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Top 5 Stories from the Week (Sept 24–Sept 28, 2018)
Top 5 Stories from the Week (Sept 24–Sept 28, 2018)

This week, we explored out-of-control infrastructure costs in Texas, a “road diet” in Akron, workforce housing in Maine, and asked whether our local governments ought to be failing more often—and owning up to and learning from those mistakes.

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Top StoryStrong TownsSeptember 29, 2018post roundup
Putting Neighborhoods First in Old Goucher, Baltimore
Putting Neighborhoods First in Old Goucher, Baltimore

The core neighborhoods of our big cities and our small towns have more in common than we might think.

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Marohn, Top Story, Success Story, #StrongCitizensCharles MarohnSeptember 28, 2018neighborhood change, small bets, Chaotic but Smart
Does the Rust Belt Need More House Flippers?
Does the Rust Belt Need More House Flippers?

Are house flippers exactly what the Rust Belt needs to recover from decades of systemic disinvestment, or a dangerous speculative game that fragile places shouldn’t be playing? Check out the third episode of our new podcast Upzoned to hear Kea Wilson and Chuck Marohn hash out this topic.

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Podcast, WIlson, Upzoned, Top StoryStrong TownsSeptember 28, 2018revitalization, housing
A Texas-Sized Pavement Problem
A Texas-Sized Pavement Problem

Collin County, Texas officials claim they need $12.6 billion for new roads in the next 30 years, and none of it for maintenance of what they’ve already built. That way lies madness.

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Transportation, Growth Ponzi Scheme, Herriges, Top StoryDaniel HerrigesSeptember 27, 2018North Texas Gathering, infrastructure cost, Collin County
Math, Maps, and Money: How Fiscal Analysis Can Change the Conversation
Math, Maps, and Money: How Fiscal Analysis Can Change the Conversation

Jordan Clark and Felix Landry of Verdunity discuss the importance of understanding the fiscal consequences of our development patterns, as well as the ways that cities can use map-based fiscal analysis to make more holistic land use decisions.

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Top Story, Planning ProfessionJordan Clark and Felix LandrySeptember 27, 2018financial solvency, Value Per Acre
What Does Urbanism Mean in Rural America?
What Does Urbanism Mean in Rural America?

Our staff writer Aubrey Byron begins a new series: at least once a month, she will be exploring how Strong Towns concepts apply to rural locations. Whether it’s transit, the value of sewers versus septics in small towns, or the walkability of small towns, check out our new coverage of the #smallstrongtown.

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Byron, Rural, Top StoryAubrey ByronSeptember 27, 2018#SmallStrongTown, Missouri, food deserts, transit
From Lone Advocate to Thriving Tribe: How to Start Your Own Neighborhood Association
From Lone Advocate to Thriving Tribe: How to Start Your Own Neighborhood Association

Want to better your community but don’t know where to start? Enter It’s the Little Things: a Strong Towns podcast that gives you the wisdom and encouragement you need to take the small yet powerful actions that can make your city or town stronger.

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Podcast, It's The Little Things, Top StoryJacob MosesSeptember 26, 2018Strong Citizenship, localism, neighborhood association
Can You Build a Resilient Place from the Ground Up?
Can You Build a Resilient Place from the Ground Up?

Can a master-planned community be consistent with Strong Towns principles of iterative, bottom-up placemaking? We take a tour of Serenbe, Georgia, an experiment in New Urbanism and eco-conscious living on the far outskirts of Atlanta.

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Herriges, Urban Design, Top StoryDaniel HerrigesSeptember 26, 2018Georgia, Serenbe, eco-friendly, development, New Urbanism
Dallas's Ticking Time Bomb of Infrastructure Costs
Dallas's Ticking Time Bomb of Infrastructure Costs

A recent D Magazine story nailed the problem with Dallas’s development pattern: the city has way more infrastructure than it can afford to maintain. But its solution—assessing local taxes differently—didn’t go far enough.

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Growth Ponzi Scheme, Top StoryStrong TownsSeptember 26, 2018Texas, infrastructure cost, Dallas, page highlight
Developers Are Finding Value in Less Profitable Projects
Developers Are Finding Value in Less Profitable Projects

In Portland, Maine, some established developers are venturing into filling the need for workforce housing without the help of subsidies, even though it is less profitable.

