Incremental development today is far from the path of least resistance. To do it, you'll need the ability to navigate dozens of regulatory barriers.
Read MoreWe need people who will build in the places where big, corporate developers won’t. But how do we get enough small-scale developers back to make a difference?
Read MoreHow should we think about scalable impact, and how should it inform our approach when trying to grapple with big, pervasive problems?
Read MoreWe get a lot of questions over at the Action Lab, and today we’re going to answer some of them!
Read MoreSomehow, as a society, we’ve drifted from ordinary people being able to build their own homes on a cash basis in an interactive, iterative way, to immense, hyper-elaborate habitats.
Read MoreIt’s no wonder that some people oppose new housing when the housing and infrastructure projects they see are disruptive construction work that drags on for years.
Read MoreWe must stop building more infrastructure in our cities and switch instead to a model of intensive maintenance, combined with making better use of what has already been built.
Read MoreThere is much we can learn from cities of the past—especially small, remote cities that grew up around the exploitation of natural resources.
Read MoreWhat if we had a class of semi-amateur developers 10 or 100 times larger than it is today?
Read MoreCities are learning they must be able to flex and bend with the rising tides of change.
Read MoreConventional planning is based on what professionals think people want or need. Now imagine a city that improves according to the actual needs and desires of its residents. The first is a gamble, the second is an adaptation.
Read MoreIncremental change doesn’t mean slow change. In fact, unleashing the power of the many to make small changes in response to immediate needs may be the only approach that is up to the scale of the problems our cities face.
Read MoreIt’s an article of faith among many that big and tall buildings don’t belong around small and short buildings. But does this idea actually stand up to scrutiny?
Read MoreThe work of building your Strong Town doesn’t end with a ribbon-cutting ceremony, because the work is never done. That shouldn’t be discouraging. Rather, it should give our efforts meaning and energy.
Read MoreWhat can go wrong when you pin all your economic hopes on a big, shiny new project? Milwaukee, the planned site for this summer’s Democratic Convention, may soon find out.
Read MoreThe way we grow our cities today produces a few winners and many losers. Here's how to get back to places that serve all of us.
Read MoreThe stars of a home makeover show are setting their sights on a much larger goal: a whole town. Strong Towns advocates weigh in on the worst—and best—that could happen.
Read MoreSee examples of “spooky wisdom” in communities across North America, submitted by readers and members in the Strong Towns Book Club.
Read MoreThe Strong Towns movement offers a template for creating a world we can be justly proud to pass on to our children, in a time in which so many of us feel like we're floundering to salvage the broken one we inherited from our parents.
Read MoreThe most brilliant innovations in building cities are already embodied in the traditional development pattern, a foolproof approach to creating resilient and productive places that was developed the hard way.
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