At Strong Towns, we try to avoid using the word “sprawl” as a shorthand term in our content—and we’d even go so far as to say that sprawl isn’t the problem we’re trying to solve in our communities. All that said, are there any instances where sprawl is actually good? Hear Strong Towns President Chuck Marohn discuss this with Joe Minicozzi, principal of Urban3.
ADDITIONAL SHOW NOTES“Sprawl Is Not the Problem,” by Chuck Marohn, Strong Towns (April 2016).
Urban3 (website).
Joe Minicozzi (Twitter/X).
Chuck Marohn (Twitter/X).
David McAlvany: Legacy is an Accumulation of Little Decisions
Jenny Schuetz: Who's To Blame for High Housing Costs?
Tim Carney: "Alienated America" and the Rise of Populism
Liz Swaine: Bootstrapping Downtown Shreveport
Should California Bring Back Redevelopment Agencies?
Go Cultivate with Verdunity
If the “Strong Towns” book is the WHY, this book is the HOW.
Students and the Strong Towns Movement
Aligning Mission with Funding, the Strong Towns Way
What does it mean to be part of a bottom-up revolution?
Live in Kansas City: "We’re a suburban community learning we can be urban."
Gracy Olmstead: It Still Takes a Village
King Williams: The Gentrifiers Will Become the Gentrified
Paul Stewart: You Are the Help You've Been Waiting For
More than Math: Living with Intention in Our Stronger Towns
Minimum Viable Development? How We Let the "Perfect" Be the Enemy of the Good
Building Productive Places (and Showering them with Love)
Breaking Free of the Infrastructure Cult
Spooky Wisdom: What Lessons Should We Be Learning from How Our Ancestors Built Cities?
James Howard Kunstler: It's All Going to Have to Get Smaller
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
City Manager Unfiltered
Potencial Americano
The ASIC Podcast
The Chris Plante Show
Red Eye Radio