The latest ideas, insights and action from around the Strong Towns movement.

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Latest Podcasts

(Transcripts Included)

From Biostatistics to Better Streets in Fayetteville

From Biostatistics to Better Streets in Fayetteville

How One Tiny House Helped Shift Boise’s Housing Rules

How One Tiny House Helped Shift Boise’s Housing Rules

Walking, Visibility, And One Mom’s Fight For Safer Streets

Walking, Visibility, And One Mom’s Fight For Safer Streets

Humility Versus Hubris in American Urbanism

Humility Versus Hubris in American Urbanism

Latest Stories

The Sims Are Taking Over the City

If urban planning is playing SimCity in real life, then the Strong Towns movement isn’t made up of distant players — it's made up of the Sims who live and work in the city every day. And they're taking over the game.

Read article
West Virginia Is the Canary in America’s Infrastructure Coal Mine

West Virginia’s $1.6 billion Road to Prosperity program was supposed to cover maintenance costs and reignite economic growth. Seven years later, the money’s gone and the situation has gotten worse.

Read article
This Canadian City is Ditching Red Tape for Rowhouses

Calgary is cutting delays—not corners—to deliver more housing where it’s needed. And your city should be paying attention.

Read article
The Intersection of Waste and Opportunity

An intersection redesign in Fairbanks, Alaska, proves that road projects are not always improvements—and that DOT priorities are often out of touch with reality.

Read article
Bangor’s Bold Moves on Housing

Bangor, Maine, isn’t holding out for silver bullets. It’s getting to work—clearing the way for more homes in creative, community-minded ways.

Read article
3 Things To Keep in Mind When Removing an Urban Highway

In 2011, the Rhode Island Department of Transportation decided to do something extremely unusual: It removed an urban highway. Here are three lessons to learn from their success.

Read article
Stop Banking on Subsidies and Start Building What Works

As Norwalk navigates a housing crisis, one thing is clear: the path forward isn’t scale for scale’s sake—it’s building smarter, more affordably, and with the community in mind.

Read article
Answering the Top 3 Questions About Abundance and the Strong Towns Approach

A couple of weeks ago, Chuck did a Q&A about how the book “Abundance” differs from the Strong Towns approach. There were some good questions, so we’ve consolidated his answers here.

Read article
How to Build the Perfect City

While urban planning can sound boring, how we choose to live is as fundamental a question as exists.

Read article
Student Journalist Goes "All Out" to Spotlight Car Dependency and Spark Change

Student journalist William Donofrio is part of a growing group of changemakers who are noticing, documenting, and sharing the struggles their places face.

Read article
How To Turn a Deadly Stroad Into a Safe Street: The Broad Street Project

How did one of the most dangerous streets in Rhode Island turn into a safe and comfortable place for people to walk, bike, and shop? It’s all about community and local context.

Read article
Five Crashes in 16 Months: One Denver Family’s Breaking Point

The house is beautiful. The neighborhood is charming. The street? Designed like a drag strip—and it's launched multiple cars into one family's living room.

Read article
Healing a Neighborhood with Paint and Possibility

Harrisonburg skipped the renderings and went straight to the street—using a live demo to calm traffic and earn back trust.

Read article
The Light Still Shines

It’s easy to get angry or check out when faced with your place’s continued decline. That doesn’t mean you should stop fighting for it.

Read article
Maryland’s Quick-Build Projects Are a Model for Every State DOT

How do you make streets safer when your tools made them unsafe in the first place? If you’re the Maryland Department of Transportation, you start building a new toolbox.

Read article
A Tribute to Leon Krier: The Thinker Who Changed My Path

Leon Krier leaves behind a generation of designers, planners, and urbanists who see the world differently because of him. I owe him more than I can put into words.

Read article
Housing Is Not a Numbers Problem—It’s a Systems Problem

When we recognize the housing crisis as a systems and strategy problem, we realize that there is no shortage of things cities can do right now to address it.

Read article
I Refuse To Accept That My Best Days of Walkability Were in College

Instead of relegating walkability to college campuses and tourist towns, let’s embrace it as a key to community strength.

Read article
Answering the Call: How This Church Is Turning Faith Into Affordable Housing

Charlotte, North Carolina, is in the middle of a housing crisis. Churches are stepping up to help.

Read article
Texas Housing Bill—Not Perfect, But Progress

Some call it watered down, others call it overreach. But there’s no denying this new Texas bill nudges housing policy in the right direction.

Read article
How Ordinary People Doing Small Things Can Change the World

It comes down to stewardship, empathy, and humility.

Read article
Making Room for Mom: Iowa’s Bold Move on Backyard Housing

Iowa’s new ADU law puts power in the hands of homeowners, not just developers—and makes it easier for grandma to stay close to home.

Read article
How Harrisonburg Is Reclaiming Its Streets From the Bottom Up

City staff in Harrisonburg, Virginia, are embracing a process of co-creation with the public they serve. Here’s what that means.

Read article
Chicago Banned Its Traditional Affordable Housing—Let’s Fix That

It’s time to make the beloved housing solution that turned Chicago into a bustling, modern city legal again.

Read article

Subscribe to Our Email Newsletter

The urgent work of thousands of advocates — straight to your inbox.

Get important updates, top stories and notifications about when Strong Towns will be in your area.

Not finding what you are looking for?
Visit the Strong Towns Archive for our older articles.