Cooltown Studios
The official blog for crowdsourced placemaking

Monday, February 06, 2012

Rightsizing, not downsizing, is what the next gen is about

One size does not fit all, which has been the model of the industrial revolution. It’s encouraging to know that model driving the creative, information, knowledge economy of the present is based on providing what people truly want, and that perhaps the right size that personally suits us is finally being provided as an option.

Rightsizing Living
Regular readers know this has been well covered in this blog, that the next gen wants smaller homes, that the housing crisis needed a correction as housing sizes got out of control. According to a 2011 report, What’s Next? Real Estate in the New Economy, by a leading real estate organization, the Urban Land Institute (ULI), Gen Y (in their teens and early thirties) prefers smaller homes in favor of an easier commute and better lifestyle. Perhaps this will lead to ‘people rightsizing’ in a country where two-thirds of the population is overweight.

Rightsizing Commuting
As stated above, people are rightsizing their commute, looking to live closer to work and creating new, less expensive options for getting there. As stated in a new study by Zipcar, more Gen Yers are selling their cars or never buying one in the first place, opting for car sharing when they absolutely need one. The same is true even for bicycles with the rise of bike sharing.

Rightsizing Working
Many major companies will decentralize and value smaller office locations in 24-hour urban centers to enable innovation by being closer to where the creative, next gen populations are migrating to. For example, Google has invested in one of the largest buildings in downtown Manhattan, a beaux arts building in central Paris, a warehouse in downtown Pittsburgh, and a new building in downtown Boulder, Colorado… a far cry from the office parks of the 20th century. The aforementioned ULI report also states that office tenants will decrease space per employee, transforming into meeting places more than work places, with an emphasis on open configurations that foster interaction.

In a March 17, 2011 news article, “Zappos CEO envisions a new community downtown“, Zappos CEO Tony Hsieh shows he’s fully invested in rightsizing to benefit his employees, “Hsieh is exploring building 500 to 1,000 units of 100-square-foot spaces rented for $100 a month - enough room for a bed and a closet, while bathroom facilities would be shared. Maybe a bar or lounge would be attached to the building and renters would crash there whenever they wanted. “Maybe call it the Crash Pad,” he said. Renters would be screened to keep it from becoming a homeless or hooker option, he said.“

Now, this may be well suited for people who live in cities, but of Americans surveyed in 2009, 51% indicated that they would prefer to live in either a small town (30%) or rural area (21%). What about them?

Rightsizing Towns
Why can’t small towns also benefit from rightsized living, commuting and working? This is where the idea of “micropolitans” comes in, defined in association with the Micropolitan Manifesto as “a place anchored with a human-scaled, walkable downtown in the smallest cities possible, that each have the potential to be simultaneously “micro” and “cosmopolitan”.

So, what’s next? Now’s it’s time to decide what rightsizing means to you in your community. If it is and you’re committed to doing something about it, it’s on to organizing a group of like-minded people to crowdsource that vision into reality. It’s what this blog is all about helping you do.


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Market Development | (0) Comments | Link
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Monday, November 10, 2003

Naboo

In the news: Francis Ford Coppola’s CoolTown

Perhaps we’ll be able to see a next generation CoolTown in less than two years - on the big screen.  The director of the Godfather is researching the ‘coolest cities’ around the world (e.g. Curitiba, Brazil) in writing a script for his next movie, ‘Megalopolis’, inspired by the 1936 movie of H.G Wells’ “The Shape of Things to Come.“

From CBS News: 

“I’m not looking for Flash Gordon or fantasy or Star Wars. It’s ‘what’ will people 100 or 500 years from now be living in and what will it be

read more…


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Entertainment & Arts | (0) Comments | Link |

Friday, November 07, 2003

Soho, London, England, UK

Investing in ‘Entrepreneur Villages’

The Conflict: Visionary municipalities have an overriding interest in improving their quality of life, retaining university graduates (stemming ‘brain drain’) and catalyzing the creation and growth of gazelles, but simply don’t have enough financial or human resources to fully carry out their most progressive economic development plans.

One Solution:  With limited resources, a talent-producing university and recognition that a vibrant, affordable, 24-hour* urban center attracts entrepreneurs,

read more…


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Economic GardeningInvestment | (0) Comments | Link |

Thursday, November 06, 2003

Florida Marlins and economic gardening

Gazelles + Economic Gardening = Prosperity

Gazelles: There are two kinds of entrepreneurs - the ones that do business (Mom & Pops) and the ones that grow businesses (gazelles*).  While it’s the Mom & Pops that offer the one-of-a-kind restaurants, brewpubs and shops that create happening places which attract entrepreneurs in the first place, it’s the gazelles that account for 75% of all job growth, plus half of all innovations, two-thirds of inventions and 95% of all radical innovations created since World War II.

