You know why i love strong towns so much? These videos always make me feel like a better place is always possible. These videos are uplifting compared to many urbanist channels doom and gloom. I want to thank you for the amazing content and for sharing the great stories of so many people.
true - notjustbikes basically has written off North America and moved to Europe. That is important as a wake up call, but his call to action is hard to action on any reasonable scale. Nothing wrong with asking both individual action (move to a better place) and systemic action (we need to create system that work), but Strong Town is more "boots on the ground" "local politicians, banks and developers are people - let's start and then let's go".
I'm a resident of Indiana, not near South Bend, but familiar enough with the state and what municipal governments in this state are like. It's incredible to see a municipal government that's pursuing progress through densification and revitalization rather than through highways expansions and suburban sprawl. It'd be lovely if the Indiana state government would actually support efforts like these, however, if your development isn't car dependent, you're likely out of luck. Hopefully with time, the city I live in will also move in a similar direction, and we can add our voices to SB's.
@@highway2heaven91 Yeah, I went to college in Indiana, and so the majority of my college friends are Hoosiers. My old roommate told me they banned light rail in Indiana because of a project in Indianapolis. Absolutely ridiculous. Just don't fund the project??? Bass ackwards when it comes to infrastructure there.
From what I can tell that's most of the rust belt states and even the grain plains in Kansas and Nebraska. The Dakota's are being stubborn and going their own way like usual.
@highway2heaven91 yes and Indianapolis built a BRT line instead and suburban residents still complain about it endlessly. It opened during Covid and had low ridership at first, but now it is very successful and has spurred a lot of development along the route.
@@davidfoust9767 I’m complaining about it too. BRT is just a simple band-aid to a much larger transit problem. It’s good if it’s not the only mode of transit used in a city but it cannot be the backbone of a good transit system.
A strong town isn't just one that is able to thrive while it is growing. It is one that is able to thrive even while in decline. Trying something different if one thing fails is better than trying the same thing and failing every single time.
I would love to live in an area like this, where there is a strong community and people care about being involved with local government and improving the area in a people-over-profits way.
I am a serial video essay/UA-cam watcher and can say hand on heart that this is some of the best produced stuff I watch. This should be shown in classrooms of how to create effective educational content.
This video is so encouraging. My wife and I are community shopping. And we’re looking for just such a town, maybe not South Bend but somewhere also in the rust belt. It’s beginning: an American Renaissance in small towns, strong towns.
It's inspiring to see property development treated with the same spirit of collaboration as my local music scene. As a child of Kalamazoo, I wish these small, hardy Midwestern cities all the best (yes, even those in Ohio).
I moved to South Bend because I believe in this cities ability to change. Mike Keen and Martin Mechtenberg have been instrumental in helping me cultivate new ideas I can make happen! I'm originally from Elkhart, but saw an opportunity to make a difference in SB, which can hopefully bring change to my hometown. I love that you guys came here! Thanks Strong Towns!
So excited to see South Bend on here! I have lived in northern Indiana my entire life and attended IUSB. South Bend isn't perfect by any means, but they are working hard with their neighboring cities: Mishawaka, Roseland, Notre Dame and others to make a better more walkable city. Thank you for highlighting it!
This is incredible because just today I was researching youngstown's planning efforts as a way to inform my advocacy for the wonderful St. Clair-Superior neighborhood in Cleveland. Thank you so much for producing exactly the content I'm looking for
More of this content please. I've followed ST for years and I'm sure this is the most inspirational piece of media you've produced. High quality, great stories, and practical. These people embody the ST philosophy and it is great to see.
Being a South Bend/Mishawaka native, I never gave much thought to how great South Bend is, but in the past few years I've noticed how great downtown is and how lively the culture is, especially when contrasted with the stroads and car-centric hell of nearby Granger. Also, shoutout to The General! My brother is the manager and I used to be a barista there! The owners (JB, Pat, & Mike) are all super great people!
I checked out the downtown area on google maps and it really seems like many of the roads could be turned into pedestrian areas. There are already large parking lots on the edges of downtown, so people could park there and walk to the shops. It would make it an even better place to be. It would make cycling much safer too.
Add bicycle infrastructure, advanced traffic systems, pedestrian zoning (probably illegal in The USA) and overall making it a more inviting efficient town.
Okay, but here's one thing I didn't hear about: In my city a lot of former retail places in neighborhoods have been converted to homes because the property tax on homes is so much lower than it is on retail. I don't know how universal this is, but it seems like here we really have to rebalance the tax code in order to preserve walkable retail.
@@ianhomerpura8937people will start doing it illegally (or at least before permit) at some point too to make money. A lot of people in homes that are too big to be profitable are secretly converting entire dining rooms into office areas or Internet cafes. Why have an empty house on the corner of a massive suburban subdivision when you could have a coworking space, a barber shop, and a catering business?
@@ianhomerpura8937 It's hard to create the demand for that new unless space is at an extreme premium. It is often economical to build "mixed" space to get the residential units and treat whatever you get out of the retail as a bonus.
In-person retail is going away at a high speed in NA , EU & AU/NZ . People shop online , it's open 24/7 365 , sheer endless variety/inventory , no shoplifting , no flash robs . Will there be little specialized shops ? As a hobby maybe. Ultimately the internet is basically too efficient at replacing retail when combined with modern logistics.
The good thing is properties are cheap in these areas. The tough thing as mentioned in this video is that it is tough to get loans for renovations. Seems to take people who have their own funds to invest or who are skilled at building and can do a lot on their own. Just takes a few successful projects before banks feel more comfortable doing loans in the area.
Bit nostalgic, lived in Mishawaka for just under a year when I was 10. Although I there wasn't a lot to do in the suburbs, I still have fond memories of SB/Mishawaka/Elkhart and felt at home as much as a shy foreign kid could in a such a short time.
The relationship Notre dame has with the community and the money they put into it definitely helps. Colleges, especially one of its caliber always help with revitalization
I dont know how to explain this but we have the opposite problem in my town Stratford Ontario. Every patch of dirt is worth a million dollars so projects dont pencil no matter what we put there. Its getting to the point where only 1-2million dollar homes are the only thing we can build because theyre the only ones who can afford it. Young people are fleeing because theres nowhere affordable to live and our banks (5 national ones) dont want to take chances on projects that dont pencil, especially with these rates. I have a feeling our town is going to collapse under its on stress soon.
