Submitted by bikesandbroccoli t3_ywaokv in baltimore

tldr: we're trying to get people and local leaders involved in making Baltimore a more people-centric city through a 2-year program with Strong Towns. Information on the program here. Sign up for our email group here.

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Hey r/Baltimore,

A couple of months ago I asked about groups that were pushing for transit improvements and non-car-dependent solutions to development in Baltimore. I was a little late to help out with the BTEC campaign and I ended up joining the recently formed Strong Towns Baltimore. For those of you not familiar with Strong Towns, Not Just Bikes did an excellent video series explaining their mission and concepts here.

Shorter form videos from Curbside Chat here.

If you prefer reading to watching, this article is a great brief introduction.

The organization’s approach focuses on incremental development (rather than the scrape-and-replace that we frequently see in Baltimore), people-centric places, and targeted investment in our most productive neighborhoods, which tend to be the most overlooked. What sets Strong Towns apart is that it focuses on both transportation and land-use (housing and commercial areas) policy whereas similar organizations tend to focus on one or the other. Strong Towns believes that the two need to go hand-in-hand for successful placemaking and aims to work with those organizations to that end.

Right now, Strong Towns Baltimore is working on a proposal to have the national Strong Towns organization conduct a Community Action Lab (CAL) right here in our city. While Strong Towns Baltimore only came together recently, this would be a massive opportunity for the city to help strengthen its already growing momentum. The CAL is a two-year project designed to introduce Strong Towns ideas to our community, shift the conversation, and kickstart the implementation of a Strong Towns approach.

We are aiming to bring more people from all over the city into this conversation. So, if you are interested in getting involved with us and helping us bring this opportunity to Baltimore, you can sign up here. If you have any questions about getting involved or just about the organization's approach in general, feel free to comment below.

In order to show the national Strong Towns organization that Baltimore would be an amazing place to implement these ideas, we are also aiming to have a wide range of visionary and forward-thinking community leaders, politicians, community-based organizations, and thought leaders at the proposal meeting in early December. So, if you have a connection to your neighborhood association, city councilperson or another organization doing development work in the city who might be interested in being involved, please reach out to me directly via DM.

Thanks and I hope to speak to some of you soon!

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Comments

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gaiusjuliusweezer t1_iwitsqp wrote

This is great, having someone from the outside with experience in down-on-their-luck places (instead of just some overpaid SF or NYC hacks) sounds nice

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bikesandbroccoli OP t1_iwiwjrs wrote

Yeah, absolutely! Strong Towns is very focused on municipal- and neighborhood-level decision making for decelopment. We need to focus on ensuring our existing neighborhoods thrive rather than providing massive TIFs for thinks like the “Baltimore Peninsula”

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completethesestreets t1_iwj8ecb wrote

This is amazing! I'm a huge Strong Towns fan. Signed up on for the email list.

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bikesandbroccoli OP t1_iwj8pr6 wrote

Fantastic! Looking forward to having you on board.

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completethesestreets t1_iwj8y30 wrote

Did you reach out to Ryan Dorsey? Or anyone at Bikemore? I feel like they would be interested in this.

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bikesandbroccoli OP t1_iwjkcqu wrote

Yes, we have reached out to both Ryan Dorsey and Jed at Bikemore

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bmore t1_iwla8q7 wrote

You should also reach out to Kelly Cross in Old Goucher. He has brought Chuck to talk in Old Goucher at least once, maybe twice before.

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bikesandbroccoli OP t1_iwlawo9 wrote

I think we've reached out to the Old Goucher neighborhood association but have not heard back yet. If you have more direct contact info for this person, can you dm me if you're comfortable doing that? We'd definitely love to get them involved.

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GovernorOfReddit t1_iwjefru wrote

I didn't even realize Baltimore had a Strong Towns chapter. Neat!

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DemocracySmellsLike t1_iwj1fua wrote

Wow, this seems like a huge opportunity! I know a lot of discussion in here focuses on the potential the city has wrt Public Transportation and walkability, etc. super excited to see this

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bikesandbroccoli OP t1_iwj4d9v wrote

Absolutely, we are incredibly excited and hoping to be able to capitalize on the opportunity!

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gaiusjuliusweezer t1_iwjhfh0 wrote

If you took any of Baltimore’s “main streets” (fells, federal hill, Hamilton, etc.) and plopped them in the mountains or on the shore there would be like one lifestyle magazine feature per month and the houses would cost 2x.

If they were in DC or Boston they would be 4x

Might as well take advantage of the discount!

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DemocracySmellsLike t1_iwji74y wrote

Agreed, I see so much to love with this city and so much value and potential in equal measure. She’s got great bones.

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bikesandbroccoli OP t1_iwk2rag wrote

This is absolutely true. I feel like I hear about Wardensville, WV quite often in lifestyle magazines and how it's developed. I have been through a couple of times and it is nice but it doesn't have half of what Baltimore's main streets do.

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justlikeyou14 t1_iwjtjwa wrote

Just subscribed! Can't wait to see where this goes.

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XanderCruse t1_iwl8d78 wrote

Awesome stuff guys. I've subscribed. Glad to see we have a chapter!

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GoodCloud t1_iwksmbv wrote

Awesome! Just signed up too!

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YoYoMoMa t1_iwl05e4 wrote

Signed up. Thanks for sharing!

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Gagerage22 t1_iwmm2z5 wrote

Signed up for the email list but question: it appears the link is broken for the discussion board on groups.io for Strong Towns Baltimore? Is there somewhere else I can read up on this project? TIA

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