The Strong Towns Podcast
Strong Towns
The Strong Towns Podcast is a weekly conversation on the Strong Towns movement, hosted by Strong Towns Founder and President Charles Marohn and frequently featuring special guests. The podcast explores how we can financially strengthen our cities, towns, and neighborhoods and, in the process, make them better places to live. Join Chuck in examining how everything from urban design to economics to systems theory to psychology helps inform this core question.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jul 5, 2018 • 1h 8min
Ask Strong Towns #4 (June 2018)
Every month, we host Ask Strong Towns to give you a chance to ask your burning questions about our vision for change, and how the Strong Towns approach might apply in your unique place.
The live Ask Strong Towns webcast is open to all Strong Towns members, but afterward, we share the audio on our podcast.
Below you'll find that audio, with a conversation led by Strong Towns staff members, Chuck Marohn and Kea Wilson. In this episode, Chuck and Kea discuss several audience-submitted questions on topics ranging from from parking minimums to density to how young people can help build Strong Towns
Here are the questions discussed in this episode:
What are some of the arguments you’ve heard over the years “for” parking minimums (i.e. leaving it the way we’ve always done it), rather than moving towards a parking maximum model? If I'm going in front of elected officials to lobby for a change, what arguments should I anticipate and how should I answer them?
If a city has large green- or gray-field lots, what can it do to promote fine-grained development in these places, especially in climates where developers are hungry to build the biggest project they can?
When talking to policymakers, how can you shift the conversation away from the overly simple "all density is good density" and towards adding value through a broader set of solutions, like mixed use development, multi-story buildings, limited parking, infill development, etc.?
I go to college a few hours from my home, and my home is immediately outside of the principal city in my region. What can I do during my college years to stay involved in a city I don't live in at all during the year, but that I intend to move into after my career?
What do you think of special “District” initiatives, the "Cultural Innovation District" in New Orleans?
As a young(ish) engineer who subscribes to Strong Towns ideas and wants to make a difference in his home town, would you recommend that I pursue a planning degree in addition to my civil engineering degree, especially if I have a chance to work in city government?
People in our small town tend to be very engaged and hold strong opinions. Big community issues can turn nasty, especially now with social media. Any suggestions on how to engage civil discourse without personal attacks?
Our town is embarking on a large development project in the core of downtown financed via a Tax Increment Financing. The short version of the explanation we got from our Town Council is that the tax revenue generated from the new project will be set aside to fund the project. Doesn't TIF = debt? What questions would help enlighten our taxpayers?

Jul 2, 2018 • 13min
The Week Ahead: From Technical Writer to Grocery Store Owner to Community Builder
On this episode, Rachel introduces her colleague, Jacob Moses, who is Strong Towns' new Community Builder. Jacob discusses his unique background in technical writing and grocery store management, and how he ended up at Strong Towns.
Mentioned in this podcast
Expand Your Impact with Social Media (webcast), 11am CT on July 25
This Is Where You Belong: Finding Home Wherever You Are by Melody Warnick
The Future of Public Space by Michelle Nijhuis, Jaron Lanier, Rachel Monroe, China Mieville & more

Jun 28, 2018 • 1h 1min
Autonomous Vehicles: Separating the Hype from Reality
This is our fourth dispatch from the Congress for the New Urbanism (CNU), which took place in Savannah, Georgia in May. Chuck Marohn attended CNU and hosted a series of in-depth podcast conversations about some of the most pressing topics for cities today, with leaders, thinkers, and activists in a whole range of fields. Now we're bringing those podcasts to your ears throughout the summer.
In this episode, Jeffrey Tumlin, Principal and Director of Strategy at Nelson Nygaard, and Corey Ershow, Transportation Policy Manager at Lyft, discuss the hype around autonomous vehicles and what the AV future might actually look like.
Questions discussed in this podcast include:
How will autonomous vehicles fit into our existing taxi and ride-hailing network?
How far are we in the technological progression toward autonomous vehicles?
Autonomous vehicles seem to work okay on a closed course, but what about in a complex urban space?
If we don't criminalize "jaywalking," how can humans and autonomous vehicles interact in a way that allows both to move freely and safely in an urban environment?
Will autonomous vehicles take over our cities and marginalize pedestrians, or might the opposite happen as a result of automation?
Will autonomous vehicles encourage longer suburban commuting?
What are governments doing right, in anticipation of autonomous vehicles?

Jun 25, 2018 • 13min
The Week Ahead: Get to know our new summer intern
This week, Rachel's guest is Connor Nielsen, our summer intern who is working with both Strong Towns and our friends at the geoanalytics firm, Urban3, to share data-related stories throughout the next few months. Connor talks about what led him to this internship and what he hopes to work on this summer.
MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE
Urban3
Connor's writing on Strong Towns
Ask Strong Towns webcast, Thursday at 12pm CT
Guns, Germs and Steel by Jared Diamond
The Liturgists (podcast)
The Good Place (TV show)

Jun 21, 2018 • 43min
Absolution and the Changing American City
This is our third dispatch from the Congress for the New Urbanism (CNU), which took place in Savannah, Georgia in May. Chuck Marohn attended CNU and hosted a series of in-depth podcast conversations about some of the most pressing topics for cities today, with leaders, thinkers, and activists in a whole range of fields. Now we're bringing those podcasts to your ears throughout the summer.
In this episode, David Rau, a New York-city based architect and Steve Mouzon, an architect and author of The Original Green, discuss the past, present and future of American architecture. They contemplate what it means for a new generation to reject or forgive the design choices of previous generations, particularly in light of recent conversations about the removal of Confederate monuments in American cities.
Questions discussed in this podcast include:
What are the key differences between traditional architecture and modern architecture?
Is a willingness to accept or reject changes as humans wired into our DNA? Are liberals more interested in moving forward and conservatives more interested in keeping this as they are?
How does the concept of absolution apply to current conversations about new urbanism? What does the process of absolution look like?
How can we be fair judges of city builders in the past while still maintaining a critical eye toward their failings? As city builders today, how would we want to be judged by future generations?
Is our ability to absolve people and places of the past correlated with the level of power we have or have not gained today?
What makes a place "lovable?"