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HousingZack BarowitzSeptember 25, 2018missing middle, Infill Development, small scale development
What Would It Take to Make the Big Jump to Active Towns?
What Would It Take to Make the Big Jump to Active Towns?

John Simmerman and his organization Active Towns want to see a massive increase in the number of places with a culture of physical activity. Come see John speak at the Strong Towns Regional Gathering in Plano, Texas, and learn what he’s doing to help create that change.

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Bikeability, Top Story, Taking ActionStrong TownsSeptember 25, 2018North Texas Gathering, bicycling, active transportation
Right-Sizing Akron's Kenmore Boulevard
Right-Sizing Akron's Kenmore Boulevard

Akron, Ohio is tackling its stroad problem, one oversized boulevard at a time. “Right-sizing” this neighborhood main street will make it safer and more inviting and hospitable for small businesses.

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Akron, #SlowtheCars, Roads and Streets, Herriges, Top StoryDaniel HerrigesSeptember 25, 2018Kenmore, Road Diet
Downshifting into a Meaningful Life: A Conversation With Ruben Anderson
Downshifting into a Meaningful Life: A Conversation With Ruben Anderson

This week on the Strong Towns Podcast, Chuck talks with behavior change and sustainability expert Ruben Anderson about the good life, and how we fool ourselves into thinking we can use systematic rationality to create it for ourselves.

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Podcast, Top StoryStrong TownsSeptember 24, 2018sustainability, antifragile, #OrderlyButDumb, Chaotic but Smart
Methodist Urbanism: Ocean Grove
Methodist Urbanism: Ocean Grove

One of the reasons Ocean Grove, New Jersey has endured intact is the presence of a religious community that had a higher calling and a longer event horizon than the dominant secular culture. There are lessons to be learned here even by people who may not identify with the church.

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Top Story, Sanphillippo, Urban Design, FaithJohnny SanphillippoSeptember 24, 2018Religion, New Jersey, traditional development pattern
Learning From Failure
Learning From Failure

Americans need to become more tolerant of government failure. That will happen, if and when, government starts to deliver improvements iteratively, and demonstrates the capacity to learn and improve with each iteration.

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Marohn, Top StoryCharles MarohnSeptember 24, 2018
The One-Week Coworking Space
The One-Week Coworking Space

The lines between work and home zones are blurring: more employers want to be in walkable, amenitized areas, and conversely, people are choosing to live closer to where they work. This Cincinnati placemaking experiment exemplifies the kind of small bets this trend is making possible.

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Success Story, Small Scale Developers, Top StoryJoe NickolSeptember 21, 2018coworking, small bets, incremental development
Big Box Stores Think Their Tax Bills Should Be Lower. Are They Right?
Big Box Stores Think Their Tax Bills Should Be Lower. Are They Right?

Check out the second episode of our new podcast Upzoned! Kea Wilson and Chuck Marohn dig into an article on a troubling trend: big box retailers in Minnesota think they’re paying too much in property taxes, and they’re asking for a cut. But that’s a hard pill to swallow for small towns.

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Podcast, WIlson, Upzoned, Top StoryStrong TownsSeptember 21, 2018big box stores
Top 5 Stories from the Week (Sept 17–Sept 21, 2018)
Top 5 Stories from the Week (Sept 17–Sept 21, 2018)

The top 5 stories from September 17-21, 2018.

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Strong TownsSeptember 21, 2018post roundup
What comes after NEXT?
What comes after NEXT?

Austin needs a new Grand Bargain, one that includes everyone and exempts no one.

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Marohn, Zoning, Top StoryCharles MarohnSeptember 21, 2018Austin, Texas
So You Want to Build an ADU?
So You Want to Build an ADU?

Let’s walk through what it actually takes to build a small rental apartment on your property in Austin, Texas. It’s a lesson in how the city’s existing code stymies gentle, incremental, small-scale development.

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Byron, Zoning, Small Scale Developers, Top StoryAubrey ByronSeptember 20, 2018ADUs, Texas, Austin, incremental development
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