What is the 15-minute city? It's every city ever built by humans on this planet until a century ago, but with a catchy new name. And if the old parts haven't been destroyed in the last century, it's where the tourists go. And people travel across oceans to see the best of them.
Forty years ago, a few pioneers decided to start building 15-minute cities again. Actually, they built 5-minute cities because they didn't think people would walk 15. This is Seaside, Florida where it all began. Time magazine called it "the little town that changed the world."
The term "15-Minute City" is much newer; Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo laid out the 15-Minute City idea in her 2020 re-election campaign. It was a sticky term, and has spread around the world since then. People who understand it realize it's much like the most-loved parts of the city.
This 🧵 is about what the 15-Minute City is and what it includes, not what it's not. The first thing it includes is neighborhood groceries. Ideally there are several in a 15-Minute City because I'm of the few people happy to walk that far with a bag of groceries.
Every 15-Minute City should include an old-line hardware store that includes 95% of your hardware needs. Sure, for the other 5% you'll need to go out and fight traffic on the highway to get to Home Depot, but having a store like Anders nearby gives you choices.
The 15-Minute City makes it easy for people to open a business and become an entrepreneur. It's important to be able to start small with a Single-Crew Workplace like these food carts at Seaside.
Places that transform themselves into 15-Minute Cities attract a lot of young talent because they have a much higher Cool Factor than places with much fewer choices. Boomers & older grew up with few choices (ABC, NBC, CBS), but young talent won't tolerate that. Have more choices.
If you build higher Cool Factor, you'll have more visitors. So 15-Minute Cities need a good supply of B&Bs scattered through their neighborhoods, but not on the quietest streets.
A good 15-Minute City doesn't just have lots of choices on where to do business within walking or cycling distance, but also lots of choices on where and how to live. Here's a great cottage court in New Town at St. Charles, just across the river from St. Louis.
A 15-Minute City also has a wide range of home sizes. This cottage and this mansion are just a few blocks away at the Waters near Montgomery, Alabama. The lady of the mansion said "I love living in a place with many home sizes; it's far more interesting this way.
Most people don't want to, but some love living over the shop where things are hopping at the town square, or on Main Street. America was largely built by people living over Main Street. The 15-Minute City brings back this fundamental choice.
Wherever you choose to live in a 15-Minute City, you're more likely to get to know your neighbors because places not dominated by cars make it easier to get acquainted. After these two finished visiting, the lady on the porch said "that's a new neighbor I met just then."
Back to other ingredients: every 15-Minute City should have a Maker Space or two. It's part laboratory, part classroom, where future entrepreneurs are figuring out new stuff and learning new skills that will serve them (and maybe you) well for years to come.
Single-Crew Workplace shops around a court have a long history in 15-Minute Cities. This is Perspicacity at Seaside, but this goes back to the forums, markets, and bazaars of antiquity. No 15-Minute City was ever complete without them.
Every 15-Minute Neighborhood should have an elementary school so the kids can walk to school, usually with a few parents, in a "foot-bus." And on rainy afternoons parents can park on neighborhood streets until school's out, unburdened by the usual several acres of "stack lanes."
There should be one large civic space (square or plaza) where large numbers can gather for concerts, celebrations, seasonal events, and other civic events. There should be many smaller civic spaces like squares, parks & playgrounds so nobody is more than a 2 minute walk away.
A theater (movie, performance, or both) is a great addition to a 15-Minute City; some consider them essential. Because theaters can draw a crowd, they are best located on a neighborhood square or Main Street.
Pharmacies are essential in the 15-Minute City. Most of what they sell is fairly lightweight, so they don't have to be right next door. If it's a full 15-minute walk, it's unlikely to be a physical challenge.
There should be a handful of barber shops, hairstyle salons & other personal services in the 15-Minute City. People leave refreshed and feeling better about themselves, so these pair well with civic spaces like squares & plazas with many opportunities for social interaction.
Farmers markets are essential in a 15-Minute City for two reasons: they're a great way to get locally-grown produce and artisanal food products, and because they usually occur only on Saturdays, they become a neighborhood cultural event because everyone's there at the same time.
Small neighborhood pubs should be scattered throughout the 15-Minute City. If they're a 5-minute walk or less from anywhere, people aren't tempted to drive, and can easily walk (or stumble) safely home.