Economic Gardening:

read more…


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Economic Gardening | (4) Comments | Link |

Wednesday, November 05, 2003

Wynkoop brewpub by Mayor John Hickenlooper

Some rather hip mayors…

The image to the left is the Wynkoop brewpub in Lower Downtown (LoDo), Denver - keep that in mind…

Economic development ain’t what it used to be.  Just listen to Mayor John Hickenlooper from this Denver Post article:

“The days when offering a big subsidy was enough to attract a major company are over. Cities used to consider cultural life as symphonies, operas and ballet companies. All those are still important, but now we should embrace struggling artists, bluegrass bands, young talent of

read more…


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Economic GardeningGovernment Innovation | (0) Comments | Link |

Tuesday, November 04, 2003

Plaza in Lugano, Czech Republic

Why are entrepreneurs important to cities?

Entrepreneurs create jobs.
Just about every Fortune 500 company has a story that began with an entrepreneur and a crazy vision.  Silicon Valley, Cambridge and Austin happen to have quite a few of them, and they’re the most economically prosperous cities in the country.  Jobs are created by companies, and companies are created by entrepreneurs.  Period.

Entrepreneurs add to and thrive on creativity, the arts and entertainment.
Entrepreneurs are often the most creative people you’ll ever meet,

read more…


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Economic Gardening | (0) Comments | Link |

Monday, November 03, 2003

Entrepreneur

Ah, to be an entrepreneur

Entrepreneur: A person who organizes, operates, and assumes the risk for a business venture. American Heritage Dictionary

Kind of hard to build, grow or improve anything signficiant without them, don’t you think?  Yet when you tell someone you’re an entrepreneur, their first reaction is, “Really?!“

Now why is that?

The American Dream for foreigners is and always has been, “come to America and build your very own business.“  Sounds great huh?  Yet the typical domestic American Dream is to

read more…


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Economic Gardening | (0) Comments | Link |

Friday, October 31, 2003

AIR outdoor party, open air nightclub, Washington DC

Investing in the CoolTown ‘resort’

Resort: A place frequented by people for relaxation or recreation
Recreation: Refreshment of one’s mind or body after work through activity that amuses or stimulates; play

So, what if a visionary financial group invested in places that people specifically visited to play in, to refresh their minds?  Now what if that same group invested in places that people lived in to play, and continually refresh their minds?  That’s the notion of a cool town.  Thus, a “CoolTown resort” is a pleonasm.

One

read more…


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Entertainment & ArtsInvestment | (0) Comments | Link |

Thursday, October 30, 2003

Big Bay Point resort village, Ontario, Canada

The CoolTown ‘workplace resort village’

The image above is a hint at what a CoolTown workplace resort village could look like.  This Fast Company magazine article of an Italian internet village for mobile professionals explains what such a place could be like, if it were isolated.

Now, take those two visions, mix thoroughly and blend into an urban fabric just waiting to be transformed into a 24-hour arts, entertainment and entrepreneur district.  Suddenly, you’d have the brightest business minds taking ‘creativity vacations’ in

read more…


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Economic Gardening | (0) Comments | Link |

Wednesday, October 29, 2003

Main street in resort

Learning from resort main streets

Look ma, no cars!  See yesterday’s blog to better understand why.

Look ma, no chains!  Well, mostly no chains.  Real estate journals publish that main streets should have at least 70% Mom & Pops.  Why?  Simply because Mom & Pops do better financially.  Why?  See yesterday’s blog.

...then there’s not learning from resort main streets.

OK, so there’s little diversity in these residential resort towns - everyone kind of looks the same and the cars you do see are either SUVs or built in

read more…


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Retail Entertainment Districts | (0) Comments | Link |

Tuesday, October 28, 2003

Port Grimaud, France

Why are resort towns so pedestrian-oriented, so cool?

To answer that, it may be best to ask one of the pioneers of progressive town planning, Andres Duany of DPZ & Company.  Here’s his response just today:

Resort towns have the responsibility of being better than daily towns. People will not go on holiday unless the experience is better, more like their ideal than their regular places. Resorts are the most interesting experimental sites. We can always push the envelope further as people will risk new behavior modes for short periods of times in

read more…


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Entertainment & Arts | (0) Comments | Link |
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