After one meeting and a little over $3,000, Medicine Hat, AB, decided to take a bottom-up approach to invest in a community-led program that has made better use of their public parks and children’s playgrounds.
Read MoreStarting a business can be daunting, but this California city has made one relatively small bet that’s helping scores of local entrepreneurs get their small businesses off the ground.
Read MoreIs your city leaping before it hops?
Read MoreIt can be difficult to find a free public restroom. Here’s how one city in Alberta is tackling the problem, through small, immediately effective solutions.
Read MoreRoundabouts are great, but completely replacing an intersection with a roundabout is an enormous project—and not the first one cities should jump to when taking the next smallest step to address traffic safety concerns.
Read MoreThe notion that there is strength in smallness can be found everywhere in the Strong Towns approach—but what’s so special about small?
Read MoreWhen this Texan city’s bus system fell into decline, local advocates took the next smallest (but highly effective) step toward making their public transit more hospitable: by installing homemade bus benches.
Read MoreWe asked, and you answered!
Read MoreIn 2018, a group of concerned citizens met in a South Dakota coffee shop to talk about their city’s problems. Now, they’re working with a $100k budget for small-scale—but big-impact—projects in their community.
Read MoreThis public toilet in Winnipeg, MB, is a case study in why city governments need to pay attention to the power of small bets.
Read MoreYour city’s long-term resilience requires paying attention to the little things.
Read MoreThis nonprofit is transforming pockets of St. Louis, MO, into delightful and welcoming parks—and at a low cost!
Read MoreParking reform can be a hard sell when it’s done all at once. Here are some small steps you can take instead to start helping your community use less land on parking.
Read MoreThe problems with "community input" are many and obvious. One misguided response is to favor more top-down policy making, simply overriding the objections of local "NIMBYs." But there is a third way.
Read MoreThese pop-up shops in Berwyn, IL, are a great example of how communities can provide low-cost, low-risk spaces for local business owners to get their foot in the door.
Read MoreWhat do fractals have to do with building strong towns? A lot more than you might assume.
Read MoreIf you’ve got a parking shortage in your downtown, consider this unique, cost-effective solution: a valet service.
Read MoreStrong Towns member Haile McCollum is helping make her community of Thomasville, Georgia, more resilient and more beloved.
Read MoreSmall investments in poor neighborhoods are the best way for a community to build wealth. They are also the best way to lift people out of poverty without displacing them from their neighborhood.
Read MoreHacer inversiones pequeñas en barrios pobres es el mejor modo de aumentar la riqueza. También, son el mejor modo de ayudar a la gente a salir de la pobreza sin desplazarse del barrio.
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