Strong Towns
Cart 0
Articles Podcasts Videos About
Become a Member
Local Conversations Crash Analysis Studio Housing-Ready Cities Community Action Lab
Academy Action Lab Cohort Accelerator Housing Trap All Books
Book an Event Attend an Event Local-Motive Tour National Gathering
Cart 0
ArticlesPodcastsVideos Programs Local Conversations Crash Analysis Studio Housing-Ready Cities Community Action Lab Learn Academy Action Lab Cohort Accelerator Housing Trap All Books Events Book an Event Attend an Event Local-Motive Tour National Gathering About
Strong Towns
We support a strong America full of strong cities, towns, and neighborhoods.
Become a Member
Top of the Bottom-Up: Creating a Coffee Shop for the Whole Neighborhood
Top of the Bottom-Up: Creating a Coffee Shop for the Whole Neighborhood

Coté Soeren’s “Resistencia” coffee shop in Seattle is a space for community connection and support, not gentrification.

Read More
Podcast, Top Story, Community StoriesStrong TownsJanuary 26, 2023The Bottom-Up Revolution, neighborhood revitalization, coffee shops, gentrification, taking action, neighborhoods, washington
Pedestrian Safety Gets Big Boost From New Cincinnati Initiative
Pedestrian Safety Gets Big Boost From New Cincinnati Initiative

Cincinnati's new five-member pedestrian safety team is making their streets safer—all while saving the city hundreds of thousands of dollars every year!

Read More
News, Top StoryBen AbramsonJanuary 26, 2023tactical urbanism, success stories, pedestrians, Complete Streets, Street Design, streets, safe and productive streets, ohio
The Governor of Missouri Wants to Spend $859 Million on Highway Expansion
The Governor of Missouri Wants to Spend $859 Million on Highway Expansion

A proposed highway expansion in Missouri will not only bulldoze through key areas in and around downtown St. Louis, but it’s also going to cost $859 million. Let’s go over some better ways that money could be spent.

Read More
Podcast, Top StoryStrong TownsJanuary 25, 2023podcast, infrastructure, infrastructure spending, highways, highway spending, missouri, upzoned, end highway expansion
What's Actually Wrong With This Building?
What's Actually Wrong With This Building?

Heated discussion about a new condo in Sarasota, FL, has got locals calling the building an eyesore. But is this a case of misdirected ire?

Read More
Herriges, Top StoryDaniel HerrigesJanuary 25, 2023architecture, design, density, downtown, zoning, urban design, florida
We’re Hiring a Web & Graphic Designer
We’re Hiring a Web & Graphic Designer

Strong Towns is currently hiring a full-time web and graphic designer. Apply today!

Read More
Strong TownsJanuary 24, 2023announcement, Strong Towns
Lexington Uses Nationwide Precedent To Repeal Parking Mandates
Lexington Uses Nationwide Precedent To Repeal Parking Mandates

In the past, city officals may have found it difficult to eliminate parking minimums, citing a lack of precedent. But now, other cities are providing the guidance that decisionmakers need to enact parking reform.

Read More
News, Top StoryAsia MieleszkoJanuary 24, 2023kentucky, parking minimums, Parking Reform Network, success stories, end parking mandates and subsidies
Cities Don't Need to Regulate Arts and Culture
Cities Don't Need to Regulate Arts and Culture

Cities don’t need to pay for or try to create arts and culture programs. They just need to remove barriers to and support the organic culture already existing in their neighborhoods.

Read More
Owens, Top StoryTiffany Owens ReedJanuary 24, 2023arts, top-down, city government, local government, texas
Road-Widening Project Threatens 30-Year-Old Farmers Market
Road-Widening Project Threatens 30-Year-Old Farmers Market

Residents of Mooresville, NC, are outraged as a road-widening project and ensuing regulatory dispute pushed by city officials threaten the future of a longstanding farmers market.

Read More
News, Top StorySeairra JonesJanuary 23, 2023farmer's market, local business, local government, North Carolina, DOT, freeway widening, end highway expansion
Are National Parks for Commuting? DC Decision a Big Win for Human Power
Are National Parks for Commuting? DC Decision a Big Win for Human Power

During the pandemic, streets across the U.S. were reclaimed for human activity—but now, many cities are undoing those changes. Not so in DC's Rock Creek Park, where road closures have been made permanent.

Read More
News, Top StoryBen AbramsonJanuary 20, 2023parks, bikeability, walkability, pedestrians, washington dc, safe and productive streets
Cutting Corners
Cutting Corners

What if we told you that by cutting a few corners, you can actually make your community a better and safer place?

