What's it like to move from a 5 acre semi-rural home to a downtown neighborhood?
Read MoreIt's only a matter of time before California finds itself in another bust cycle, where the emergency of rising prices gives way to the catastrophe of falling prices—where the manic cycle ends and the depressive cycle begins.
Read MoreWe can battle with stats and studies, but we'll be much more effective advocates when we get beyond logic and reason.
Read MoreThis proposal is political theater at best, and, at worst, it's treating jobs as an object of religious veneration.
Read MoreSpringfield admits it has a speeding problem. It's time for the elected officials to order that State Street be redesigned to make travel speeds safe.
Read MoreThe line between optimism and reality can be a fine one to walk.
Read MoreLet's stop pretending we know the simple antidote to the painful symptoms our housing prices are expressing and instead humble ourselves to admit that we don't understand all the complexity.
Read MoreThe world is experienced much differently at thirty miles per hour than it is at two or three.
Read MoreAs our cities experience decline and tension, as frayed budgets cut back on what governments are capable of delivering, people need to be allowed to turn the bad party in their cities, towns and neighborhoods into a good one.
Read MoreYour membership supports us financially and that is important, but it is critical that our movement be expanding simply in raw numbers as well. Where we are today, with the resources we need to secure to take the next step, the validation of a growing movement cannot be understated. It is the difference.
Read MoreWhen you become a member of Strong Towns, you are supporting a change in the conversation. You are giving us the resources that we need to get this powerful message in front of more and more people. It’s working. All we need today is your support.
Read MoreOur job as Strong Towns advocates is to share our message, to keep bringing the conversation back to the persistent fact that our current approach is not working financially. We’re broke and so we must start thinking differently.
Read MoreWe have come up with many ways to explain the decline we see around us. In reality, we've simply given our cities no other option.
Read MoreA fetish with density is spiking the rising tide of housing demand in cities like Portland. To make housing affordable, we have to deal with the cause of the spike.
Read MoreWhen the issue of housing affordability comes up again and again, it is always tied to the agreed upon narrative that Portland is growing and will continue to grow, world without end. I don't buy that.
Read MoreWhere improvement is not an option, stagnation and decline are all that remain.
Read More"Build it and they will come" transit has distorted the housing market in Portland.
Read MoreIt's the incremental nature of both the private and the public investments that made traditional cities strong, resilient and financially productive.
Read MoreRefuting 4 myths about why housing in Portland (and cities like it) is so expensive.
Read MoreIt is incrementally rising land values, combined with the ability to redevelop to something more intense, that naturally prompts the redevelopment of property in decline. Take away one of those two factors and redevelopment breaks down.
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