This YouTube channel introduces us to the hidden gems in some otherwise #PedestrianUnfriendly cities.
Read More“No neighborhood should be exempt from change. No neighborhood should be subjected to radical change.” Let’s examine what this core Strong Towns principle actually means.
Read More“You don’t have to move out of your neighborhood to live in a better one,” says Majora Carter in her new book, Reclaiming Your Community.
Read MoreThis congregation launched a non-profit organization to help its neighbors—not as an act of benevolence for them, but in solidarity with them.
Read MoreIn 2022’s inaugural Strong Towns Podcast episode, Chuck interviews Tim Soerens, author and co-founder of the Parish Collective.
Read MoreThis house came with a unique instruction: “Change the mailbox message every week, or people will get upset.”
Read MoreThe pets of this neighborhood brought their humans closer together.
Read MoreThese temporary artwork instillations (that anyone can create) are a great way to connect with your neighbors, and help them connect with your community, in turn.
Read MoreWhy it’s important that we connect with members of our community sooner rather than later.
Read MoreResidents of this Houston neighborhood thought they were winning the lottery with a government-sponsored infrastructure project. Instead, they endured a seven-month-long nightmare.
Read MoreOur drive continues through the area once called “the ugliest place in Maryland.” When you look around, though, you can find the building blocks for an urban transformation in these suburbs.
Read MoreLet’s take a drive down Rockville Pike, a major thoroughfare near DC. What kinds of development patterns will we find as we pass through each ring of suburbia?
Read MoreHere’s a roundup of five highway boondoggles that are threatening neighborhoods right now in the U.S. Think of it as a hall of shame.
Read MoreOne family’s history tells volumes about the development of Kansas City since the 1950s.
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 seeing poor neighborhoods as "bad" neighborhoods, and instead understand them as intrinsically goods ones, whose problems are addressable if we empowered the people who care about them.
Read MoreThe 85th percentile rule makes it hard to ensure safe streets, so residents of northeast Kansas City took matters into their own hands.
Read MoreWhen it comes to creating strong neighborhoods, there are some valuable lessons to be had from slowing down the pace and seeking novelty in the ordinary.
Read MoreLocal decision-making must become more accessible to everyday people. Here's how to make that happen in your place.
Read MoreA lot of supposedly "innovative" proposals are for things that have long existed in neighborhoods, but you wouldn't know it based on the language that planners use.
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