Aaron M. Renn

All Things Aaron

  • Home
  • Bio
  • Press
  • Archives
    • By Date
    • By City
    • Podcasts
    • Reviews
    • Articles in Governing Magazine
    • Articles in the Guardian
    • Articles in City Journal
    • Articles in New Geography
  • Get Posts by RSS
  • Podcast

Archives for May 2013

The Inevitability of Community in Small Cities

May 30, 2013 By Aaron M. Renn

This is both a standalone piece and a bit of a bridge between the first installment in my Las Vegas Downtown Project overview and the second one. One thing I consistently heard from the people in Vegas was their pride about the sense of community they had downtown. Tony Hsieh says it is the most community oriented place he's lived. One of the Downtown Project official goals is to make Las Vegas the most community-oriented downtown in the world. There's certainly a big sense of community in downtown Las Vegas. I don't want to diminish that … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Las Vegas, Urban Culture

Tony Hsieh and the Las Vegas Downtown Project

May 27, 2013 By Aaron M. Renn

The Downtown Project in Las Vegas, an attempt to completely reinvent downtown Las Vegas spearheaded by Zappos CEO Tony Hsieh, is one of the better known downtown revitalization initiatives in America. I've been planning to write on it since I saw Tony speak about it in Providence last fall. I was kicked in the pants to finally do so by a trip I took to Vegas last week to check the Downtown Project out. Before going any further, I should disclose that I stayed there for free in one of the project's "crash pad" apartments (more on those … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Demographics and Economic Development, Las Vegas, Planning, Transport, and Environment, Urban Culture

Chicago’s Daley Deals

May 15, 2013 By Robert Munson

Politics + Projects = Planning......And The Deal Beyond Daley Chicago has trouble beating its rap portrayed in the popular media these days. So do the Daleys. Three books give a balanced description of what The Daley Years got done, focusing on the son’s service as Mayor from 1989 to 2011. By reviewing these books in context, this essay suggests that two key tasks in completing Chicago’s transformation -- revitalized poorer neighborhoods and improved transit -- requires sacrifice from taxpayers and a new deal. Richard M. Daley was raised … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Chicago, Demographics and Economic Development, Governance and Public Services, Planning, Transport, and Environment

Milwaukee’s Future as Part of Greater Chicagoland

May 13, 2013 By Aaron M. Renn

Last summer I was invited to speak at a conference called "Milwaukee's Future in the Chicago Megacity" put on by the Marquette University School of Law and the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel. It was an interesting day of conversation about mega-regional integration between the two metros. In follow-up, Marquette Lawyer magazine asked me to write a piece for them about it. I'm including the full text of that article below. However, the current issue of the magazine has a couple of other major articles on the same topic. These are "Thinking and … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Chicago, Demographics and Economic Development, Milwaukee, Planning, Transport, and Environment

Worcester v. Providence: Is Downtown Revitalization the Sum of Urban Revitalization? by Stephen Eide

May 7, 2013 By Stephen Eide

Worcester, MA and Providence, RI invite comparison for at least four reasons. They’re the same size (pop. ~180,000), they share the same history of deindustrialization and urban decline, they’re only 40 miles apart, and they’re different, which makes comparison stimulating and worthwhile. By most any fiscal or economic measure, Worcester outperforms Providence. But because of the so-called Renaissance, the revitalization of downtown Providence throughout the 1980s and 90s, Providence has attracted far more attention among urbanists and the … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Demographics and Economic Development, Planning, Transport, and Environment, Providence

Parallel Societies

May 5, 2013 By Aaron M. Renn

This post originally ran on November 11, 2009. Until recently I had an apartment in the Fountain Square neighborhood of Indianapolis. Fountain Square is a small commercial node surrounded by houses on the near southeast side of the city that has long been my favorite 'hood in the city. I've been hanging out in the area for over 15 years. Fountain Square was a sort of lower working class neighborhood. The South Side of Indianapolis is notably more Southern in character than the north. In fact, some have said that Washington St. (or I-70) … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Demographics and Economic Development, Indianapolis, Urban Culture

Get my eBook The Urban State of Mind for your Kindle from Amazon.

About Aaron M. Renn


 
Aaron M. Renn is an opinion-leading urban analyst, consultant, speaker, and writer on a mission to help America’s cities and people thrive and find real success in the 21st century. (Photo Credit: Daniel Axler)
 
Email: aaron@aaronrenn.com
Full Bio

Trending Posts

  • Ten Things You Need to Know About Indianapolis City Culture
  • Nine Reasons Why Detroit Failed
  • A Manifesto Against Completing Sagrada Famí­lia Church
  • The Great Reset
  • William H. Whyte's Original Plan to Save Bryant Park

Disclosures

Links on this site may contain embedded “affiliate codes.” Purchases made through these links may result in a payment to me.
 
Header design by Carl Wohlt.
Header images via Shutterstock.

Copyright © 2006-2020 Urbanophile, LLC, All Rights Reserved - Click here for copyright information and disclosures