Talking Headways: A Streetsblog Podcast

The Overhead Wire
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Sep 18, 2018 • 54min

Episode 1: Mondays at The Overhead Wire

Welcome to our NEW SHOW on the Talking Headways Podcast Network called Mondays at The Overhead Wire where Jeff Wood and a rotating band of amazing co-hosts talk about the top stories from TheOverheadWire.com.  This week Anna Muessig of Gehl joins to talk about why autonomous vehicles should focus on pedestrians and Domino's Pizza as a pothole filling enterprise. We also play the game WikiCity and wonder who should be the voice transit in a city. Featured Articles This Week Left Behind America - Frontline What America's Mayors Think About Domino's Pothole Filling Stunt - Eater Autonomous Cars Need to Think More Like Humans - Fast Company
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Sep 13, 2018 • 34min

Episode 202: The Anatomy of an Urban Cell

This week we're joined by planner and author Robin Renner. We talk about his wonderful book Urban Being: Anatomy and Identity of the City.  Robin talks about how living in a number of places around the world got him to think differently about cities and how that led to his categorization of urban clusters. I ask how his work can be used by cities and he gives us a look into his thought process and the different geographies of the city.   Don't forget to Subscribe to Talking Headways on iTunes, Stitcher, or wherever you get your podcasts. Follow us on Twitter @TheOverheadWire Support the Podcast on Patreon Sign up for a free trial of our daily newsletter The Overhead Wire  
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Sep 6, 2018 • 43min

Episode 201: Building the Dutch Cycling City

This week we're joined by Melissa and Chris Bruntlett to talk about their new book Building the Cycling City: The Dutch Blueprint for Urban Vitality. They chat about their trip to the Netherlands and their experiences in a number of different cities and how they relate to the North American context.  We also chat about overflowing bike parking, why bikes are often left behind, and how street design is better than signs. To purchase the book, visit Island Press
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Aug 30, 2018 • 55min

Episode 200: Urbanism as a Way of Life by Louis Wirth

This week on the podcast it's our 200th episode!!!! We have a bit of a dance party in the intro before getting to the good stuff. We read in full "Urbanism as a Way of Life" by Louis Wirth from the Journal of Sociology in 1938.  The piece is introduced by Dr. Lisa Schweitzer, a professor at USC Sol Price School of Public Policy who believes this piece and others sometimes get overshadowed by Jane Jacobs. So let us change that shall we? I really hope you enjoy this episode.  If you do please send us an email at theoverheadwire@gmail.com   Copyright © 1938 The University of Chicago. This podcast is published by arrangement with the University of Chicago Press, and was produced in the year 2018 by The Overhead Wire.
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Aug 22, 2018 • 38min

Episode 199: Recycling Capital for Public Good

This week we're joined by former President and CEO of the Low Income Investment Fund (Liif) Nancy Andrews. Nancy and I chat about community development, poverty reduction strategies, and the Bay Area Transit Oriented Housing Fund.
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Aug 16, 2018 • 46min

Episode 198: Setting Real Goals and Accelerating Change

This week we're joined by Doug Farr, President of Farr Associates and author of the new book Sustainable Nation. Doug chats about the arrangement of the book by different patterns of urbanism and how we can take a bottom up approach to change our cities. He also chats about the forced boredom of the Burning Man festival and why Alexis de Tocqueville's 1835 work Democracy in America is still relevant today. 
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Aug 9, 2018 • 40min

Episode 197: The Uber Effect

This week we're joined by Andrew Saltzberg, Head of Transportation Policy and Research at Uber. Andrew talks about growing up in Montreal and his previous transportation work at the World Bank. We also chat about the importance of transportation policy at the city level and Uber's support for congestion pricing as well as the issue of geometry in urban places. 
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Aug 2, 2018 • 34min

Episode 196: Infill is Brain Damage

This week we’re chatting with Susan Henderson of PlaceMakers about the use and benefits of form-based codes. We talk about the focus of these codes, how they are used to support transit, and how a code can affect the streets around them. Susan also discusses why people might push back against form-based codes and how to frame conversations about them and their benefits.
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Jul 26, 2018 • 49min

Episode 195: The First Shoupista

This week Patrick Siegman joins us to chat on the topic of parking. We chat about the etymology of the word parking, the legend that is Donald Shoup, and why the topic of parking gets so personal.
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Jul 19, 2018 • 36min

Episode 194: When is My City Going to Fit Me?

This week we're joined by Mikael Colville-Andersen to talk about his book Copenhagenize. Mikael tells us about how his children influence his work and his feelings about bike culture. He also shares his dislike of e-bikes and scooters as well as the innovations that he believes help move bikes as transportation forward.   

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