These brothers are pushing for incremental infill development in Memphis, Tennessee, with a community they’re building just north of downtown.
Read MoreThere’s no large city in America that’s doing a better job of pivoting to a Strong Towns approach than Memphis, TN. Here’s why.
Read MoreTommy Pacello made me love Memphis. Even more powerfully, he helped me forgive the failures of my own struggling community and to love it even more.
Read MoreStrong Towns is empowering thousands of champions for change to bring their places back to greater prosperity, little by little, through bottom-up action. Here’s what that looks like.
Read MoreIf your community has a huge backlog of unfunded infrastructure maintenance — and it’s the rare one that doesn’t — there are some basic and obvious steps that need to be taken.
Read MoreThe ideas behind Strong Towns began in my small town of Brainerd. A tour starting in Memphis is designed to bring them home.
Read MoreEquipped with “grit and grind”—but also with a whole lot of good data on the financial consequences of past development decisions—Memphis, Tennessee is taking smart steps toward a bottom-up renaissance. Just ask its Chief Operating Officer, Doug McGowen.
Read MoreUntapped, a six-week pop-up beer garden in the landmark Tennessee Brewery in downtown Memphis, might well have been a goodbye party for the long-neglected building. Instead, it caught a local developer’s interest and led to a second life for the historic structure.
Read MoreMemphis is a shining example of how taking small, low-cost steps can lead to more permanent change that benefits a neighborhood and a city, without risking detrimental public backlash or precious money in the city budget.
Hospitals around the country are realizing that it is good policy and good business to take an interest in the welfare of the neighborhoods they are in.
Read MoreSometimes the best thing that can come from a project is to have it be a warning beacon for others.
Read MoreWhile Memphis is home to many case studies on chaotic but smart development, it also has one of the poster childs for orderly but dumb, that of course being the Memphis pyramid.
Read MoreIf you want your city to be wealthy and prosperous, stop obsessing about cars and start obsessing about your people, your wealth and the taxpayer's return-on-investment.
Read MoreBiking is transportation. Walking is transportation. If you want to empower your people, if you want to make your city financially strong and resilient, follow Memphis by making incremental investments to improving biking and walking throughout the core neighborhoods of your community.
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