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

Sep 7, 2017 • 31min
Bike Share and Equity with Caressa Givens
Caress Givens is the Community Engagement Coordinator for Milwaukee, Wisconsin's bike share program, Bublr. In this interview hosted by Rachel Quednau, Givens discusses equity issues related to bike share: How can bike share programs best meet the needs of low-income people and reach low-income neighborhoods? Is bike share an indicator of gentrification? Givens also talks about how to fund bike share programs, as well as how to get kids involved with bike share. Plus, Givens shares her list of favorite bike share programs across the nation.

Sep 5, 2017 • 29min
The Week Ahead: September 5, 2017
Chuck and Rachel discuss recent perspectives about Hurricane Harvey and the aftermath in Houston. They also chat about recent favorite books and films. (We apologize that there were some issues with Rachel's audio in this episode.)
Mentioned in this podcast:
"The Real Lesson of Hurricane Harvey" by Chuck Marohn
"Piling on Houston" by Chuck Marohn
"Houston isn't flooded because of its land use planning." by Daniel Herriges
Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman
13th (Documentary)
The Color of Law by Richard Rothstein

Aug 31, 2017 • 1h 2min
A Conversation about Market Urbanism
Chuck Marohn interviews Scott Beyer, urban affairs journalist and owner of Market Urbanism Report, who is currently traveling the country on a three-year trip visiting 30 different American cities. Chuck and Scott discuss their overlapping and diverging viewpoints on government regulations, zoning and housing affordability issues. They also compare issues in large cities with smaller towns and consider whether the same policies can apply in both sorts of places.

Aug 21, 2017 • 37min
The Week Ahead, August 21, 2017
Chuck Marohn shares the highlights from his recent family vacation to Washington DC including visits to the Library of Congress, the US Capitol, and several national monuments. He also discusses an upcoming Strong Towns event in Tulsa, OK and his recent article, "A Spirit of Generosity." Rachel talks about a new favorite podcast, Left, Right & Center.
Mentioned in this podcast:
Event in Tulsa, OK
"A Spirit of Generosity" by Charles Marohn
Left, Right & Center

Aug 17, 2017 • 27min
Alfonso Morales on Markets
In this podcast, Rachel Quednau interviews Alfonso Morales, a Professor of Urban and Regional Planning at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, about public markets as part of Strong Towns' ongoing focus on local food.
They compare markets in the United States with markets around the world, discuss current factors impacting the growth of markets and talk about ways to use data to analyze the success of farmers markets, including a new tool Morales helped to create.
Mentioned in this podcast:
MIFI Markets
Dane County Farmers Market
Milwaukee Public Market
Cities of Farmers by Alfonso Morales and Julie C. Dawson

Aug 14, 2017 • 37min
A Chat with Chuck about Brainerd
Chuck Marohn is on vacation this week, but before he left, he sat down to record a solo podcast about his new life in downtown Brainerd in response to the frequent question he gets, "How's the new neighborhood?"
We'll be back with our usual Week Ahead podcast next Monday.

Aug 7, 2017 • 22min
The Week Ahead: August 7, 2017
This week, Chuck and Rachel apologize for their recent absence on the podcast and discuss a recent article about the California Housing Crisis. They also discuss an ongoing Local Food campaign and recent favorite books.
Mentioned in this podcast:
"California Housing Crisis" by Charles Marohn
Local Food campaign
Hillbilly Elegy by J.D. Vance
Strangers in Their Own Land by Arlie Hochschild
White Trash by Nancy Isenberg

Jul 27, 2017 • 55min
Pete Saunders
Chuck Marohn interviews Pete Saunders, a planner and journalist who writes for Forbes, Business Insider and other publications, as well as his blog, The Corner Side Yard. Pete grew up in Detroit and now lives in Chicago so this discussion kicks off with a conversation about baseball (especially the Cubs and White Sox) and the relationship of stadiums and teams to their surrounding neighborhoods. Chuck and Pete also discuss two fascinating American cities where Pete has spent time: Detroit and Las Vegas. Finally, they contemplate the shift of African American populations toward the suburbs and out of the cities, and what that could mean for this demographic.
Mentioned in this podcast:
Can the Chicago White Sox Help Turn Around the South Side?
Las Vegas Lessons Part I and Part II
On the Outside, Looking In
You can read more from Pete on his blog or connect with him on Twitter.

Jul 23, 2017 • 42min
Don Kostelec
Chuck Marohn interviews Don Kostelec, a Strong Towns member and Senior Planning Associate at Alta Planning + Design based in Boise, ID. He's also the creator of this awesome video series.
Chuck and Don discuss a deadly street in Springfield, MA. (Read Chuck's open letter to the city of Springfield and the follow-up article for more back story.) They also chat about the challenges of the engineering and planning professions in general, and the nuance necessary in examining car crash data.

Jul 20, 2017 • 45min
A Renaissance Zone in Bismarck
Chuck Marohn interviews Kate Herzog, one of the first members of Strong Towns and Marketing & Assistant Director of Downtown Bismarck in Bismarck, ND. Chuck and Kate discuss the economic and political challenges in the Bismarck area and what Downtown Bismarck is doing about it. They also discuss a "renaissance zone" in Bismarck and the benefits and drawbacks of that program, as well as comparisons with tax increment financing (TIF) programs.