It sounds like the pendulum swung hard in a single direction (the expensive side). Stratford Ontario will reset with time when the demand drops to meet acceptable prices :)
@@geospacedout I live right on the Canadian border, on the American side. I have a lot of family and friend's in the Montreal area. I absolutely back you up on your comment. I know A LOT of people are scared and are barely making it. Month to month & week to week living in fear and disparity of what is actually happening. This was a very hopeful and positive video. However, for the rest of us this is not the case. Especially after the (sickness), many people lost their home's. Small businesses and social gatherings. All gone where I live. Bigger cities are running rampid with homelessness and addiction. My town/village was beautiful! Known for the the camping, fishing, ice fishing, hunting and downhill skiing as well as cross country skiing. We had an out door drive in theater, a bowling alley, ice skating, golfing, hundreds of miles of trails to hike. Mom & Pop shop's. Something for everyone to enjoy. Very family friendly oriented place to visit or live. Everyone knew everyone. Kid's had lemonade stands, we had a couple of beautiful recreational parks for everyone to enjoy. We also had many many farms inthe surrounding area. It was very picturesque with all 4 seasons. We have many rivers and lakes right in the area as well. The finger lake's are only a few hours from here. This was a very very safe place to live. We had quite a few big industrial plants, finding work was not ever a problem. The downfall here actually started in the late 80's, when they decided to build prisons. X3 double, and 1 triple maximum security prison. At that time they thought it would bring in more money from the state. Biggest mistake imaginable. Then they let "Wal-Mart" in here. That took out all of the Mom & Pop shop's. All of the Pub's-Bar's are all gone. There's nowhere for adults to congregate and visit and have fun. They also put in several Stewart's gas stations. We have 1 hospital that os ready to shut down because there are no Dr.s that want to live here anymore. No Dentist's. Nothing! They should have been smart enough to know these things! The prisoner's get released, and then they stayed and brought their families with them. Crime went sky high and the drugs came flowing in. Everyone lives in constant fear. No one knows their neighbor's anymore. The kid's don't play outside with each other anymore. Between technology and the prisons, drugs ect... The people are moving that were born and raised here are leaving because of the state of living here. Even the churches are empty! All the industrial plants sold out to China. It's truly starting to look like a ghost town. Here's another kicker! They are letting all the illegal immigrants through the border! Welfare and unemployment has pretty much taken over. The prices are sky high. No one can even think about buying land to build on, or even buy an existing home that's owned mostly by the banks. Starting up a business to bring back what once was is pretty impossible as well. It's so sad and down right depressing to see what has happened almost over night. You would have to be a multimillionaire or billionaire to even think about to fix whats been broken here. I truly believe in my heart that there was a hidden agenda in plain sight. But no one spoke up, or fought back to stop the train wreck it is today. I went to school with the people who are running the show here. It's a nightmare and a 🤡 clown show! So, whoever may read this? Please enlighten me how to go about beginning and try to help and rebuild family, community, businesses ect... I am all eyes and ears? I welcome anyone to give me hope, inspiration and some insight how to fix this? I know that my town is not the only one. The struggle is very real! Thank you in advance and I apologize for writing so much. I just had to from the bottom of my heart. Much love and respect to all who takes the time to read this. 🥰☺️💜❣️
The stuff being done in South Bend reminds me of some of the revitalization stuff being done in my hometown of Shreveport, LA. Shreveport still has a long way to go and is not close to SB, but there are definitely lots of good people there doing good work. This video could be a good guide for developers in Shreveport to continue this revitalization. I hope the positive momentum continues and that Shreveport will see a rebirth in my lifetime.
You guys are way more positive than NJB. Ive honestly been really considering just emailing or reaching out to they mayor or just government people in my town to change the zoning code. We have a 4 lane stroad that would be sooooo much nicer if it was converted to 2 lanes and zoned for mixed use.
Definitely go to a city hall meeting too or something of that sort. Infrastructure bill funding is going to fuel a lot of changes on state roads and community input is a big factor
NJB is on record for not being the guy who can help action change. He recently said something along the lines of: I love strong towns. I'm not going to help people change cities, but they are.
@@Brandon-zs7ko which is fair enough I guess. I like NJB but i cant up and leave my life to move to Europe (as much as Id love to, I even interviewed for a job in Amsterdam before). He fills the niche of bringing urban planning problems to light and Strong Towns tried to actually give us local solutions for our communities. I enjoy both creators personally but ST definitely motivates me more to reach out to local officials.
Loving the storytelling skills on display here. Cinematic b-roll, high quality interview clips distilled down, quality lighting, layers of captured story and decompressed explainer clips. 😮 All for the good cause of spreading the wisdom of the Strong towns message 👏👏👏
While I understand the focus on community action, I'm curious how Notre Dame plays into this narrative as it's clearly a nearby resource that most towns don't have. (also, TIL that Notre Dame and other associated schools aren't actually in South Bend, but rather in their own unincorporated enclave, which seems like a whole 'nother issue!) Oh, and sweet flag for South Bend!
South Bend has improved by leaps and bounds, and it is amazing to see, especially in how they talk about it in the video (collaboration, entrepreneurship, sharing the wealth). Compared to its county counterpart, St. Joseph County, it is a shining example of how a city should be investing in resident-led, incremental improvements to neighborhoods. It'd be great to see these two work better together to equitably uplift the lives of people in the entire metropolitan area.
@@davidfoust9767 or if South Bend becomes too popular, some people with similar ideas try to get that change elsewhere in the county. You don't need that many people to start a trend, as long as they are willing to put in the effort it takes to organise, show up at board meetings, your voice will be heard loud and clear. It's not enough to get the results, but it is the first step on which your movement can build.
They have their content and presentations on UA-cam! From a sheer startup perspective, it's awesome they have it there. I'm probably going to watch a few of them.
South Bend has Norte Dame keeping it from not dying, a key competent for a lot of these mid-size/small rust belt cities is keeping the young people that come to study there.
I'm glad I've found your channel. Breath of fresh air. I'm a Somali-British and I'd love a lot of towns and small towns to be built/restored like this.
I love your rust belt content. You should look into Detroit. It is highly on a comeback. Some big projects being done are the Joe Louis Greenway and major road streetscapes. There is still a long way to go before seeing media attention.
My town just released that my area is now officially designated for redevelopment. The wording used in the announcement in the local paper was a little concerning. It's Gilbert, AZ I'm trying to figure out how to make a proposal or a suggestion that would actually improve the area for the people who live in it. There is a lot of potential. But the towns priority for the past while is attracting big businesses who will provide jobs by providing tax breaks and so on.
A year later and we are not really getting much better. They need to bring jobs back, because most of us have to travel out of town just to work. A lot of houses have been torn down but still many sit empty. Without jobs though, there's no reason to bring more people. Wealth usually leaves South Bend when people get money and move out adding to the empty house problem.
Good on those people that realized that giant companies will not help them, and started changing their neighborhood not because it has a good ROI but because it will make the place where they live better. It is dumb that this realization escapes quite few people.
I live in South Bend, and I would say we feel like we are sinking as a city. We used to have our own mall, we used to make car's. We got neither today. Businesses are slow. I mean I started working a job in 2005 and here 18 years later it's just so much slower. Things feel worse here.
I spent time in South Bend during law school, and I loved it. So glad to see this work happening to bring additional vitality to the community. Now it's time for me to apply this in my new home, which is another rust belt town.
