How does a transit agency in a car-dominated suburban city double its bus ridership in only twelve years? Through a smart, iterative strategy of placing small bets and learning from the results.
Read MoreOur cities increasingly isolate us from those who are unlike us. To rekindle civic trust and empathy, we must make communities where people enjoy mixing it up with others: where they will live a portion of their lives in public, not because they are forced to do so, but because it is delightful to do so.
Read MoreWhat do you do with an old freeway in the heart of your city that never should have been built? In Akron, it’s become an experimental pop-up park that is stitching the city back together.
Read MoreChange may come, but it isn’t going to be planned or voluntary. Instead we’re all going to absorb a variety of unintended consequences.
Read MoreIn places with heavy foot traffic, an unusual type of intersection just might be the key to keeping walkers and drivers alike safer and less stressed out.
Read MoreWe’re sharing the video and audio from our November 2018 live webcast Q&A with renowned urban planner, walkability expert, and author of Walkable City Rules, Jeff Speck.
Read MoreCatch up on what you missed from #BlackFridayParking week this year, including our favorite social media shares.
Read MoreIt is backward to think of a parking ramp as a catalyst for success; it is the outcome of success. There is no shortcut to building a Strong Town, but lots of rewards for the effort.
Read MoreSee which cities are getting rid of parking minimums, from sea to shining sea.
Read MoreIf you have an objection on the tip of your tongue when it comes to removing parking minimums or providing less free parking, let’s see if we can answer it.
Read MoreWhile your fellow Americans are busy fighting each other for 50% off toys and discounted televisions at the stores in your town, you have a job: Snap some photos of the parking lots surrounding these stores.
Read MoreI keep thinking about the efficiency of the human body. Each model year comes equipped with space-saving design, lots of leg-room, built-in entertainment features, and is bio-fuel-compatible with generally limited emissions.
Read More“There’s no parking around there!” How to hit the streets and collect the data yourself, and figure out whether your neighborhood actually has a parking shortage—or, more likely, an excess.
Read MoreThe city of Akron has taken a measured approach to phasing in a network of bike lanes, including reversible, low-risk experiments in altering street layouts. Can this piece-by-piece approach help nurture a cycling culture?
Read MoreRequiring excessive parking comes at a heavy cost to the vitality and financial resilience of our cities. Have you ever wanted a one-stop list of the many ways this is the case? We did too. So we made one.
Read MoreTransportation engineers are ethically bound to “hold paramount the safety, health, and welfare of the public.” What is their obligation when unsafe, but commonplace, road design practices conflict with that mandate?
Read MoreSchool officials in my town claim our neighborhoods are too unsafe for their children to walk to school. Yet the actual key to safety lies in numbers. We need designs that make it so more, not fewer, people will choose to walk.
Read MoreAnnouncing two upcoming webcasts: Ask Strong Towns Celebrity Edition on 1/29/19 with Stacy Mitchell, author of Big-Box Swindle. And a regular Ask Strong Towns Q&A with Chuck Marohn and Kea Wilson on 2/22/19.
Read MoreThere is no justification for a city to maintain minimum parking requirements, to force others to build parking, or to build parking for others to use at no charge.
Read MoreI keep thinking about the efficiency of the human body. Each model year comes equipped with space-saving design, lots of leg-room, built-in entertainment features, and is bio-fuel-compatible with generally limited emissions. On foot, we are nimble, responsive, and shaped to maximize the utilization of space. A crowd of people is not a traffic jam, it’s a party!
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