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Strong Towns
We support a strong America full of strong cities, towns, and neighborhoods.
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Strong Towns Featured in New Documentary "Owned"
Strong Towns Featured in New Documentary "Owned"

Strong Towns is prominently featured in a new documentary about suburbanization and mass homeownership in America. Owned, directed by Giorgio Angelini, explores the human consequences of America's suburban experiment.

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Housing, Top StoryStrong TownsAugust 22, 2018suburban experiment, segregation, housing, Great Recession, housing finance, Owned, homeownership
Character Counts: How to Create a Sense of Place in Your Community
Character Counts: How to Create a Sense of Place in Your Community

The less you look like everyone else and the more you look like yourself, the better off you’ll be. This truth should be driving your town’s development. In fact, creating a distinctive sense of place is your competitive advantage.

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Economic Development, Top StoryQuint StuderAugust 21, 2018Economic Development, local economy, placemaking, downtown, Entrepreneurship
When we exile the aging from our auto-oriented towns, where do they go?
When we exile the aging from our auto-oriented towns, where do they go?

An assisted-living facility in Ohio offers a nostalgic, Norman Rockwell-esque setting modeled on traditional neighborhoods—the very sort of beloved, timeless places that we’ve all but stopped building in the real world.

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WIlson, Top StoryKea WilsonAugust 21, 2018aging in place, traditional development pattern, Ohio
Vancouver's West End Challenges Assumptions About Compatibility
Vancouver's West End Challenges Assumptions About Compatibility

The West End neighborhood of Vancouver, BC challenges common assumptions about compatible development: its eclectic mix of high-rises and smaller buildings amid shady streets shouldn’t make for a cohesive, appealing place, and yet it does.

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Top StoryDaniel HerrigesAugust 21, 2018
Getting Parking Right in Portland
Getting Parking Right in Portland

Portland, OR is leading the charge in parking reform by pricing its on-street parking at a variable rate that reflects shifting demand, instead of subsidizing it.

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Parking, Top StoryStrong TownsAugust 20, 2018parking minimums, parking, Donald Shoup, Portland OR
Winning is the Absence of Losing
Winning is the Absence of Losing

The most important thing for a local government is to avoid ruin.

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Marohn, Top Story, StrategiesCharles MarohnAugust 20, 2018antifragile, Risk, #OrderlyButDumb, page highlight
Top 5 Stories from the Week (Aug 13-Aug 17, 2018)
Top 5 Stories from the Week (Aug 13-Aug 17, 2018)

This week, we took Akron, Ohio to task for subsidizing redevelopment of a failed mall, explored why it’s hard to jump-start walkability in places built around the car, made the case for bike lanes from an unusual perspective, illustrated why it’s harmful to measure road performance by motorist convenience, and more.

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Strong TownsAugust 18, 2018post roundup
3 Strong Towns Lessons From Around the World
3 Strong Towns Lessons From Around the World

Our writers are a well-traveled bunch, and over the past few years, they’ve brought back perspectives from abroad that Strong Towns advocates in North America can learn from. Here are three lessons the rest of the world has to offer.

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Top StoryStrong TownsAugust 17, 2018
The Catch-22 of Retrofitting the Suburbs
The Catch-22 of Retrofitting the Suburbs

Two large development projects currently working their way through the public engagement and approvals process illustrate why suburban retrofit is a really tough proposition to stake our future on.

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Herriges, Walkability, Neighborhood Design, Top StoryDaniel HerrigesAugust 17, 2018sprawl retrofit, car dependency, page highlight, traffic engineering
Making Incremental Development Easier in College Station, Texas
Making Incremental Development Easier in College Station, Texas

A Strong Towns member shared with us a success story from the city of College Station, Texas, which recently revised its zoning code to make it easier to do incremental development by rehabilitating or expanding older structures.