Lol, oh my, wasn't expecting to see my area in this one..... or a prof that had the most horrific view of sustainability when I was at IUSB. So many individuals in the Michiana area are making choices and basing them on sustainable values. Sounds like maybe he figured out that sustainability on the individual level isn't worthless even if it needs to be in conjunction with corporate sustainability.
It doesn't hurt South Bend that it has one of the most prestigious universities in the country there either, I imagine. lol No, but in earnest, this is so encouraging to hear, and I hope this mission spreads other places!
This spits in the face of NJB's recent "North America isn't doing anything and can't be saved, everyone move to the UK" rant. I'm very appreciate of that.
This is a really great, uplifting video. So brilliant to hear people working together to improve their cities and really show how proud they are of this work. It's really heart-warming. Thank you for sharing.
Nice to see some positive urban changes in the U.S . Sometimes grassroots organisations can seem powerless for decades until sudden rapid change happens.
I was just looking at prices of Airbnb rentals in South Bend and Youngstown as I would be interested in visiting. Crazy high. Same as everywhere I guess, but feel for people renting there. Got to get these new developments going.
Until places like these tackle the issue of zoning that typically allows for ONLY single house dwellings, it will never recover. People are looking for walkable communities with a thriving downtown of local businesses, a variety of transportation choices like being able to walk or bike to downtown by providing ample planning for BOTH safety AND beauty. Decrease the dependency on cars. Those vacant homes could be turned into multi-family dwellings.
I hope Canton, NC can see this and figure out how to remake their city. Its a beautiful small town that's always been centered around a paper mill that just closed a few weeks ago, costing around 25% of the local jobs.
Most places are breaking down because, for several generations, people have been waiting for someone else to give them a job, rather than making jobs themselves.
Cleveland tryna become a “15 minute city”. LONG way to go comin from a lifelong resident (actual Cleveland, not da surrounding metro), but good to see progress from other cities too
I grew up in Philadelphia, and moving to State College PA has made me realize how much I like the smaller town lifestyle. South bend looks like a wonderful place to live. How can I find more towns nearby that follow the strong towns philosophy?
As a European myself I *could* just shake my head, and resignate from all the bad decisions that were made in the past in the USA. It is one tiny piece of the mosaic that creates the whole picture leading to divisiveness and the frailty of a society which is susceptible to demagogues and radicals. But then again, I want to help people, no matter where they are from, what their skin color is (that shouldn't matter anyway), so I need info about what has been done in the past, what sounds like a reasonable approach to turn lost neighborhoods around, and maybe inject a few ideas myself. That's why I watch these kinds of videos, and compare what I see in them (hopefully honestly represented) to what I see in my neighborhood in Germany. I do hope that not only singular lots are improved, but a concept for future public transport, with maybe trams/streetcars/overhead electric buses is included as well. With the normal zoning laws of single use lots a vibrant neighborhood, walkable and friendly with a true sense of community, is difficult to implement. Multi-use lots, with small stores and shops on the ground floor, apartments on the second to third floors, and maybe a few offices or doctors practices above that, is the way to go. In addition to that small squares and plazas, with grass and plants, not really a park, but a small oasis of green, maybe a small pond or creek, does wonders for the livability of a neighborhood. I see them here in Hamburg, Germany everywhere, and they work. If I would start to list all the amenities, shops, doctors, pharmacies, bakeries, etc that I have within a 5 minute walk from my front door, this parapgraph would expand significantly. I wish all communities in the USA a healthy, strong, friendly neighborhood with a sense of being connected to each other again. Where you not only know the neighbors by their faces, but their history, their lives, and families. Greetz from a German in Hamurg, Germany.
whoa, didn't expect to see the town i live in now on here. there's a really interesting art/music scene in town that's growing which is pretty exciting as someone who came from athens, ga which is known for those things. there need to be more apartments/multi-family housing that are not run by llcs based in chicago tho -_-
I had family who had to go that way for work living there and I remember everything outside of the city area being littered with boarded up and rundown property. I also don't remember the city area being particularly large. It really came across as a small area was made nice for the wealthy and everyone else was left in squaller. That was quite a few years back and it does look like they made huge progress helping much more of the area since then. It's good to hear that things are working out for people there.
just wanted to say I really like those kind of videos where you interact with people of those communities (just like your first video on Lafayette parking). There is a lot of explainer video (notjustbikes, vox, alan the armchair urbanist...) it add something more to the youtube space. it is more concrete and less "just the opinion" of some group of people over the internet. By the way, I am looking forward to a video featuring people from Shreveport fighting highway expension :).
This was such a great video and nice change of pace to all the negativity that often surrounds Urban Planning content especially in the US. Thank you for creating these kinds of videos
I'm a metal and glass artist and I've been wanting to settle down in a place to put down my roots. This city looks very appealing. Time to take a vacation.
I can't say I'm really comfortable with how much this depends on the goodwill of private businesses and entrepreneurs. It kind of looks like gentrification to me. Where are the renters? Where are the working class people? It's mostly people with capital and education to undertake these kinds of projects. If property values go up, what will happen to those who weren't able to get in on buying homes when things were cheap? What will prevent South Bend from become a gentrified enclave? Maybe I'm seeing this all wrong, but it feels kind of top-down from monied players. I know you briefly mentioned the importance of making sure existing people don't get left out, but you didn't really outline how that may be achieved. Would these plans also come with zoning changes in the rest of the city so that Downtown, the most productive place, isn't completely subsidizing leafy green neighborhoods surrounding it that don't feel inclined to take on any change? I don't like being so suspicious, but this looks and sounds so much like what I've been hearing about development for the last 20 odd years that has never led to growth or revitalization that included working class and poor people. The only major update has been updated assessments of productivity per acre which highlights which parts of town are genuinely productive.
I grew up in South Bend. I lived there from 1972 to 1999. The biggest issues in the city at that time were crime and corruption. According to the latest statistics I can find (just before COVID started), crime is still an issue. A number of terrible decisions were made while I was there, from the alteration of the street direction and bus terminal in the downtown area to lobbying for the College Football Hall of Fame (which has lost money everywhere it has been). I will be very happy if Mayor Meuller can get it done but the crime MUST be reduced and for that, corruption MUST be dealt with. I wish them well.
It is heartening to see this kind of progress in South Bend. I grew up in the small town of Culver, and S.B. was the "big city" where we shopped and ate out or took art lessons or went to a concert or a sports event at Notre Dame. In those days the state had some progressive Democratic leaders but political realities have cast a pall on my perception of the state. Though I haven't lived there since college, this piece (as well as many others by Strong Towns) gives me pleasure and hope.
I am SO thankful that I have not seen any problems like this in western Canada! In 2003 I bought my 1000 sq ft condo for $230,000 CAD and today it is valued at $765,000 CAD ($575,000 USD).
My brother used to go to the University of Notre Dame and when I was younger we would go visit as much as we can. My family loved the University and we would spend a lot of time in Mishawaka and Elkhart but never in South Bend because my parents called it "dead" and when we went Downtown about 15-10 years ago, it was exactly that. Nobody there with nothing to do. I'm very happy to see South Bend becoming a Strong Town and I'm looking forward to visiting again and truly exploring and experiencing South Bend the right way.
