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March 7, 2024 41 mins
In part one of our interview with Brookings Metro fellow Tracy Hadden Loh, we discussed lasting influences of post-pandemic work trends on urban design and governance.

Although it is the most recent example, the COVID-19 pandemic is not the first major disruptor of economic activity within major U.S. metros, and it certainly will not be the last. A century earlier, the widespread adoption of automobiles changed the way metropolitan areas function to this day, allowing for mass migration to the outlying suburbs of once-booming central cities.

Knowing that perennial industrial and population growth is a fickle thing to maintain, more city leaders, developers, and urban planners are re-acquainting themselves with the idea of ‘placemaking’ as a method for creating a resilient community culture. Popularized in the mid-twentieth century by pioneers like Jane Jacobs and William H. Whyte, the placemaking movement in the U.S. has long lauded the potential for urban living to foster human connections. Placemaking has since seen a twenty-first-century revival that has gained renewed energy as urban advocates aim to recover city life that was lost during the pandemic—with new insights into the values of equity and sustainability.

In this second and final half of their discussion, Tracy Hadden Loh and Ten Across founder Duke Reiter will discuss the ambitions of the placemaking movement, and how it can improve the urban issues that were covered in the previous episode.

Articles and sources referenced in this episode by order of appearance:

“New census estimates show a tepid rise in U.S. population growth, buoyed by immigration” (Brookings, January 2023)

Hyperlocal: Place Governance in a Fragmented World (Vey, S. Jennifer; Storring, Nate, 2022)

“How a ‘Golden Era for Large Cities’ Might Be Turning Into an ‘Urban Doom Loop’” (The New York Times, November 2022)

“The Perfect Height for Urban Buildings” (Next City, February 2024)

“Opinion: A Life Without a Home” (The New York Times, February 2024)

“Homelessness in US cities and downtowns” (Brookings, December 2023)

“AG suing Arizona landlords for ‘corrupting’ market, colluding to keep rents high” (12News, February 2024)





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