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Strong Towns Archive
An archive of articles, podcasts, webpages and more from Strong Towns.
Go to strongtowns.org
How "Small and Smart" Ideas can Boost Your City's Creativity (and Financial Resiliency)
How "Small and Smart" Ideas can Boost Your City's Creativity (and Financial Resiliency)

Greg Wright—Executive Director at CREATE Portage County—shares how you can foster creative (and financially resilient) communities where you live, including how to inspire creative residents, how to demonstrate the economic impact of creativity, and why you should root all initiatives in a “small and smart” way.


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Podcast, Top StoryJacob MosesAugust 21, 2019Strong Citizenship, how to, community building, community engagement, public engagement, nonprofit sector, Economic Gardening, local government
Refuge and Prospect: The Front Porch
Refuge and Prospect: The Front Porch

The Poet Laureate of Mississippi reflects on her adopted South and on the Southern tradition of front porch-sitting: “No other architectural space is so deliciously not/and: not inside, not outside. Not public, not private. Not house, not garden.”

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Top StoryBeth Ann FennellyAugust 21, 2019front porches, architecture, mississippi
How Should a Strong Town Respond to the Housing Crisis? (And Other Questions from Ask Strong Towns)
How Should a Strong Town Respond to the Housing Crisis? (And Other Questions from Ask Strong Towns)

Once a month we host Ask Strong Towns, a members-only live Q&A webcast. Here’s the video and audio from August 2019’s edition.

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Podcast, Top StoryStrong TownsAugust 20, 2019Ask Strong Towns
Celebrating the American Front Porch
Celebrating the American Front Porch

Once ubiquitous, then endangered, the American front porch is making a comeback. From rocking chairs to rock music, a conference near Oxford, Mississippi celebrates the past, present, and future of the surprisingly powerful front porch.

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Top StoryCampbell McCoolAugust 20, 2019architecture, conferences, mississippi, front porches, traditional development pattern
Plan for Spontaneity
Plan for Spontaneity

It’s a paradox, but cities can set the stage for the unscripted. These playful surprises cater both to young and the young-at-heart, and they endear the community to visitors and residents alike.

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Arian HorbovetzAugust 20, 2019public space, children, family, tactical urbanism, parks, illinois
The Streets of Paris
The Streets of Paris

The United States isn’t France, but there are still plenty of lessons to be learned—and myths to be busted—by looking at the way their streets are designed to build wealth.

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Marohn, Top StoryCharles MarohnAugust 19, 2019walkability, safety, urban design, great streets, streets, pedestrians, europe
Top 5 Recent Stories (August 12–August 16, 2019)
Top 5 Recent Stories (August 12–August 16, 2019)

Infrastructure doesn’t have to be expensive. But in the U.S., we infamously spend a fortune on it… and not always for the best results. This and more in this week’s top 5 articles.

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Strong TownsAugust 16, 2019
Meet the Pro Sports Stadium That Won't Make Your City Go Broke
Meet the Pro Sports Stadium That Won't Make Your City Go Broke

In North America, stadium projects are almost synonymous with silver bullet disasters. But does that have to be true?

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Podcast, Top StoryStrong TownsAugust 16, 2019podcast, canada, stadium, economic deve, economic development, upzoned, antifragility
Copenhagen: More Than Bike Lanes
Copenhagen: More Than Bike Lanes

Copenhagen’s famous biking culture—over 3 out of every 5 commutes are by bike—is lauded internationally as an achievement for the environment, public health, and—we’d add—fiscal sustainability alike. But they didn’t get there just by building bike lanes.

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Top StoryJoe CortrightAugust 16, 2019biking, gas tax, car culture, europe
Broad is the Road that Leads to Destruction
Broad is the Road that Leads to Destruction

We’ve been taught that a growing city inevitably needs wider highways. Even those who oppose specific road projects often accept this premise. But is it actually true?

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Top StoryVince GrahamAugust 15, 2019infrastructure cult, freeway widening, transportation, end highway expansion, south carolina
You Can't Make It Up
You Can't Make It Up

When my school district proposed tearing down buildings for parking, I and others suggested there were more creative and less destructive ways to solve these problems. We were scoffed at, and we lost. Hate to say, “I told you so,” but….

