Category: Public Engagement

Serpentine Maze: Pop-up parks in a time of pandemic

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
In this week's post, PlaceMaker Hazel Borys walks us through a pop-up park that she and her friends built. And how it helps implement three of the 22 actions of the Pandemic Toolkit. Click below to launch. Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk

Public Participation, Part II: Equitable Outreach

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
This is Part II of a two-parter on community engagement strategies in a new era. Part I is here. This conversation is the third in our series addressing planning challenges for local governments in a post-pandemic future. The two previous topics can be found here and here. Jennifer Hurley is President & CEO of Hurley-Franks... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk

Public Participation, Part I: Let’s Fix What’s Not Working

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
This is Part I of a two-parter on this topic. The conversation is the third in our series addressing planning challenges in an era likely to be reshaped by the COVID-19 pandemic. The two previous topics can be found here and here. Jennifer Hurley is President & CEO of Hurley-Franks & Associates, a planning consultancy... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk

Better Places for Changing Populations: AARP has some ideas

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
Between now and April 17, AARP, the largest advocacy organization for seniors, is inviting government entities and non-profits to apply for a Community Challenge grant. This program, now in its third year, is a good one. Not just for retirement-aged crowd, and not just for the support it provides for individual projects. ... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk

Moving Beyond “Smart Growth” to a More Holistic City Agenda

Kaid Benfield
Kaid Benfield Twitter Instagram Facebook LinkedIn
Originally published almost four years ago and every bit as relevant today. I have spent most of the last twenty years working on an agenda grounded in, for lack of a better phrase, “smart growth.”  That agenda basically holds that our regions must replace suburban sprawl with more compact forms of growth and... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk

Resolved for 2018: Fewer delusions, more reality-based planning

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
Okay, so we’re shaking off the shock therapy of 2017 and ready to move on, right? Let’s start with admitting some of the stuff a lot of us got wrong about challenges and solutions in municipal and regional planning. Such as: Our misplaced overconfidence in the stability of basic institutions, especially those requiring... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk

The Sidewalk to Hell is Paved with Good Intentions

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
Sometimes all the right people seem to be at the table, all singing from similar hymnals, and all seemingly focused on transcending growth-as-usual and yet, still, the results fall flat. Today we look at one of those times. The scenario Imagine this: A site area that retailers describe as a “100% corner.”... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk

Storytelling Part II: Getting to Getting Things Done

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
First a review: In a post last month, I made a pitch for organizing community storytelling around getting stuff done. I acknowledged how hard it is to do that in the current political environment, which is increasingly an arena of competing tribal identities and mutually exclusive convictions: A community that has... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk

Watch Your Words: Building support for walking and biking infrastructure

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
In my last post, I looked at the difficulty of getting things — like walking and biking infrastructure — done and how the manner in which we measure our accomplishments makes all the difference. Not just towards building momentum but towards building community. In short, it’s all about baby steps. But let’s... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk

Plotting a Persuasive Story? Better have a happily ever after

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
On my PlaceMakers business card, my job title is “Storyteller.” I figured a graduate degree in English and a two-decade career in journalism gave me a certain amount of credibility in that department. What I didn’t count on, however, was what the title seemed to imply to most folks. To them, I was the spin doctor. “We’ve... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk
1 2 3 4 7 8 9 10