Benjamin Herold, author of Disillusioned: Five Families and the Unraveling of America’s Suburbs, joins host Chuck Marohn on this week’s episode of the Strong Towns Podcast.
Read MoreSomerville, MA, is a thriving and vibrant city. So how is it that its own planners declared it an illegal place to build!?
Read MoreA financial bubble is, by definition, unsustainable. So, why have we recreated the 2000s housing bubble?
Read MoreAnd why a lot of people will remain unimpressed by it.
Read MoreHere’s how high-end shoes can help us understand why the housing market is in the state it’s currently in.
Read MoreWe talk with author Jake Berman about the history of rail networks in America’s cities and why our transit systems are the way that they are in the current era.
Read MoreOn this episode of the Strong Towns Podcast, we talk with author Seth Kaplan about his new book, Fragile Neighborhoods: Repairing American Society, One Zip Code at a Time.
Read MoreAs traditional highway expansions are put on pause around the country, professionals and policymakers have an opportunity to move forward with a better approach. This book shows them how.
Read MoreIn the 10th anniversary edition of his book Walkable City, Jeff Speck suggests a new pledge that professional planners should take in order to qualify for certification—and to better serve society.
Read MoreJeff Speck joins Chuck Marohn on the Strong Towns Podcast to talk about the latest edition of his book, Walkable City, which features 100 new pages of information for anyone wanting to make their city stronger.
Read MoreLooking for a holiday gift for the localist or urbanist in your life? Look no further, because the Strong Towns team has rounded up a list of books they’re sure to love!
Read MoreAn annual tradition, here is Chuck Marohn’s list of his favorite books he read in 2022.
Read MoreThis week on the Strong Towns Podcast, Chuck Marohn chats with Sam Quinones, author and journalist, about his most recent book, The Least of Us.
Read MoreFor the sake of our cities and the people who live in them, it’s time we fundamentally rethink how we regulate land in America. Read about it in this excerpt from Nolan Gray’s new book, Arbitrary Lines.
Read MoreAldo Leopold was an ecologist, not an urban planner, but insights from his Sand County Almanac can resonate with anyone interested in urbanism.
Read MoreIn this interview with author Majora Carter, she explains an empowering truth: that you don’t have to move out of your neighborhood to live in a better one.
Read MoreThis week on the Strong Towns Podcast, Chuck Marohn talks with Nolan Gray about his new book, in which he shows why zoning reform is necessary for building stronger towns and cities.
Read MoreIt’s no secret that the conventional process for public engagement in urban planning is broken. So, what should we be doing, instead?
Read More“You don’t have to move out of your neighborhood to live in a better one,” says Majora Carter in her new book, Reclaiming Your Community.
Read MoreTechnology historian Peter Norton talks about why we need to be more skeptical toward the utopian promises of self-driving cars.
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