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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Friday, December 12, 2003

Creating Cool conference, Lansing, Michigan MI

The Creating Cool conference: Part 2

The most inspiring person at the Creating Cool conference was the lunchtime keynote: Bill Strickland of the Manchester Craftsmen’s Guild.

Here was a simple man with no money who established a center for excellence in job training, art and music production in “a black neighborhood in inner city Pittsburgh” as he reminded the audience repeatedly.  The incredible story behind the center is definitely worth the time to read.

Another great story told at the conference was that of the Box Factory

read more…


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

Thursday, December 11, 2003

Creating Cool conference, Lansing, Michigan MI

The Creating Cool conference: Part 1

How big a trend is this ‘cool town’ thing?  The organizers for today’s Creating Cool conference in Lansing, Michigan were expecting 700 attendees.  There were 1400.

Governor Jennifer Granholm opened the one-day event, and I’d have to say I haven’t witnessed a cooler governor.  She wasn’t out there giving a typical political speech with statistics and policy promises, she was out there impassioning people to think creatively, to think cool.

Richard Florida was the keynote, and he gave an

read more…


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

Tuesday, December 09, 2003

Back to Prosperity: A Competitive Agenda for Renewing Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania - Far from supporting CoolTowns (so far)

This new report from the Brookings Institution, Back to Prosperity: A Competitive Agenda for Renewing Pennsylvania, December 2003 can be summed up in this excerpt:

“Pennsylvania’s cities, boroughs, and older townships possess centrality and convenience. They marshal numerous health centers and educational institutions, strong business traditions, and abundant transportation links. And equally important, they offer in abundance the charming town centers, distinctive neighborhoods, and clusters

read more…


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

Monday, December 08, 2003

Athens, Georgia GA

The best college towns

Community profiler ePodunk ranked the top college towns in their College Town Index.  Focusing on the community rather than the colleges, some of the criteria include restaurants; book, music and periodical stores; entertainment offerings; and publishers, recording studios and other information-oriented companies, among the usual economic demographics.

A summary of the rankings:

Big Cities
1 Boston-Cambridge, MA
2 Minneapolis, MN
3 Denver, CO
4 Columbus, OH
5 Seattle, WA

Medium-Sized Cities

read more…


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

Friday, December 05, 2003

City Hall

Investing in infill

So what can the private sector do to invest in infill neighorhoods in cities and towns when public sector legislation favors sprawl?

Find out if City Hall is ‘cool’.

1. If you’re in one of those cities that is legislated for sprawl (ie disallows mixed-use, higher densities, low parking ratios and tax reinvestment back into the project’s infrastructure) - find another city to invest in.  You’ll have a very low ROI, if any, otherwise.

2. If you’re in one of those cities that is thinking about

read more…


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

Thursday, December 04, 2003

Third Street Promenade, Santa Monica, California CA

In the news: More economic reason for infill/CoolTowns

The Washington Post: Retailers Embrace the Great Outdoors

There’s no better way to make a case for this week’s blogs on investing in infill, than providing evidence of both the economic benefits and market demand:

- An International Council of Shopping Centers (ICSC) survey found that ‘outdoor malls’ (urban-oriented town centers) produce better sales than enclosed, typically suburban shopping malls.  Last year they reported median retail sales of $270 per square foot of total area vs. $242

read more…


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

Wednesday, December 03, 2003

Street in London, England, UK

What cities can do to help build infill/CoolTowns

To answer the previous entry’s questions:

Municipalities (economic development agencies in partnership with planning agencies) have the power to reverse the ‘greenfield easier’/‘infill-harder’ reality.  The overwhelming desire to truly accomplish this is years away unfortunately.

What municipalities can do to help build CoolTowns:
1. Property/site identification and assembly assistance.
2. Tax increment financing (TIF) program to fund public infrastructure, namely project-killing parking

read more…


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

Tuesday, December 02, 2003

Tools

Why it’s easier to build sprawl than urban infill (so far)

To answer yesterday’s question:  Why is it easier to build greenfields/sprawl?

Because it’s legislated that way, and the private sector has followed.  How’d this happen?  A quick history:

Early 1900s to 1934:  A group of home builders lobbied the government relentlessly to allow them to mass-produce homes just like Henry Ford mass-produced automobiles.  Of course, people lived in villages, which were anything but.

1934:  As a result, Congress passed the FHA (Federal Housing Administration)

read more…


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

Monday, December 01, 2003

Greenfield vs infill

The infill/greenfield dilemma

Greenfield/sprawl developments are easy for the private sector to do, but not economically, socially and environmentally beneficial.  Meanwhile, infill/urban/redevelopment projects are difficult, but highly beneficial economically, socially and environmentally.

Greenfields/sprawl vs. infill/urban/redevelopment impacts, as it relates to the creatively entrepreneurial CoolTown audience:

Economic:  Workers are increasingly bolting office parks to work for companies (and themselves) in cities

read more…


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

Wednesday, November 26, 2003

Zurich, Switzerland at night

Cool towns + ‘hollywood model’ = CoolTown Studios

CoolTown Studios and the content on this daily blog represent the growing trend of creatively entrepreneurial urban villages that are filling the emotional and financial holes in people’s lives.

It’s oftentimes difficult to explain this vision.  While it’s far easier to understand by people who have lived and worked in places like Greenwich Village, Cambridge and the West Bank of Paris, perhaps learning the meaning behind CoolTown studios will help.

‘Cool’ - as defined on Monday’s blog, is

read more…


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Beta Communities | (0) Comments | Link |
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