
there's a clear, at least correlation right if
not cause between companies that do well in the long term financially and culture although if you
look at the good to great companies have you looked at those lately well so there's a follow-up
book that jim collins came up with which was how the mighty fall or fail and so that's also interesting reading um but generally the great companies whether it's in
good to great or or in general have strong cultures and so some people might think it's a strong
culture that results in the long-term positive financial results and some people could say it's
the other way around the
right because they're you have the ability to kind of develop your culture if you're being
successful right yeah and so um you can also tell you just from i guess personal experience and from
uh experience at least of the close friends i have at zappos that I talk to, that when you're working with friends
and super engaged, just time flies and you want to do the best job possible, not because
you're incented to, but just because you have that intrinsic motivation.
Right.
You grew up Marin?
Marin County, just north of San Francisco.
And kind of borderline rural suburban?
What was it like?
It was in the suburbs.
And you went to college where?
Went to Harvard.
What did you study?
Computer science.
Okay.
So you lived in Marin County, and then you lived in Cambridge.
What did you think of cities?
Had you been in cities a lot?
Did you live in any other cities?
And which cities did you love?
No, actually, I guess.
Yeah, I mean, aside from Cambridge, which...
Did you go into Boston much?
I think I went twice during college.
So, yeah, I was never a city person, but I did like the, um, community
aspect of living in the dorm environment.
Right. Right. So then obviously you went on to do a whole bunch of things, including Zappos
where you still are. Um, what are your favorite cities now in the world? I love visiting New York,
Amsterdam,
downtown Vegas, obviously,
San Francisco.
And what is it about those cities
that makes you happy?
I think probably a combination
of the walkability
and the accessibility
of really whatever you want.
If you're in the mood for some random type of Indian food,
you can find it.
Or if you want something delivered, you can find it.
So where we're sitting here doesn't resemble
what most people think of as city is all.
What's your ultimate dream of where we're sitting right now, which is feels more Burning Man at the moment than the middle of a city.
Do you want to have this feel like it's what Brooklyn now feels like someday or no?
I don't really know Brooklyn that well. But yeah, a few years ago, the easiest way to describe what we were trying to do from the Downtown Project perspective was imagine TED, the conference, meets South by Southwest, meets Burning Man, I guess a lot of city revitalization projects are
really top down master plan and we're really anti that.
It's really more about backing the entrepreneurs and their passions.
And so our goal is to help accelerate stuff, help make downtown Vegas a place of inspiration, entrepreneurial energy, creativity, innovation creates not only productivity, but a whole lot of other gains that are not necessarily predictable and not necessarily even that measurable.
Just the density and the propinquity of all the people coming together in terms of value and in terms of intellectual property and stuff just totally changes the game. I'm just
curious, like how, like, do you see Glazer as a kind of guru for what you're trying to do and
how did you come to like him so much? Um, yeah, I mean, basically after reading his book,
it was probably a big part of, I guess, formulating the strategy behind what we're trying to do so uh about you know cities are ultimately
about the acceleration of idea flow and different industries and so on and so just being more
purposeful about that approach versus let's he has something i think he refers to as the edifice
complex in his book so versus let's build a giant right whatever and then that
will magically revitalize the city um but for me it was um more the progression of we talked about
the looking at party flow to within an office getting employees to flow and collide to this
is the same concept just at a different scale but getting residents to
collide and talk to each other and and just knowing that the more often that happens
just statistically the magic will happen on its own
will the magic happen on its own?
It's obviously too early to say, but I shouldn't stop you from rooting for it, if cities are your kind of thing.
As they are for me, and for Tony Hsieh, even though he came to them late, and as they are for Ed Glazer. Let's say that 50 years from now or 100 years from now, downtown Las Vegas has turned into one of the most dynamic and original and productive and even aesthetically pleasing cities in the United States and the rest of the world.
And you and I will presumably be long gone by certainly 100 years from now. What does it feel like to be the guy, the economist who studies cities and how they thrive and how they've triumphed? How would that feel to
have played a not insignificant role in that triumph?
Well, that would be lovely. Of course, if it doesn't do well, I have to take the bodes for that as well. But to be clear, I think, you know, if I'm one hundredth of one percent of this, that would be a lot.
This is the dream and the energy of the Downtown Project and Tony Hsieh and his people.
And I think there's often a tendency of people to point to academics and say, look, look at this fancy Harvard academic who gives me an imprimatur for the idea that I want to do anyway.
And I think that, you know, while it's lovely for me to puff myself up with importance and think that I played some huge role in this, I think really the vision was in Tony's head and in the people on the ground.
But look, I'm not trying to dodge responsibility if it goes badly. I
certainly, you know, I certainly didn't say that it was a bad idea in a major way to him. So if it
does crash, you can come knocking on my door and tell me I screwed up. Thank you. I have no idea. I'm taping this promo before the actual event, so you might say anything.
Asking the questions will be faith-sally, so that's next week on Freakonomics Radio.
And do me a favor, once you've read When to Rob a Bank, let us know what you think.
You can drop us a line at radio at Freakonomics.com or reach us on Twitter, Facebook, and I guess that's it.
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