One of the problems with any disaster like this is that the rebuilding often displaces the original inhabitants.
It is said that a significant portion of the areas affected are occupied by low income families.
If the rebuilding and inner city development projects elsewhere are anything to go by e.g. London Englans Covent Garden, The Canary Wharf development, Paliapolis Rhodos etc, what usually happens is that the poor folks have to live in bad conditions for decades and then, when some initiative provoked by whatever cause (from hurricanes, flooding, EU development money, re-election years etc) produces an influx of funding to put things right then the porr folk can no longer afford to live there.
SO the future for N.O. may also look bleak for some families. If/when they rebuild any portion of the city I'd be interested to see how many of the original inhabitants get to see some of the silver lining to every cloud.
I think Davefitz's comment on a "Walt Disney" style redevelopment has some merit, however after WWII in the UK a travesty of redevelopment meant that any bomb damaged houses could be pulled down and the sites re-developed. Bomb damage was interpreted pretty liberally and even a few tiles loose were sufficient to see some pretty characterful buildings demolished and replaced with "post war manic depressive" concrete utilitarian cubes. On the other hand, in Germany many buildings, towns and even cities were largely rebuilt exactly as they were before and even today we can see old building gutted and new structures errected within the skins of the old resulting in a modern building within a shell that retains its place in the cityscape.
So the appraoch to New Orleans has various directions to go and I can bet there will be no concensus.
Sure, a "Walt Disney" style reconstruction may initially appear to be a travesty in wiating but some of the alternatives are no better. But creating the right environment is a key element in trying to recapture the original spirit of the city and a recreation of the original may be a lot better than using this as an excuse to build new or build kitsch. Of course the key is to enable the people to return to the city as it is the people who generate the real spirit and this is why imention the history of other "good intentions".
JMW