Here’s how doing the math can help get your city the best return on investment and steward your local resources well.
Read MoreA letter from the apartment complex is a reminder of how our cities prioritize cars over bikes.
Read MoreHas an infatuation with owner-occupation in Western countries contributed to the housing crisis and economic inequality?
Read MoreLet’s keep our ideals and our vision for a better America while we simultaneously continue to do what we can to make ours a strong town.
Read MoreBasically decent people can support or enable things you find self-evidently bad. It’s easy to caricature them—it’s much harder to truly do the work of seeking to understand.
Read MoreReduced competition—in the form of monopolies and oligopolies—hurts us not only as consumers and workers but as citizens and community members. Here’s why.
Read MoreHow do we move beyond Team Mask vs. Team Anti-Mask? Understanding the difference between individual and cumulative risk is a start. But it’s only a start.
Read MoreA get-out-the-vote message done right, the surge of interest in really big climate interventions, and how loneliness can lead to the worst forms of totalitarianism. These are a few stories from around the web that Strong Towns staffers were reading and talking about this week.
Read MoreGleaned from a 100,000 mile journey into the heart of America, here are 8 principles the leaders and cities of America’s most successful towns swear by.
Read MoreOne vision is for a place where people can walk, bike, and spend time (and dollars at local businesses). The other is for a busy road expansion that will move a lot of traffic. Hear how two Strong Towns advocates are fighting the good fight in Erie, PA.
Read MoreGood fences—good edges of all kinds—make for good neighbors. They can also boost the economic vitality of our downtowns.
Read MoreKansas City’s path forward is simple yet powerful. It needs to recommit to its own strengths—the same ones that built the city in the first place.
Read MoreU.S. commercial real estate was way overbuilt before the pandemic. What will happen now that brick-and-mortar retail is cratering?
Read MoreEating together can subvert partisanship, restore trust, and build stronger cities.
Read MoreYoung people shouldn’t have to choose between living in the place they grew up and pursuing a prosperous life.
Read MoreLocal and state governments have stepped in to fill the gap for businesses when the federal response was either too slow, too small, or not tailored to the right needs.
Read MoreHow do local leaders make the right decisions in a world based less on facts and fundamentals than on who can tell the best story? It starts with learning to see beyond the false narratives.
Read MoreWhen an attempt to solve a problem ends up making the problem worse, that’s The Cobra Effect. It’s also a pretty good description of the decisions that are slowly bankrupting many of our towns and cities.
Read MoreThe uneasy truce between farmers and gravel producers, the case for quitting the news, and a new children’s book about urban planners. These are just a few of the stories from around the web that Strong Towns staffers were reading and talking about this week.
Read MoreNeighborhoods don’t have to wait for distant gatekeepers to turn on the spigot of money and attention. Here’s a tool that can provide a homegrown pathway to economic development.
Read More