If you're from any part of America besides Los Angeles, you've probably dissed the California city at one point or another. It's full of smog, traffic and vain movie stars, right? But that narrative misses out on so much of what L.A. has to offer. Not only is the city an exciting and rewarding place to live for many people, it's also, surprisingly, a great place to raise a family and — believe it or not — a good place to walk and bike.
Alissa Walker is living proof of this. She's the Urbanism Editor for Curbed and a long-time resident of Los Angeles. She's made the city work for her and actually says that walking or biking is often easier than driving in her neighborhood. When she realized this a few years back, she ditched her car and has been enjoying bus rides, bike rides and walks with her family ever since. She's also watched the city around her change as investments in public space, walking, biking and transit grow. Alissa's hopeful that cities like hers will continue to figure out ways to welcome and accommodate families.
This thoughtful and fun conversation with Alissa Walker will challenge your Los Angeles stereotypes and help you think about what it means to build a family- and woman-friendly city.
Jeff Speck on the 10th-Anniversary Edition of Walkable City
Lawsuit Update: Making a Stand for Engineers in the Minnesota State Court of Appeals
Mike Hathorne: Where Does Decision-Making Need to Occur in Our Communities?
Ben Hunt: In Praise of Bitcoin
Thanks for a Great Year
Sam Quinones: True Tales of America and Hope in the Time of Fentanyl and Meth
Get Ready for #BlackFridayParking
The Impact of Systemic Racism on Jackson’s Water Crisis
A Behind-the-Scenes Look at the Most Comprehensive Resource Strong Towns Offers
A Whole New Framework for Analyzing Car Crashes
This Is How the Strong Towns Movement Becomes “Unignorable”
The Power of Talking Locally Over the Noise of National Politics
The Strong Towns Strategy
Water System Crises and Solutions
The Highway Boondoggles Report
What Customer Service Should Mean for a City
Hawaii’s Suburban Experiment
The Jackson Water Crisis Is Not a Fluke—Your City Could Be Next
Not Just Bikes and Strong Towns Discuss Public Transit in North America
“Bias Writ Large” in the Property Tax Assessment System
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
City Manager Unfiltered
Potencial Americano
The ASIC Podcast
The Chris Plante Show
Red Eye Radio