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Top Story, Success Story, Zoning, Planning ProfessionStrong TownsAugust 17, 2018zoning, incremental development, historic preservation
Dispatches From Spokane: Introduction
Dispatches From Spokane: Introduction

The history of Spokane, Washington is a microcosm of what American cities as a whole have experienced. Spokane has lessons to teach us, including the power of incremental (but rapid) growth.

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Gardner, Top StorySpencer GardnerAugust 16, 2018history, incremental growth, traditional development pattern, suburban experiment, Washington, Spokane
How Relevant is Localism in an Age of Urgency?
How Relevant is Localism in an Age of Urgency?

We’re constantly told that the world has become a flaming dumpster fire, and that only large-scale actions are adequate to address today’s urgent problems. But is that true? Chuck and three panelists explore this question in a podcast episode recorded at CNU in May.

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Podcast, Top Story, CNUStrong TownsAugust 16, 2018community engagement, local government, Placemakers, Incremental Development Alliance, localism
The Case for Community Gardens
The Case for Community Gardens

The idea of a community garden isn’t a new one. Now, when modern life seems to be more stressful and uncertain than ever, community gardens could prove to be the salve that heals our hurting communities.

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Top Story, Local Food, #StrongCitizensScott JenkinsAugust 16, 2018gardening, community building, Public Safety, local food
The Mega-Project Exception That Proves the Rule?
The Mega-Project Exception That Proves the Rule?

If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it’s probably a duck. But if a mega-project doesn’t have the characteristics—massive public debt, heavy infrastructure burdens, dubious if any benefit for the surrounding area—that usually make such projects so odious, is it still a bad deal?

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Top Story, Economic DevelopmentSteven ShultisAugust 15, 2018Megaprojects, casino, stadium, #OrderlyButDumb
Why Did This Town's Entire Police Force Quit?
Why Did This Town's Entire Police Force Quit?

When a small Massachusetts town made national news as its entire police force quit, it was easy to have preconceived notions about what the moral of the story must be. Then a reader from the town reached out to give us this far more nuanced and interesting explanation.

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Top Story, Rational ResponsesChristian BerglandAugust 15, 2018Public Safety, financial solvency, rural, Small Towns
Why Drivers Should Support Bike Lanes
Why Drivers Should Support Bike Lanes

Here are 3 reasons why drivers should be celebrating and championing bike lanes, not lamenting them.

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Top Story, Quednau, Roads and Streets, BikeabilityRachel QuednauAugust 15, 2018cars, bike lanes
The Activation Energy of a Walkable Place
The Activation Energy of a Walkable Place

Is it magical thinking to expect the transition from car-dependent to walkable places to happen organically? When, and how, do we need a catalyst to jump-start that process?

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Walkability, Herriges, Neighborhood Design, Top StoryDaniel HerrigesAugust 14, 2018suburban retrofit, car dependency, walkability, development, Infill Development, page highlight
Going the Wrong Way: NYC’s New Ride-Hailing Cap
Going the Wrong Way: NYC’s New Ride-Hailing Cap

It’s not just ride-hailed traffic that causes congestion; its all traffic. Singling out these app-based services for regulation takes transportation policy down a dead-end route.

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Transportation, Top StoryJoe CortrightAugust 14, 2018Joe Cortright, New York, congestion, traffic engineering
A LOSing Proposition
A LOSing Proposition

By overemphasizing vehicle Level of Service (LOS) we justify expensive, overbuilt streets that are dangerously inhospitable to people—just so drivers won’t be inconvenienced during peak travel times.

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Kobos, Bikeability, Transportation, Walkability, #SlowtheCars, Top StorySarah KobosAugust 14, 2018walkability, traffic engineering, page highlight
Announcing Strong Towns Regional Gatherings
Announcing Strong Towns Regional Gatherings

Want to connect with other Strong Towns advocates in your region? Good news: We’re launching a series of regional gatherings around the United States! The first will be this October in Plano, Texas.

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Top StoryStrong TownsAugust 13, 2018
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Strong Towns is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization. Our work is performed under a  Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. Please share with others to use for good.

 
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