Videos like this get me excited about the future. I wish they weren't just tailored to large towns. It's understandable of course, cities and large towns have the resources to make things of themselves, but I want to try to bring that same revival to my hometown. It's around 1,000 people, so much of what is talked about on here does not apply.
Chico CA is an interesting example. It’s one of the few cities in CA that sense moderately committed to sustainable growth. Especially since this city is in the Central Valley, makes it a real anomaly
Might have something to do with Chico being a college town. It varies from city to city, of course, but as a general rule, college towns tend to be more walkable and transit friendly to better support a student population who is more likely to need, want, and use such services and environments. Davis is another example. Chico will be even better connected once the North Valley rail project is completed. You will be able to get to any major valley city and the Bay Area (via rail connections in Sac). When I retire, moving to a walkable college town with good train connections and transit is my backup plan if moving abroad doesn’t work out. Chico might be an option since it’s more affordable and has a lot of nearby nature.
I do have a question, has the local property development gone hand-in-hand with zoning reform to build up the missing middle? If not, just building out a bunch of large front lawn, isolated from business, single family homes won't solve the cities troubles in the long run, just delay it again.
I dont just want a good place to live. I NEED a good place to live. Because without that, I have no foundation on which to build a good and lasting life.
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:05 🏙️ South Bend, a Rust Belt city, took charge of its future and created a better version of itself by revitalizing neighborhoods. 03:37 🏡 South Bend's "thousand houses in a thousand days" campaign successfully improved neighborhoods by repairing or demolishing abandoned houses. 08:39 🏙️ A vibrant downtown is crucial for a city's financial sustainability and overall quality of life. 12:01 🏠 Local developers with a deep connection to their community can create positive change by revitalizing neighborhoods from within. 16:09 🤝 Strong communities are built through individuals advocating for changes that support local development and create a collaborative ecosystem of resources and support. Made with HARPA AI
Thank you for creating such an informative, important video. Strong Towns has the right idea. Creating vibrant, flourishing communities with an inviting, attractive town centre is crucial. Having the ability to walk, cycle or take public transit is requisite. Developing intimate spaces without ubiquitous automobiles completes the picture. A Dutchman who grew up in California, I now live in the fatherland--in Middelburg. I recommend visiting Dutch cities where one finds extraordinary magic in their city centres.
50 years ago, the town I grew up in was a ghost town. Literally my family doubled the population when they moved in. They started an art gallery. There was existing tourist traffic, and now it is a thriving artist community. It did not happen with investors, but by the people themselves. We are an unincorporated town, meaning there is no city to zone areas, etc. When the town was divided up, the properties were sold dirt cheap so people could get into them with minimal financing. The houses were literally falling over, they had been miners shacks, Ave then abandoned for 20 years. The people buying them had been living out of their cars and were willing to live in houses with leaking roofs, no sewage system, and aging minimal electricity. The houses now are selling for nearly a million dollars. Part of that is inflation, part of that is gentrification. But it shows what can happen if people have the opportunity they need.
I'm all for building up cities. I live in a city that went from 80,000 people in the 60's to 35,000 today and see a lot of parallels between South Bend and my city. But I will always oppose giving $$$ to banks. A city directly funding co-ops and developments are far better than a city giving tax dollars to banks. It's privatizing profits and socializing losses.
No money is given to the banks- it goes toward closing the appraisal gap that citizens face when trying to secure funding to revitalize their own neighborhoods. The appraisal gap means that they can't get enough funding to renovate- the city is trying to find ways to encourage these local developers so that these vacant lots can start generating value for the city again.
Giving money to bank? I hope you don't think that coop are magically better and morally superior to banks. It is not. And I hope you don't think that allowing people to deposit in banks is giving money to banks ... seriously some of the thinking coming out of usa ...
@@Jinkypigs the reason most coops, credit unions, and other financial institutions are seen as more moral or better than banks, is because banks will consistently pour hundreds of millions of their investments (which they can make using money stored there) toward anything lucrative no matter how wrong (and then lie about doing it). This includes oil companies, coal companies, gas companies, and neocolonial mining operations, but these are not the only ones.
single family homes seem like a waste of space, honestly. Why not make 2 or 3 story townhouses instead, that can host multiple families + a business on the first floor?
Because the vast majority of people who are looking for a home *do not want* to live in such neighborhoods. Have you ever lived in that kind of housing? How dare you offer your opinion as right for everybody? If you want to live there, go live there.
Bring back manufacturing and small scale mom/pop farming and small towns be saved. Smaller cities will get trickle down effect. And resource extraction
You know why i love strong towns so much?
These videos always make me feel like a better place is always possible. These videos are uplifting compared to many urbanist channels doom and gloom. I want to thank you for the amazing content and for sharing the great stories of so many people.
true - notjustbikes basically has written off North America and moved to Europe.
That is important as a wake up call, but his call to action is hard to action on any reasonable scale.
Nothing wrong with asking both individual action (move to a better place) and systemic action (we need to create system that work),
but Strong Town is more "boots on the ground" "local politicians, banks and developers are people - let's start and then let's go".
The only real possibility is to make it happen.
I'm a resident of Indiana, not near South Bend, but familiar enough with the state and what municipal governments in this state are like. It's incredible to see a municipal government that's pursuing progress through densification and revitalization rather than through highways expansions and suburban sprawl. It'd be lovely if the Indiana state government would actually support efforts like these, however, if your development isn't car dependent, you're likely out of luck. Hopefully with time, the city I live in will also move in a similar direction, and we can add our voices to SB's.
Explains why they banned LRTs in Indianapolis
@@highway2heaven91 Yeah, I went to college in Indiana, and so the majority of my college friends are Hoosiers. My old roommate told me they banned light rail in Indiana because of a project in Indianapolis. Absolutely ridiculous. Just don't fund the project??? Bass ackwards when it comes to infrastructure there.
From what I can tell that's most of the rust belt states and even the grain plains in Kansas and Nebraska. The Dakota's are being stubborn and going their own way like usual.
@highway2heaven91 yes and Indianapolis built a BRT line instead and suburban residents still complain about it endlessly. It opened during Covid and had low ridership at first, but now it is very successful and has spurred a lot of development along the route.
@@davidfoust9767 I’m complaining about it too. BRT is just a simple band-aid to a much larger transit problem. It’s good if it’s not the only mode of transit used in a city but it cannot be the backbone of a good transit system.
For the record, we 100% support Mike Keen's socks and sandals.
There’s a Home Towne Development sandal? Are they close toed?
This is a heel turn I was not expecting, its so hard to see your heroes fall😔
Give me a break
I'm from the Pacific Northwest, and I absolutely support socks and sandals as well.
Nothing beats socks and sandals. The socks protect your feet from the straps, but as sandals still breathe.
