How Small Acts of Neighborliness Can Shift the Morale of Your Neighborhood

Think small acts of neighborliness mean nothing more than signs of a welcoming neighborhood? Discover how Strong Towns contributor Steve MacDouell introduced “micro-neighborliness” to shift the morale of residents in neighborhoods across London, Ontario.

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We Need Growth. But Only If It Generates Real Wealth.

We’ve been living for decades on the urban economic equivalent of anabolic steroids: it’s time for some good old-fashioned diet and exercise. The key is to reorient the way we approach growth. Instead of thinning out our cities and taking on more infrastructure liabilities, we need to wring real value out of the places we’ve already built.

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The Power of Information Equity

Information about our city’s revenue, expenses and liabilities is usually presented in ways that disempower most people from making informed decisions. But what about folks who aren’t a Level 20 Spreadsheet Wizard? How can we use data to better tell the story of where we are now — and empower more people to write the story of their city’s future?

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Get the Insights You Need to Create Your Own Bottom-Up Revolution

Designing a traffic intervention after the tragic death of a pedestrian. Pitching the Strong Towns approach to a local service club. Developing missing middle housing. These are just some of the conversations happening on the Strong Towns Community site, where members offer each other encouragement and practical guidance on how to build the block-by-block revolution.

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Top 5 Recent Stories (September 30-October 4)

Chuck Marohn talks in his new book about the “spooky wisdom of cities” that developed as humans co-evolved with their complex human habitats. Some modern cities have taken more of this wisdom to heart than others. Tokyo, for example, has taken a very different approach to many of the same issues facing its American counterparts. And we’ve got pictures to prove it.

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Episode 5. More than Math: Living with Intention in Our Stronger Towns

Building stronger towns isn’t just about planning, engineering and development. We need to address questions about cultivating rich and abundant lives in our neighborhoods. How do we live out our values when so much of the built environment seems to be working against us?

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You Say You Want a Revolution: Q & A with Chuck Marohn

Is growth inherently bad? Are declining neighborhoods really a good investment? And, most of all, can we actually make the changes we need to make our communities stronger? Chuck Marohn answers these and other questions about his new book Strong Towns: A Bottom-Up Revolution to Rebuild American Prosperity. What questions do you have?

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