Coffee shops should be almost as plentiful in the 15-Minute City as pubs. And coffee shops build Walk Appeal because nothing is as interesting to humans as other humans, and people can sit enjoying their coffee for quite some time.
Almost everyone living in 19th Century Paris lives within a 5-minute walk of a bakery. Americans might not eat as much bread & pastries, but bakeries should be a staple of the 15-Minute City in many places.
Sandwich shops are another 15-Minute City staple, and they can be tiny. Mike & Patty's is a Single-Crew Workplace regularly rated as the best sandwich shop in Boston. Mike serves; Patty cooks. The place has line out the door whenever they're open.
Here's a classic French Quarter chamfered corner entry to a white-tablecloth restaurant on a quiet mostly-residential stretch of street. Of all the places to eat in a 15-Minute City, these tend to be the quietest, and so don't have to be on major streets or squares.
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What is Goldilocks Messy? As a place recovers from disinvestment, disaster, or sprawl, what's the just-right balance of messy and clean? A place needs to be improved enough to give hope, but be imperfect enough to feel human. How do we find that place?
Ben & Erin Napier may be doing the best job of anyone I'm aware of getting to Goldilocks Messy in Laurel Mississippi. What they're doing in this little town creates enough hope that Laurel is swarmed with fans on pretty days, but they're not sanitizing anything so far.
Here's a classic example of what Ben & Erin are doing. These buildings show much evidence of long histories; the only interventions are graphics, paint, and string lights. This is incredibly lean inspiration. My understanding is that they mostly act as catalysts & builders.
Many now protest anything that would reduce consumption of anything as "forcing us into poverty," with vows to fight fiercely against it. @RizomaSchool posted a meme on localized warming vs. all-house warming and got savaged for it. How, when, and where did this begin?
@RizomaSchool Basically, this is about the same thing as a morbidly obese person saying "how dare you limit what I eat?" My dad was 5-8 and at one point got over 215. He hated it, and worked hard to get it off. I know no morbidly obese person clamoring to gain more weight. Why?
My gut feel is that those clamoring for more consumption are shills for the Davos crowd. I could be wrong, but serious question: who does the WEF serve well beyond their own interests? No? Didn't think so.
I'm upgrading my Townhouse Guidelines. They address the composition of everything visible on the building and its front yard. Floor plans can be whatever they need to be. But first, there are 3 core choices: single design, composed block, or individual designs.
Three core choices of townhouse design: A single design for all townhouses in a block, a composed block with some repeated designs, and individual designs along a street. Classical too vernacular. Beautiful to charming. (This is the French Quarter vernacular & classical.)
A row of townhouses of a single design is the hardest to accomplish and is therefore the rarest type. The only way I know to pull it off successfully is with high classical design beautiful enough to compensate for the repetitiveness. This takes years of training.
What is authenticity, both at the scale of urbanism & the scale of architecture? Are the only authentic places & buildings those built by hand before the Industrial Development Complex? Or can we build authentically using some of today's processes? What's touchable; what's not?
Shutters are things that open and shut. If they don't have hinges to allow that, and if they don't have shutter dogs to hold them open, they are not shutters, but rather "screw-on do-nothings" because they screw on the wall and do nothing.
People confuse fences & railings. The top element of a railing is a handrail; the top elements of fences are pickets, which are subtle delineators of public & private. A handrail atop a fence would make it easier to hop the fence; pickets discourage honest people from doing so.
Agricultural outdoor rooms on the edge of a neighborhood can provide fruits and vegetables to neighborhood restaurants, but there is a hidden benefit that might be greater. Ask children “where does food come from,” and the overwhelming answer is “the grocery store."
Few children living in town know any farmers at all, and much of our food now comes from outside our nation’s borders. Bio-intensive agriculture is “good-neighbor” agriculture, requiring far less industrial equipment but more farmers for the same acreage.
It is essential to Agrarian Urbanism, because industrial-scale farms can’t fit into a neighborhood and would annoy the neighbors with the sound of heavy equipment at daybreak, the smells of large-scale agriculture, and the spraying of a host of chemicals.
I always fail at #FF because I want to tell people why I appreciate the work of people I follow, and it takes so much time I never finish. Crashed again a week ago yesterday. So here's my #FF +1 with just usernames. @_buildingbeauty@1000yearhouse@ad_mastro@akatieanna