Jun 18, 2018 • 20min
The Week Ahead: Bee Season
Rachel's guest this week is Michelle Erfurt, Strong Towns' Pathfinder. She shares an update on Strong Towns' events for the year and the amazing reach that the Strong Towns message has been having. Michelle and Rachel also dish about their latest favorite books and tv shows. If you want to book a Strong Towns event, head to this page to get in touch with Michelle.
Mentioned in this podcast
Chuck speaks at the International City/County Management Association's Annual Conference in Baltimore
Strong Towns events in:
Erie, PA
Fort Worth, TX
Cedar Creek, TX
8 Lessons Learned from Starting my First Garden by Michelle Erfurt
Queer Eye for the Straight Guy
Red Sparrow by Jason Matthews
Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi

Jun 14, 2018 • 53min
Even Historic Cities Face Auto-Oriented Design Problems
This is our second dispatch from the Congress for the New Urbanism (CNU), which took place in Savannah, Georgia in May. Chuck Marohn attended CNU and hosted a series of in-depth podcast conversations about some of the most pressing topics for cities today, with leaders, thinkers, and activists in a whole range of fields. Now we're bringing those podcasts to your ears throughout the summer.
One month after the Congress, today's podcast guests are Andres Duany and Kevin Klinkenberg, who discuss the host city of Savannah. Andres is one of the founders of CNU and Kevin is a long-time Savannah resident. Both are architects and planners, and both were deeply involved with producing the Congress this year.
Questions discussed in this podcast include:
What makes Savannah such a unique place?
Why didn't the rest of Savannah develop in the same traditional, walkable manner as the city center?
How has auto-oriented design impacted the historic core of the city?
How do you balance historic preservation concerns and the need to allow cities to move forward?
What's the impact of large developments like convention centers and arenas?
Engineers and planners often have a compulsion to fix things, but how do we know when to let a place go? What is the opportunity cost of spending too much time fixing things that are really beyond repair

Jun 7, 2018 • 37min
Why is it so hard to get things built?
This is our first dispatch from the Congress for the New Urbanism (CNU), which took place in Savannah, Georgia in May. Chuck Marohn attended CNU and hosted a series of in-depth podcast conversations about some of the most pressing topics for cities today, with leaders, thinkers, and activists in a whole range of fields. Now we're bringing those podcasts to your ears throughout the summer.
Today's podcast guest is Monte Anderson, a developer based in Texas and a leader of the Incremental Development Alliance.
Monte encourages people to pick a place they love and stay there. That's how you really learn what communities need and how to make them better. And that's what he did by choosing to incrementally improve his hometown.
Questions discussed in this podcast include:
What if your town seems past the point of getting better? Should you stay anyway?
What needs to happen in order to encourage development in our towns?
How do you respond to people who worry that the removal of parking minimums will be harmful to local businesses?
What's the best sort of business to kickstart a commercial street?
How do we reconcile the desire to be flexible and encourage new business start-ups, especially in poor neighborhoods, while still ensuring that buildings are safe and basic health codes are met?
What are the first steps someone should take if they want to become an incremental developer? What if you don't have much money?
How do you find a balance between investing in a neighborhood and not pricing people out of it?
What's the difference between a developer and an investor?

May 31, 2018 • 53min
How a Productivity- and Efficiency-Obsessed Culture Harms Parents
A few decades ago, Beth Berry lived in Austin, Texas with her four children. The pace of life in that big city eventually caught up with them and they decided to move south to Mexico to find something different.
Beth started writing, cooking, walking and observing the family-centric life around her. "I was learning to not have an agenda and let curiosity lead me," she says. "The culture shifted my perspective on what I needed to do to be okay, to be worthy, to be successful by some measure."
Since then, she has moved back to the United States and begun working as a life coach with mothers who share similar concerns about the unceasing pace of American life, and the burdens and impossible ideals it lays on women.
In this engaging conversation with Chuck Marohn, Beth discusses the pressures of modern parenthood, the loss of "the village" when it comes to raising children, and the way the design of our communities furthers disconnection and isolation.
Mentioned in this podcast:
In the absence of ‘the village,’ mothers struggle most (on Motherly)
Revolution from Home (Beth's website)

May 29, 2018 • 15min
The Week Ahead: Thank you!
On this episode, Kea and Rachel recap the recent member drive and chat about some recent favorite books and shows. A huge thank you to the 150 new members who joined us last week. If you didn't get a chance to become a member yet, you can still do so right here, right now.
Mentioned in this episode
The Winners of our State vs. State New Member Contest
In Defense of Housing by Peter Marcuse and David Madden
Wild, Wild Country (Netflix show)
Is it better to build a Strong Town from scratch? by Kea Wilson