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Marohn, Top StoryCharles MarohnAugust 15, 2019schools, minnesota, end parking mandates and subsidies
On September 10th, Strong Towns Hits the Road. Find Out Where We're Going (So Far).
On September 10th, Strong Towns Hits the Road. Find Out Where We're Going (So Far).

Is the Strong America Tour coming to your town?

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Top StoryStrong TownsAugust 14, 2019Strong Towns Book, events, strong america
Announcing A Special Celebrity Edition of "Ask Strong Towns" with Dan Burden of Blue Zones
Announcing A Special Celebrity Edition of "Ask Strong Towns" with Dan Burden of Blue Zones

Our special celebrity guest for the September edition of our "Ask Strong Towns webcast is Dan Burden, Director of Innovation and Inspiration at Blue Zones and one of Planetizen’s 100 Most Influential Urbanists.

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Top StoryStrong TownsAugust 14, 2019Ask Strong Towns, public health
Why this Strong Towns Member Got Involved in Local Government (and Why You Should, Too)
Why this Strong Towns Member Got Involved in Local Government (and Why You Should, Too)

Strong Towns member Ben Harrison shares his experience serving on a citizen advisory committee and why you should run for something in your own community, including how to pitch your vision to city staff, how to introduce Strong Towns principles, and, how serving on these committees can help you feel closer to your community.


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Podcast, Top StoryJacob MosesAugust 14, 2019Strong Citizenship, how to, community building, community engagement, community, neighborhood change, nonprofit sector, public engagement, local government
The Cult of the Fantasy Pedestrian
The Cult of the Fantasy Pedestrian

If your goal is to promote public safety, design streets for the humans you have, not the perfectly obedient ones you wish you had.

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Herriges, Top StoryDaniel HerrigesAugust 14, 2019safety, pedestrians, missouri, safe and productive streets
So Your City's Getting More Bike-Friendly. How Do You Identify the Next Best Step?
So Your City's Getting More Bike-Friendly. How Do You Identify the Next Best Step?

So your city’s made progress on bike safety—there are some nice new bike lanes, and more people out and about on two wheels. How to keep the momentum going? That’s the situation in this Strong Towns member’s hometown, and he has some ideas to share.

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Tim WrightAugust 13, 2019Strong Citizenship, biking, bike lanes, success stories, louisiana
Do Multi-Million Dollar Mansions Really Benefit Cities?
Do Multi-Million Dollar Mansions Really Benefit Cities?

South Florida is known for its luxurious lifestyle and extravagant beachfront homes. These mansions must reel in big bucks for the city, right? Let’s see how productive they really are when we #DoTheMath.

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Top StoryRobert SulaskiAugust 13, 2019housing, value per acre, transparent local accounting
To Build Sustainable Places, Look to the Past, Not Just the Future
To Build Sustainable Places, Look to the Past, Not Just the Future

“Sustainable” is a buzzword that often conjures images of technological wizardry aimed at solving environmental problems. But what if our ancestors knew a lot more about sustainability than we give them credit for?

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Podcast, Top StoryStrong TownsAugust 12, 2019sustainability, architecture, Original Green, urban design, traditional development pattern
Why Does Infrastructure Cost So Much?
Why Does Infrastructure Cost So Much?

Why does infrastructure cost so much to build in the U.S.? The fundamental reasons aren’t technical. We’ve structured our postwar economy to use overspending on infrastructure as a way to induce short-term growth.

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Marohn, Top StoryCharles MarohnAugust 12, 2019infrastructure, infrastructure cost, macroeconomics, infrastructure cult, growth ponzi scheme
Top 5 Recent Stories (August 5–August 9, 2019)
Top 5 Recent Stories (August 5–August 9, 2019)

Does Boston—one of America’s oldest and densest cities—have too much parking? The verdict is in. This and more in our top 5 stories of the past week.

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Strong TownsAugust 9, 2019
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