I believe in the idea with the caveat of a modification as we have a 133 communities in SE and in essence we could build a "Bunny Hill" community in StackExchange.
Sometimes questions are closed but it is clear some users are getting value. Upvotes on closed questions show people are clearly getting value.
I believe we can leverage the "wisdom of the crowd." The modification would be that if a closed question doesn't belong in StackOverflow and yet the crowd is showing that it is valuable via upvotes, then move the question to a new "Bunny Hill" community. That improves the quality of StackOverflow and yet still delivers the value to a new "beginner" community.
Here are some thoughts why it could be worth doing.
(1) I believe we can be guided by the "wisdom" of the crowd. Here is one CLOSED question where 35 people up voted it. Many other closed questions have up votes It appears that people gain value from closed content.
(2) Today, Stack could be discarding tapping the long tail value of questions by never reopening questions that subsequently show they are benefiting users by their up votes. Long tails can be the source of untapped value. Amazon built a business out of the long tail. Perhaps Stack can imagine something to do.
(3) Most elite ski resorts in the world built bunny hills. Maybe there is something to learn from that.
(4) All of us, even if experts in one area, are newbies in another. The number of newbies is a far larger population than the experts. We could quantify the viability of a "reopened" question community by counting how many closed questions have significant up votes.
(5) Tapping the long prevents StackOverflow from suffering from classic Clayton Christiansen disruption up from the bottom. Stack can prevent disruption by removing the risk that other sites thrive by addressing a lower end-of-the-market. Stack can seed its future too much like Google seeds the lower end of the market, like schools, with free software. Stack can serve beginning programmers as opposed to losing them.
(6) Serving beginning developers is charitable. We were all beginners once.
How could it be done? Leave the system exactly like it is now. The community closes question. But if a question gets X number of up votes, then automatically move it to the Stack "Bunny Overflow" community, and re-open it. Stack then gets the wisdom of the "beginner" crowd to curate the best content. Disruption averted. Long tail tapped. Stack wins.