Read More
Edward Erfurt, Top StoryEdward ErfurtJanuary 20, 2023design, Street Design, traffic engineering, intersections, pedestrians, safe and productive streets
5 Telltale Signs You’re on the Stroad From Hell
5 Telltale Signs You’re on the Stroad From Hell

Stroads are everywhere in North America—but since they don’t come with any labeling, this handy guide will help you identify when you’re on one.

Read More
Top StoryBen AbramsonJanuary 19, 2023streetscape, Street Design, transportation, pedestrians, stroad, safe and productive streets, safety, end parking mandates and subsidies
Baltimore Wants Permanent Parklets
Baltimore Wants Permanent Parklets

Baltimore’s department of transportation is considering making the city’s temporary outdoor dining “parklets” a permanent fixture.

Read More
News, Top StoryAsia MieleszkoJanuary 19, 2023parklet, Third Places, restaurants, maryland
The U.S. Is Running Out of Skilled Labor. Is It Gen Z’s Fault?
The U.S. Is Running Out of Skilled Labor. Is It Gen Z’s Fault?

The U.S. needs more carpenters, plumbers, and other people in skilled trades and technical industries—and a lot of people are quick to point fingers at Gen Z for not picking up the slack.

Read More
Podcast, Top StoryStrong TownsJanuary 18, 2023podcast, upzoned
Will There Still Be Chinatowns in Utopia?
Will There Still Be Chinatowns in Utopia?

“Community character" is often invoked to support exclusion and discrimination, but there are also communities whose unique "character" matters—a lot. How (if at all) should local government support such places?

Read More
Herriges, Top StoryDaniel HerrigesJanuary 18, 2023local government, local regulation, race, housing policy, neighborhoods
Do It Afraid
Do It Afraid

To save our cities, we need to try new ideas, and that’s scary. But sometimes we must make scary decisions if we’re ever going to move into a stronger, more resilient future.

Read More
Owens, Top StoryTiffany Owens ReedJanuary 17, 2023local government, policy change, city government
These 4 Communities Are Leading the Way in Making Their Places Stronger
These 4 Communities Are Leading the Way in Making Their Places Stronger

Today, we’re announcing the four communities hosting the inaugural Community Action Lab. 

Read More
Top StoryStrong TownsJanuary 16, 2023announcement, Community Action Lab
Ruling: Oklahoma Turnpike Authority “Willfully” Misled Public to Force $5 Billion Expansion Project
Ruling: Oklahoma Turnpike Authority “Willfully” Misled Public to Force $5 Billion Expansion Project

The Oklahoma Turnpike Authority faces multiple lawsuits, with plaintiffs alleging its plans for an imminent turnpike expansion project not only lacked transparency, but were illegal.

Read More
News, Top StoryAsia MieleszkoJanuary 16, 2023transportation, infrastructure, oklahoma, DOT, highways, freeway widening, end highway expansion
Sketches of Shenandoah
Sketches of Shenandoah

A drive through Shenandoah National Park, and a look back at its 1930s creation, offers a glimpse into the early era of American car culture, when motoring was a recreational activity with a lighter imprint on the landscape.

Read More
Edward Erfurt, Top StoryEdward ErfurtJanuary 13, 2023car culture, history, rural, environment, parks
In This Housing Fight, It’s Conservative Politicians vs. Conservative Policies
In This Housing Fight, It’s Conservative Politicians vs. Conservative Policies

One would expect a Republican governor to endorse free-market solutions on a local level, yet housing and zoning tend to scramble traditional political debates in unexpected ways.

Read More
News, Top StoryBen AbramsonJanuary 12, 2023Incremental Housing, housing, housing affordability, housing crisis, housing cost, politics, florida
5 Cities That Repealed Parking Minimums in 2022
5 Cities That Repealed Parking Minimums in 2022

In recent years, a rapidly growing number of cities across North America have begun repealing mandatory parking minimums. Here are a few highlights from 2022.

Read More
News, Top StoryAsia MieleszkoJanuary 12, 2023parking minimums, Parking Reform Network, success stories, end parking mandates and subsidies
Newer Older
 

Helping cities, towns and neighborhoods take local action to grow safe, livable and financially resilient.

 

Get Involved

Become a Member
Sign Up for Emails
Pitch a Story
RSS Feed

Resources

Books
Action Lab
Blog Roll
Shop
Press

About

About Us
Team | Board
Employment
Contact Us

Site

Privacy Policy
Comment Policy
FAQ
Search

Each month, this website is funded by Strong Towns members.

Join the movement to keep the message going.
Become a Member

Strong Towns is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization. Our work is performed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Please share with others to use for good.

 
Strong Towns
1511 Northern Pacific Rd,
Brainerd, MN, 56401
8442181681 linda@strongtowns.org
Hours