A strong town isn't just one that is able to thrive while it is growing. It is one that is able to thrive even while in decline. Trying something different if one thing fails is better than trying the same thing and failing every single time.
Would you look outside of your town that is able to thrive while it is growing?
I would love to live in an area like this, where there is a strong community and people care about being involved with local government and improving the area in a people-over-profits way.
Born and raised in FW Indiana and it does me proud to see one of mine doing good and leading a charge. Get it y'all
I am a serial video essay/UA-cam watcher and can say hand on heart that this is some of the best produced stuff I watch. This should be shown in classrooms of how to create effective educational content.
This video is so encouraging. My wife and I are community shopping. And we’re looking for just such a town, maybe not South Bend but somewhere also in the rust belt. It’s beginning: an American Renaissance in small towns, strong towns.
Developers who are set on improving community, we really need cities to cut back on sprawl to even make it possible.
Exactly
It's inspiring to see property development treated with the same spirit of collaboration as my local music scene. As a child of Kalamazoo, I wish these small, hardy Midwestern cities all the best (yes, even those in Ohio).
Ohio is my favorite abyss
I moved to South Bend because I believe in this cities ability to change. Mike Keen and Martin Mechtenberg have been instrumental in helping me cultivate new ideas I can make happen!
I'm originally from Elkhart, but saw an opportunity to make a difference in SB, which can hopefully bring change to my hometown.
I love that you guys came here! Thanks Strong Towns!
You're killing the video production man. The FPV shots were a nice addition 👌
So excited to see South Bend on here! I have lived in northern Indiana my entire life and attended IUSB. South Bend isn't perfect by any means, but they are working hard with their neighboring cities: Mishawaka, Roseland, Notre Dame and others to make a better more walkable city.
Thank you for highlighting it!
This is incredible because just today I was researching youngstown's planning efforts as a way to inform my advocacy for the wonderful St. Clair-Superior neighborhood in Cleveland. Thank you so much for producing exactly the content I'm looking for
More of this content please. I've followed ST for years and I'm sure this is the most inspirational piece of media you've produced. High quality, great stories, and practical. These people embody the ST philosophy and it is great to see.
What is the most inspirational piece of media that you have produced?
I love the idea of people reinvesting in the communities that are important to them. this is great
Being a South Bend/Mishawaka native, I never gave much thought to how great South Bend is, but in the past few years I've noticed how great downtown is and how lively the culture is, especially when contrasted with the stroads and car-centric hell of nearby Granger.
Also, shoutout to The General! My brother is the manager and I used to be a barista there! The owners (JB, Pat, & Mike) are all super great people!
Love this positivity! Love strong towns so much, please keep making these powerful videos!
Next step: Make it more walkable by removing unnecessary car traffic, and by planting trees along the roads.
I checked out the downtown area on google maps and it really seems like many of the roads could be turned into pedestrian areas. There are already large parking lots on the edges of downtown, so people could park there and walk to the shops. It would make it an even better place to be. It would make cycling much safer too.
Add bicycle infrastructure, advanced traffic systems, pedestrian zoning (probably illegal in The USA) and overall making it a more inviting efficient town.
it's getting there!
Don’t care still driving 🤷
@@Jfxkxdvrvr Nobody cares that you don't care
Okay, but here's one thing I didn't hear about: In my city a lot of former retail places in neighborhoods have been converted to homes because the property tax on homes is so much lower than it is on retail. I don't know how universal this is, but it seems like here we really have to rebalance the tax code in order to preserve walkable retail.
Or better yet, have homes that have both residences and retail - basically mixed-use zones.
@@ianhomerpura8937people will start doing it illegally (or at least before permit) at some point too to make money. A lot of people in homes that are too big to be profitable are secretly converting entire dining rooms into office areas or Internet cafes. Why have an empty house on the corner of a massive suburban subdivision when you could have a coworking space, a barber shop, and a catering business?
@@ianhomerpura8937 It's hard to create the demand for that new unless space is at an extreme premium. It is often economical to build "mixed" space to get the residential units and treat whatever you get out of the retail as a bonus.
In-person retail is going away at a high speed in NA , EU & AU/NZ .
People shop online , it's open 24/7 365 , sheer endless variety/inventory , no shoplifting , no flash robs .
Will there be little specialized shops ? As a hobby maybe.
Ultimately the internet is basically too efficient at replacing retail when combined with modern logistics.
True, if there is demand for housing. If people are leaving because there is no work, however, you’ll just have empty houses.
I'm from Youngstown and I'm hoping to start finding ways to improve our city. This video has me very optimistic
The good thing is properties are cheap in these areas. The tough thing as mentioned in this video is that it is tough to get loans for renovations. Seems to take people who have their own funds to invest or who are skilled at building and can do a lot on their own. Just takes a few successful projects before banks feel more comfortable doing loans in the area.
Bit nostalgic, lived in Mishawaka for just under a year when I was 10. Although I there wasn't a lot to do in the suburbs, I still have fond memories of SB/Mishawaka/Elkhart and felt at home as much as a shy foreign kid could in a such a short time.
The relationship Notre dame has with the community and the money they put into it definitely helps. Colleges, especially one of its caliber always help with revitalization
Colby is a leader in this area. Spent a lot of money revitalizing Waterville Maine. It’s looking up.
I dont know how to explain this but we have the opposite problem in my town Stratford Ontario. Every patch of dirt is worth a million dollars so projects dont pencil no matter what we put there. Its getting to the point where only 1-2million dollar homes are the only thing we can build because theyre the only ones who can afford it. Young people are fleeing because theres nowhere affordable to live and our banks (5 national ones) dont want to take chances on projects that dont pencil, especially with these rates. I have a feeling our town is going to collapse under its on stress soon.
