Cooltown Studios
The official blog for crowdsourced placemaking

Monday, February 06, 2012

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

While ‘one size fits all’ may have been the mass production model of the industrial revolution, it’s encouraging to know that the model driving the creative, information, knowledge economy of the present is based on providing what people truly want. That ‘right size’ we’re looking for 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. Single-family home sizes are dropping for the first time. 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.“

Rightsizing towns?
While you may be thinking that rightsizing is only relevant to urban areas and big cities, it isn’t. Even small towns are rightsizing their footprints as we evolve from sprawl to what are being referred to as ‘micropolitans’; small towns with compact downtowns. This is especially important given that 51% of Americans indicated that they would prefer to live in either a small town (30%) or rural area (21%). For a more detailed and contemporary definition of ‘micropolitan’, check out the Micropolitan Manifesto, a primer for author Katie McCaskey’s upcoming book, Urban Escapee: “Micropolitan: 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, and if 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. That’s the purpose behind this site.


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Market Development | (0) Comments | Link
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Thursday, August 14, 2003

Newbury Street, Boston, MA

Free wireless internet for all - on Newbury Street

There’s already a well-established market for going wireless (making technology invisible) at home and at the workplace, but even at your local bakery?

If you frequent Newbury Street in Boston, chances are you’re pretty productive as well, as many of its cafes and shops provide free wireless internet access.  Thanks to the work of the Newbury Open Network, there’s a national trend afoot to provide wireless internet access at every public establishment, as common as a bathroom or a payphone

read more…


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Invisible Technology | (0) Comments | Link |

Wednesday, August 13, 2003

Nightlife in Hong Kong

CoolTowns start with fiber optics, not freeways

In the industrial age, the basic infrastructure is a road network with cars.  In the experience age (aka the CoolTown era), it’s a fiber optic network with people.  The good news is the fiber is invisible, the people aren’t.

Case Western Reserve University’s fiber optic network is setting the bar with gigabit/second access, 1000 times faster than a typical home connection.  What does this mean?  Major job creation for economically-disadvantaged communities if they get focused, perhaps on a

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Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Invisible Technology | (0) Comments | Link |

Tuesday, August 12, 2003

Telecommute

Broadband = quality of life, jobs

Understanding that people will be more apt to use technology they don’t see, a town-wide broadband infrastructure may do wonders for the local economy and quality of life.

Quality of life:  For urban dwellers, a fast network means one less reason to have a car, probably our least invisible technology.  It essentially means you can work at home, or at your local third place w/ free wireless broadband. This magazine focuses on achieving this quality of life.

Job creation:  I’m awaiting some

read more…


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Invisible Technology | (0) Comments | Link |

Monday, August 11, 2003

Turn It Off

CoolTown’s invisible technology

CoolTowns are most definitely state of the art, and that means incorporating the latest, most useful technologies.  However, the more invisible the technology, the less afraid people will be to use them.

CoolTowns are first and foremost about building community and enabling face-face interaction.  That mindset just doesn’t seem as sincere when your friend across the table is talking through his cell phone headset while adding entries to his PDA, as both of you sit on a sidewalk flanked by

read more…


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Invisible Technology | (0) Comments | Link |

Friday, August 08, 2003

SM community center

Investing in Experience Towns

Using the Experience Town steps, here’s how an investment group looks to invest in their next generation communities:

1. Discover and extract commodities:  Utilize capital in institutional investment network, leverage student/graduate market of universities and seek currently undesirable/economically-disadvantaged sites.
2. Develop and make goods:  Team with the best urban designers to build a new urbanist neighborhood fabric, although more European/international in density/intensity.
3.

read more…


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Entertainment & ArtsInvestment | (2) Comments | Link |

Thursday, August 07, 2003

Street scene painting

Steps to an Experience Town and beyond

The economic steps to achieving an Experience Town can be compared with the progression to self-actualization in Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs.

1. Discover and extract commodities:  The land/site, financial capital.
2. Develop and make goods:  The physical town, ie New Urbanism.
3. Devise and deliver services:  The right mix of dining/shopping/entertainment tenants coupled with community center for the residents.
4. Depict and stage experiences:  The integration of the first three into both

read more…


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

Wednesday, August 06, 2003

Frederic Payet painting, Paris

The Experience Town

One CoolTown goal is for its residents to exclaim, “Now this is a living and working experience!“

The authors of the Experience Economy listed five guidelines:  1) how well the theme or organizing principle is carried out; 2) the degree to which there is harmony of the impressions or “take-aways” of the experience; 3) the elimination of “negative cues” or distractions from the theme; 4) the memorabilia associated with the experience; and, 5) how well the experience is designed for all the

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

Tuesday, August 05, 2003

Experience Economy

The Experience Economy

We’ve gone from an agricultural economy, to manufactured goods, to services.  What’s next? Experiences.

The experience economy (fast becoming common language) is based on providing continuously unique experiences that can’t be commoditized by competitors, as services and goods increasingly are.  Experiences must be holistic, and examples include Southwest Airlines’ people-first mission, theatre restaurants, and Progressive Insurance’s commitment to improving the customer experience, to name

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

Monday, August 04, 2003

Piazza at night, Florence, Italy

Even better than a main street

There’s no question the entrepreneurial creatives won’t frequent shopping malls and strip centers (it was even an AOL headline last week), but there’s something they desire much more than the popular-again main street:

The piazza, pronounced like “pizza” with an extra syllable and not like a certain popular baseball player.

Why?  Because it’s designed around the concept of being a place rather than a thoroughfare, making it a much better venue for people-watching and people-meeting.  It also

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

Friday, August 01, 2003

Nanjing Road, Shanghai

Vision of the next generation university town

Today’s popular university trends described in yesterday’s blog hint at the future of university towns when those ideas are seamlessly knitted.

The common theme is higher learning in the real world:  Students no longer have to live in concentration camp dormitories, but in affordable, community-oriented lofts.  They can choose to live in themed buildings that relate to their areas of study - all the better to network, study late with and collaborate on independent projects.  They can take

read more…


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • University Towns | (0) Comments | Link |
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