Category: Resilience

Stayin’ Alive: The life and death prospects of community ties

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
“We had better get together on this or we’re going to die.” People talk a lot about community these days. How we’ve lost whatever sense of it we might have once had. How we don’t really know each other much anymore. How we yearn for more intimacy, with connection that transcends the typically weak ties of... Continue Reading
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13 Ways to Kill Your Community

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
Not so long ago, fellow urban scribe and recently elected mayor of Concrete, Washington, Jason Miller, recommended the book, “13 Ways to Kill Your Community.” The timing was fortuitous. For a while, in an ongoing series of internal conversations, I’d been wrestling with a fundamental question of human nature: Are... Continue Reading
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Sustainability: What’s in a word?

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
The places we inhabit are rarely if ever arbitrary. They’re the products of intention. Personal. Economic. Environmental. Religious. We choose for ourselves, individually and collectively, the kind of places we want and -- through leadership, policy, investment, advocacy, action and, at times, inaction -- those places... Continue Reading
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Going Green: What is it you really want?

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
Last week I spent some time in the mountains of southern Virginia visiting my folks. That’s something I not only enjoy but find productive as well, as it affords me opportunity to further explain exactly what it is I do for a living. For some reason, “telling the story of community placemaking” still leaves them... Continue Reading
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Here Comes Chaos: David Lynch sketches the landscape

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
If I’d been paying better attention (which is how I start a lot of sentences these days), I could have begun my reeducation in the ways things work in 1986. That’s when film director David Lynch gave us Blue Velvet. Back then, the way Dennis Hopper and Isabella Rossellini embraced Lynch’s sex and violence mash-ups... Continue Reading
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CNU21: Insights and Highlights from Salt Lake City

PlaceMakers
PlaceMakers Twitter Instagram Facebook
Git ‘Er Done | Hazel BorysThis year's CNU was all about doing again, unlike the past few years where we've focused on stop-gap measures to redirect our investment choices to more resilient patterns. Looks like they might be starting to pay off. Still, we have plenty of hard work ahead to remove both legal... Continue Reading
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Crowdsourcing = Data = Better Places

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
You know what the payment is for crowdsourcing? By asking other people to step up and think through solutions to some collective problem, I must commit to making a difference myself. Every time I’ve asked you to share information with me, you have. Then I feel the need to compile it, analyze it, and organize it... Continue Reading
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Corrosion of Community: Impossible standards as an excuse for inaction

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
Community fascinates me. Not just the idea of it, but the dynamics, and how those dynamics end up stoking or choking our collective efforts to be together. Having worked in a lot of different places, I’ve had opportunity to study community in action, at both its strongest and weakest, in all different contexts -- economic,... Continue Reading
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Next Urbanism Lab 04: Dare to live outdoors

Howard Blackson
Howard Blackson Twitter Instagram
As we re-populate our downtowns, and watch the crime statistics drop, people are seeing safety in numbers. Jane Jacobs was right about eyes on the street reducing crime. With the sense that it's indeed safe to be in cities again, it appears that citizens are re-learning how to be connected in an urban context. Downtown’s... Continue Reading
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We’re All Connected: Too bad more is not necessarily the same as better

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
Roughly two hundred years ago, working in a little Bavarian workshop, Samuel Soemmering created a crude device that, refined by others, would revolutionize communications for the emerging industrial age: the telegraph. A hundred years thereafter, post-Victorians began to ponder its evolution -- wireless telegraphy... Continue Reading
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