It sounds like the pendulum swung hard in a single direction (the expensive side). Stratford Ontario will reset with time when the demand drops to meet acceptable prices :)
@@geospacedout I live right on the Canadian border, on the American side. I have a lot of family and friend's in the Montreal area. I absolutely back you up on your comment. I know A LOT of people are scared and are barely making it. Month to month & week to week living in fear and disparity of what is actually happening. This was a very hopeful and positive video. However, for the rest of us this is not the case. Especially after the (sickness), many people lost their home's. Small businesses and social gatherings. All gone where I live. Bigger cities are running rampid with homelessness and addiction. My town/village was beautiful! Known for the the camping, fishing, ice fishing, hunting and downhill skiing as well as cross country skiing. We had an out door drive in theater, a bowling alley, ice skating, golfing, hundreds of miles of trails to hike. Mom & Pop shop's. Something for everyone to enjoy. Very family friendly oriented place to visit or live. Everyone knew everyone. Kid's had lemonade stands, we had a couple of beautiful recreational parks for everyone to enjoy. We also had many many farms inthe surrounding area. It was very picturesque with all 4 seasons. We have many rivers and lakes right in the area as well. The finger lake's are only a few hours from here. This was a very very safe place to live. We had quite a few big industrial plants, finding work was not ever a problem. The downfall here actually started in the late 80's, when they decided to build prisons. X3 double, and 1 triple maximum security prison. At that time they thought it would bring in more money from the state. Biggest mistake imaginable. Then they let "Wal-Mart" in here. That took out all of the Mom & Pop shop's. All of the Pub's-Bar's are all gone. There's nowhere for adults to congregate and visit and have fun. They also put in several Stewart's gas stations. We have 1 hospital that os ready to shut down because there are no Dr.s that want to live here anymore. No Dentist's. Nothing! They should have been smart enough to know these things! The prisoner's get released, and then they stayed and brought their families with them. Crime went sky high and the drugs came flowing in. Everyone lives in constant fear. No one knows their neighbor's anymore. The kid's don't play outside with each other anymore. Between technology and the prisons, drugs ect... The people are moving that were born and raised here are leaving because of the state of living here. Even the churches are empty! All the industrial plants sold out to China. It's truly starting to look like a ghost town. Here's another kicker! They are letting all the illegal immigrants through the border! Welfare and unemployment has pretty much taken over. The prices are sky high. No one can even think about buying land to build on, or even buy an existing home that's owned mostly by the banks. Starting up a business to bring back what once was is pretty impossible as well. It's so sad and down right depressing to see what has happened almost over night. You would have to be a multimillionaire or billionaire to even think about to fix whats been broken here. I truly believe in my heart that there was a hidden agenda in plain sight. But no one spoke up, or fought back to stop the train wreck it is today. I went to school with the people who are running the show here. It's a nightmare and a 🤡 clown show! So, whoever may read this? Please enlighten me how to go about beginning and try to help and rebuild family, community, businesses ect... I am all eyes and ears? I welcome anyone to give me hope, inspiration and some insight how to fix this? I know that my town is not the only one. The struggle is very real! Thank you in advance and I apologize for writing so much. I just had to from the bottom of my heart. Much love and respect to all who takes the time to read this. 🥰☺️💜❣️
The stuff being done in South Bend reminds me of some of the revitalization stuff being done in my hometown of Shreveport, LA. Shreveport still has a long way to go and is not close to SB, but there are definitely lots of good people there doing good work. This video could be a good guide for developers in Shreveport to continue this revitalization. I hope the positive momentum continues and that Shreveport will see a rebirth in my lifetime.
Sometimes it just works! What about cities that are commuter suburbs of bigger cities themselves?
You guys are way more positive than NJB. Ive honestly been really considering just emailing or reaching out to they mayor or just government people in my town to change the zoning code. We have a 4 lane stroad that would be sooooo much nicer if it was converted to 2 lanes and zoned for mixed use.
Definitely go to a city hall meeting too or something of that sort. Infrastructure bill funding is going to fuel a lot of changes on state roads and community input is a big factor
I looked into this and my mayor is actually pretty supportive of this movement its given me a lot of hope!
NJB is on record for not being the guy who can help action change. He recently said something along the lines of: I love strong towns. I'm not going to help people change cities, but they are.
@@Brandon-zs7ko which is fair enough I guess. I like NJB but i cant up and leave my life to move to Europe (as much as Id love to, I even interviewed for a job in Amsterdam before). He fills the niche of bringing urban planning problems to light and Strong Towns tried to actually give us local solutions for our communities. I enjoy both creators personally but ST definitely motivates me more to reach out to local officials.
@@yuriydee makes sense! Both voices have different goals and I think both are doing well at accomplishing them
Loving the storytelling skills on display here. Cinematic b-roll, high quality interview clips distilled down, quality lighting, layers of captured story and decompressed explainer clips. 😮 All for the good cause of spreading the wisdom of the Strong towns message 👏👏👏
While I understand the focus on community action, I'm curious how Notre Dame plays into this narrative as it's clearly a nearby resource that most towns don't have. (also, TIL that Notre Dame and other associated schools aren't actually in South Bend, but rather in their own unincorporated enclave, which seems like a whole 'nother issue!) Oh, and sweet flag for South Bend!
Everyone you spoke to is so optimistic and receptive. Really hopeful stuff.
South Bend has improved by leaps and bounds, and it is amazing to see, especially in how they talk about it in the video (collaboration, entrepreneurship, sharing the wealth). Compared to its county counterpart, St. Joseph County, it is a shining example of how a city should be investing in resident-led, incremental improvements to neighborhoods. It'd be great to see these two work better together to equitably uplift the lives of people in the entire metropolitan area.
Maybe if more people move there the city can dominate county elections more and improve things on that end as well.
@@davidfoust9767 or if South Bend becomes too popular, some people with similar ideas try to get that change elsewhere in the county. You don't need that many people to start a trend, as long as they are willing to put in the effort it takes to organise, show up at board meetings, your voice will be heard loud and clear. It's not enough to get the results, but it is the first step on which your movement can build.
Wow, this is super inspiring! Keep going, Strong Towns! Reclaiming towns to be for people, not cars, one neighborhood at a time
They have their content and presentations on UA-cam! From a sheer startup perspective, it's awesome they have it there. I'm probably going to watch a few of them.
I hope they can!!
Minute 17 is where the gold of these interviews starts. Great job taking apart a very complex problem.
Honestly nothing makes me more proud of a town and its people than seeing how its people raised their city instead of leaving it.
South Bend has Norte Dame keeping it from not dying, a key competent for a lot of these mid-size/small rust belt cities is keeping the young people that come to study there.
I'm glad I've found your channel. Breath of fresh air. I'm a Somali-British and I'd love a lot of towns and small towns to be built/restored like this.
I love your rust belt content. You should look into Detroit. It is highly on a comeback. Some big projects being done are the Joe Louis Greenway and major road streetscapes. There is still a long way to go before seeing media attention.
What does media attention mean?
@@cameronbateau6510 when the news writes articles about success and reporting.
Thanks for this great video about my hometown! I'm proud of my little city and it's been great to see its renaissance.
My town just released that my area is now officially designated for redevelopment. The wording used in the announcement in the local paper was a little concerning. It's Gilbert, AZ
I'm trying to figure out how to make a proposal or a suggestion that would actually improve the area for the people who live in it. There is a lot of potential.
But the towns priority for the past while is attracting big businesses who will provide jobs by providing tax breaks and so on.
Killer video, this is so high quality
A year later and we are not really getting much better. They need to bring jobs back, because most of us have to travel out of town just to work. A lot of houses have been torn down but still many sit empty. Without jobs though, there's no reason to bring more people. Wealth usually leaves South Bend when people get money and move out adding to the empty house problem.
Good on those people that realized that giant companies will not help them, and started changing their neighborhood not because it has a good ROI but because it will make the place where they live better. It is dumb that this realization escapes quite few people.
awesome video and story, cant wait for the next one!!
I live in South Bend, and I would say we feel like we are sinking as a city.
We used to have our own mall, we used to make car's. We got neither today. Businesses are slow. I mean I started working a job in 2005 and here 18 years later it's just so much slower. Things feel worse here.
Dang this is just what I need, a path forward and some hope ❤
I like that strong towns is making high quality video content nowadays, amazing job guys.
I spent time in South Bend during law school, and I loved it. So glad to see this work happening to bring additional vitality to the community. Now it's time for me to apply this in my new home, which is another rust belt town.
Lol, oh my, wasn't expecting to see my area in this one..... or a prof that had the most horrific view of sustainability when I was at IUSB. So many individuals in the Michiana area are making choices and basing them on sustainable values. Sounds like maybe he figured out that sustainability on the individual level isn't worthless even if it needs to be in conjunction with corporate sustainability.
It doesn't hurt South Bend that it has one of the most prestigious universities in the country there either, I imagine. lol
No, but in earnest, this is so encouraging to hear, and I hope this mission spreads other places!
This spits in the face of NJB's recent "North America isn't doing anything and can't be saved, everyone move to the UK" rant. I'm very appreciate of that.
I love this attitude, I really want to make a better community too. Thank you!
and you can!
The USA May not be perfect but As long as we live in the USA, it’s better to make the best of it.
This is a really great, uplifting video. So brilliant to hear people working together to improve their cities and really show how proud they are of this work. It's really heart-warming. Thank you for sharing.
Nice to see some positive urban changes in the U.S . Sometimes grassroots organisations can seem powerless for decades until sudden rapid change happens.
I think everyones ready to try something different
I was just looking at prices of Airbnb rentals in South Bend and Youngstown as I would be interested in visiting. Crazy high. Same as everywhere I guess, but feel for people renting there. Got to get these new developments going.
Until places like these tackle the issue of zoning that typically allows for ONLY single house dwellings, it will never recover.
People are looking for walkable communities with a thriving downtown of local businesses, a variety of transportation choices like being able to walk or bike to downtown by providing ample planning for BOTH safety AND beauty.
Decrease the dependency on cars.
Those vacant homes could be turned into multi-family dwellings.
This film was beautiful. Thankyou.
I hope Canton, NC can see this and figure out how to remake their city. Its a beautiful small town that's always been centered around a paper mill that just closed a few weeks ago, costing around 25% of the local jobs.
What an inspiring story! I can see you put a lot of effort into this video and the result of it is amazing!
This is a nice new format! Much more specific and actionable! Nice work!
Things do change, we need to make sure the change goes in the right direction.
Most places are breaking down because, for several generations, people have been waiting for someone else to give them a job, rather than making jobs themselves.
First post 😊. Loving this channel.
Great video. Thank you for the work you do 🙏
I love this movement! So good to see in the States finally, after seeing some wonderful towns in Europe.
Cleveland tryna become a “15 minute city”. LONG way to go comin from a lifelong resident (actual Cleveland, not da surrounding metro), but good to see progress from other cities too
I grew up in Philadelphia, and moving to State College PA has made me realize how much I like the smaller town lifestyle. South bend looks like a wonderful place to live. How can I find more towns nearby that follow the strong towns philosophy?
Great video! Great community
Oh hey! a Youngstown mention! 🙋♂
As a European myself I *could* just shake my head, and resignate from all the bad decisions that were made in the past in the USA.
It is one tiny piece of the mosaic that creates the whole picture leading to divisiveness and the frailty of a society which is susceptible to demagogues and radicals.
But then again, I want to help people, no matter where they are from, what their skin color is (that shouldn't matter anyway), so I need info about what has been done in the past, what sounds like a reasonable approach to turn lost neighborhoods around, and maybe inject a few ideas myself.
That's why I watch these kinds of videos, and compare what I see in them (hopefully honestly represented) to what I see in my neighborhood in Germany.
I do hope that not only singular lots are improved, but a concept for future public transport, with maybe trams/streetcars/overhead electric buses is included as well. With the normal zoning laws of single use lots a vibrant neighborhood, walkable and friendly with a true sense of community, is difficult to implement. Multi-use lots, with small stores and shops on the ground floor, apartments on the second to third floors, and maybe a few offices or doctors practices above that, is the way to go.
In addition to that small squares and plazas, with grass and plants, not really a park, but a small oasis of green, maybe a small pond or creek, does wonders for the livability of a neighborhood.
I see them here in Hamburg, Germany everywhere, and they work.
If I would start to list all the amenities, shops, doctors, pharmacies, bakeries, etc that I have within a 5 minute walk from my front door, this parapgraph would expand significantly.
I wish all communities in the USA a healthy, strong, friendly neighborhood with a sense of being connected to each other again. Where you not only know the neighbors by their faces, but their history, their lives, and families.
Greetz from a German in Hamurg, Germany.
absolutely we're desperately lacking connection
whoa, didn't expect to see the town i live in now on here. there's a really interesting art/music scene in town that's growing which is pretty exciting as someone who came from athens, ga which is known for those things. there need to be more apartments/multi-family housing that are not run by llcs based in chicago tho -_-
Amen
@@kpunicorn whoa a fellow former Athens resident! Nice to run into one here haha
This reminds me of Peoria, Illinois… has nearly the same issues
The importance of supporting local businesses.
I had family who had to go that way for work living there and I remember everything outside of the city area being littered with boarded up and rundown property. I also don't remember the city area being particularly large. It really came across as a small area was made nice for the wealthy and everyone else was left in squaller. That was quite a few years back and it does look like they made huge progress helping much more of the area since then. It's good to hear that things are working out for people there.
Didn’t you remember the city area being particularly large?
just wanted to say I really like those kind of videos where you interact with people of those communities (just like your first video on Lafayette parking). There is a lot of explainer video (notjustbikes, vox, alan the armchair urbanist...) it add something more to the youtube space. it is more concrete and less "just the opinion" of some group of people over the internet.
By the way, I am looking forward to a video featuring people from Shreveport fighting highway expension :).
This was such a great video and nice change of pace to all the negativity that often surrounds Urban Planning content especially in the US. Thank you for creating these kinds of videos
I'm a metal and glass artist and I've been wanting to settle down in a place to put down my roots. This city looks very appealing. Time to take a vacation.
I can't say I'm really comfortable with how much this depends on the goodwill of private businesses and entrepreneurs. It kind of looks like gentrification to me. Where are the renters? Where are the working class people? It's mostly people with capital and education to undertake these kinds of projects. If property values go up, what will happen to those who weren't able to get in on buying homes when things were cheap? What will prevent South Bend from become a gentrified enclave? Maybe I'm seeing this all wrong, but it feels kind of top-down from monied players. I know you briefly mentioned the importance of making sure existing people don't get left out, but you didn't really outline how that may be achieved. Would these plans also come with zoning changes in the rest of the city so that Downtown, the most productive place, isn't completely subsidizing leafy green neighborhoods surrounding it that don't feel inclined to take on any change? I don't like being so suspicious, but this looks and sounds so much like what I've been hearing about development for the last 20 odd years that has never led to growth or revitalization that included working class and poor people. The only major update has been updated assessments of productivity per acre which highlights which parts of town are genuinely productive.
I grew up in South Bend. I lived there from 1972 to 1999. The biggest issues in the city at that time were crime and corruption. According to the latest statistics I can find (just before COVID started), crime is still an issue. A number of terrible decisions were made while I was there, from the alteration of the street direction and bus terminal in the downtown area to lobbying for the College Football Hall of Fame (which has lost money everywhere it has been). I will be very happy if Mayor Meuller can get it done but the crime MUST be reduced and for that, corruption MUST be dealt with. I wish them well.
It is heartening to see this kind of progress in South Bend. I grew up in the small town of Culver, and S.B. was the "big city" where we shopped and ate out or took art lessons or went to a concert or a sports event at Notre Dame. In those days the state had some progressive Democratic leaders but political realities have cast a pall on my perception of the state. Though I haven't lived there since college, this piece (as well as many others by Strong Towns) gives me pleasure and hope.
I am SO thankful that I have not seen any problems like this in western Canada! In 2003 I bought my 1000 sq ft condo for $230,000 CAD and today it is valued at $765,000 CAD ($575,000 USD).
My brother used to go to the University of Notre Dame and when I was younger we would go visit as much as we can. My family loved the University and we would spend a lot of time in Mishawaka and Elkhart but never in South Bend because my parents called it "dead" and when we went Downtown about 15-10 years ago, it was exactly that. Nobody there with nothing to do.
I'm very happy to see South Bend becoming a Strong Town and I'm looking forward to visiting again and truly exploring and experiencing South Bend the right way.
Videos like this get me excited about the future. I wish they weren't just tailored to large towns. It's understandable of course, cities and large towns have the resources to make things of themselves, but I want to try to bring that same revival to my hometown. It's around 1,000 people, so much of what is talked about on here does not apply.
Chico CA is an interesting example. It’s one of the few cities in CA that sense moderately committed to sustainable growth. Especially since this city is in the Central Valley, makes it a real anomaly
Might have something to do with Chico being a college town. It varies from city to city, of course, but as a general rule, college towns tend to be more walkable and transit friendly to better support a student population who is more likely to need, want, and use such services and environments. Davis is another example. Chico will be even better connected once the North Valley rail project is completed. You will be able to get to any major valley city and the Bay Area (via rail connections in Sac). When I retire, moving to a walkable college town with good train connections and transit is my backup plan if moving abroad doesn’t work out. Chico might be an option since it’s more affordable and has a lot of nearby nature.
I do have a question, has the local property development gone hand-in-hand with zoning reform to build up the missing middle? If not, just building out a bunch of large front lawn, isolated from business, single family homes won't solve the cities troubles in the long run, just delay it again.
Yep! Really cool stuff going on with pre-approved plans and infill development. Several of the homes we showed were multi family.
@@strongtowns That's awesome to hear, thanks for the reply!
Excellent example - thanks
Thanks!
"We're collaborating with the Heritage Foundation!"
😐 uh oh. All of a sudden the vibe changed lol
sbheritage.org/
That's so cool! So people there are just playing House Flipper IRL and having a jolly old time? South Bend here I come!
I dont just want a good place to live. I NEED a good place to live. Because without that, I have no foundation on which to build a good and lasting life.
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
00:05 🏙️ South Bend, a Rust Belt city, took charge of its future and created a better version of itself by revitalizing neighborhoods.
03:37 🏡 South Bend's "thousand houses in a thousand days" campaign successfully improved neighborhoods by repairing or demolishing abandoned houses.
08:39 🏙️ A vibrant downtown is crucial for a city's financial sustainability and overall quality of life.
12:01 🏠 Local developers with a deep connection to their community can create positive change by revitalizing neighborhoods from within.
16:09 🤝 Strong communities are built through individuals advocating for changes that support local development and create a collaborative ecosystem of resources and support.
Made with HARPA AI
Thank you for creating such an informative, important video. Strong Towns has the right idea. Creating vibrant, flourishing communities with an inviting, attractive town centre is crucial. Having the ability to walk, cycle or take public transit is requisite. Developing intimate spaces without ubiquitous automobiles completes the picture. A Dutchman who grew up in California, I now live in the fatherland--in Middelburg. I recommend visiting Dutch cities where one finds extraordinary magic in their city centres.
50 years ago, the town I grew up in was a ghost town. Literally my family doubled the population when they moved in. They started an art gallery. There was existing tourist traffic, and now it is a thriving artist community. It did not happen with investors, but by the people themselves. We are an unincorporated town, meaning there is no city to zone areas, etc. When the town was divided up, the properties were sold dirt cheap so people could get into them with minimal financing. The houses were literally falling over, they had been miners shacks, Ave then abandoned for 20 years. The people buying them had been living out of their cars and were willing to live in houses with leaking roofs, no sewage system, and aging minimal electricity. The houses now are selling for nearly a million dollars. Part of that is inflation, part of that is gentrification. But it shows what can happen if people have the opportunity they need.
Y'all have such fantastic video production AND messaging. Incredible stuff, it's very much appreciated.
those before and after pictures are gorgeous
I'm all for building up cities. I live in a city that went from 80,000 people in the 60's to 35,000 today and see a lot of parallels between South Bend and my city. But I will always oppose giving $$$ to banks. A city directly funding co-ops and developments are far better than a city giving tax dollars to banks. It's privatizing profits and socializing losses.
No money is given to the banks- it goes toward closing the appraisal gap that citizens face when trying to secure funding to revitalize their own neighborhoods. The appraisal gap means that they can't get enough funding to renovate- the city is trying to find ways to encourage these local developers so that these vacant lots can start generating value for the city again.
Giving money to bank? I hope you don't think that coop are magically better and morally superior to banks. It is not.
And I hope you don't think that allowing people to deposit in banks is giving money to banks ... seriously some of the thinking coming out of usa ...
@@Jinkypigs the reason most coops, credit unions, and other financial institutions are seen as more moral or better than banks, is because banks will consistently pour hundreds of millions of their investments (which they can make using money stored there) toward anything lucrative no matter how wrong (and then lie about doing it). This includes oil companies, coal companies, gas companies, and neocolonial mining operations, but these are not the only ones.
@@JinkypigsAfter 2008 you should know why people despise banks.
@@LucidFLWhy? After every mass shooting (and there are a lot of them EVERY day) the people of America still don’t despise guns.
One thing that is needed is a tax structure that discourages house flippers and works to keep people in their homes.
single family homes seem like a waste of space, honestly. Why not make 2 or 3 story townhouses instead, that can host multiple families + a business on the first floor?
Because the vast majority of people who are looking for a home *do not want* to live in such neighborhoods. Have you ever lived in that kind of housing? How dare you offer your opinion as right for everybody? If you want to live there, go live there.
Bring back manufacturing and small scale mom/pop farming and small towns be saved. Smaller cities will get trickle down effect. And resource extraction