
REDESIGNING CITIES: The Speedwell Foundation Talks @ Georgia Tech
by School of Architecture, Ellen Dunham-Jon
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From 12 epsHost
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Recent episodes
Episode 52: Episode 52: Atlanta’s Sweet Auburn: Preserving the Spaces & Stories of the Civil Rights Movement
May 27, 2026
1h 06m 59s
Episode 51: Episode 51: Ecologies of Memory
May 26, 2026
1h 00m 55s
Episode 50: Episode 50: Health and Economic Benefits of Walkability
Apr 6, 2026
1h 11m 44s
Episode 49: Episode 49: Mayors Redesigning Cities: The Transformation of Greenville SC’s Downtown
Mar 6, 2026
1h 15m 43s
Episode 47: Episode 47: Council Members Redesigning Cities: Autonomous Vehicle Shuttles in Boca Raton, FL
Dec 1, 2025
47m 16s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5/27/26 | ![]() Episode 52: Episode 52: Atlanta’s Sweet Auburn: Preserving the Spaces & Stories of the Civil Rights Movement✨ | historic preservationCivil Rights Movement+3 | Gene KansasClay Kiningham+2 | Civil Sights | AtlantaSweet Auburn Historic District | AtlantaSweet Auburn+5 | — | 1h 06m 59s | |
| 5/26/26 | ![]() Episode 51: Episode 51: Ecologies of Memory✨ | landscape architecturecultural memory+3 | Sara Zewde | HarvardFrederick Law Olmsted’s abolitionist work in the South | — | landscape architecturecultural memory+4 | — | 1h 00m 55s | |
| 4/6/26 | ![]() Episode 50: Episode 50: Health and Economic Benefits of Walkability✨ | walkabilityhealth+3 | Yilun ZhaDr Lawrence Frank | — | — | urban formbikeways+3 | — | 1h 11m 44s | |
| 3/6/26 | ![]() Episode 49: Episode 49: Mayors Redesigning Cities: The Transformation of Greenville SC’s Downtown✨ | urban designdowntown revitalization+2 | Knox White | Mayors Redesigning Cities: The Transformation of Greenville SC’s Downtown | Greenville SC’s | Greenville SCdowntown+3 | — | 1h 15m 43s | |
| 12/1/25 | ![]() Episode 47: Episode 47: Council Members Redesigning Cities: Autonomous Vehicle Shuttles in Boca Raton, FL✨ | autonomous vehiclespublic transportation+2 | Jun WangMark Wigder+1 | WaymoTesla+1 | Boca RatonFL+2 | AV shuttlestransit service+2 | — | 47m 16s | |
| 12/1/25 | ![]() Episode 48: Episode 48: Mayors Redesigning: Putting downtown Oklahoma City's streets on a diet✨ | urban designpublic streets+2 | Mick CornettJeff Speck | — | Oklahoma City'sOklahoma City+1 | Oklahoma Citystreet redesign+3 | — | 1h 09m 58s | |
| 11/21/25 | ![]() Episode 46: Episode 46: Mayors Redesigning Cities: Building a Downtown with TIF, Arts, and Public Parking in Carmel, IN✨ | urban designpublic policy+2 | Jim Brainard | Redesigning CitiesMayors Redesigning Cities: Building a Downtown with TIF, Arts, and Public Parking | CarmelIN | Carmel INwalkable downtown+3 | — | 44m 13s | |
| 7/3/25 | ![]() Episode 45: Episode 45: Sustainable Urbanism and Emerging Technologies✨ | Sustainable UrbanismEmerging Technologies+1 | Nico Larco | Sustainable Urban Design HandbookRedesigning Cities+1 | — | urban designsocial collaboration+3 | — | 1h 33m 46s | |
| 7/3/25 | ![]() Episode 42: Episode 42: Creating Beloved and Thriving Communities Now✨ | homeownershipaffordable housing crisis+5 | Natosha Reid Rice | — | — | connectednessneighboring+2 | — | 1h 18m 41s | |
| 6/27/25 | ![]() Episode 44: Episode 44: Can AI Empower Community Voices in Climate Adaptation?✨ | AIclimate adaptation+3 | Dr Anthony Townsend | resilience planning chatbotssynthetic visualizations | — | urban AIclimate change+3 | — | 1h 17m 16s | |
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| 6/26/25 | ![]() Episode 43: Episode 43: The City as Developer: From Dead Mall to a Downtown✨ | urban developmentredevelopment+2 | Neal PaytonSarah Nurmela | Torti-Gallas + PartnersThe City as Developer | Westminster | suburban retrofitmaster developer+1 | — | 1h 23m 33s | |
| 5/15/25 | ![]() Episode 41: Episode 41: Redesigning Cities for Climate Migration with Abrahm Lustgarten✨ | climate migrationurban planning+2 | Abrahm LustgartenJairo Garcia+2 | Abrahm Lustgarten's bookGeorgia Tech+3 | — | wildfiresurban heat+3 | — | 1h 11m 20s | |
| 5/15/25 | ![]() Episode 39: Episode 39: Redesigning Housing for Cities with Amanda Loper | Amanda Loper, principal of David Baker Architects and director of the Birmingham, AL office is an expert on designing beautiful, affordable and market rate housing that's both contemporary and local. Ellen Dunham-Jones interviews her in this follow up to her lecture at GA Tech on her and David's new book, Nine Ways to Make Housing for People.(see the video on the Redesigning Cities website.) They discuss designing housing for people vs as a commodity, "small but mighty" interventions, how to determine what "better here"looks like, and some nerdy details of financing affordable housing that we all can expand on. | 41m 51s | ||||||
| 11/8/24 | ![]() Episode 39: Episode 40 - Joe Minicozzi | Cities only have a finite amount of land – does it make sense that they tax lower density areas at a lower rate? How should cities balance the cost of maintaining infrastructure on a per acre basis with how land use policies impact the amount of property taxes those same acres produce? Joe Minicozzi explains the simple math that anyone interested in redesigning cities should know. This fascinating talk relies heavily on visuals. Listeners unfamiliar with his 3D visualizations of property tax/acre revenues showing short green spikes for low values and “purple mountains” of tall spikes for high value properties may prefer to watch the video of Joe’s talk. | 1h 24m 19s | ||||||
| 5/25/24 | ![]() Episode 38: Episode 38: The Mobility Revolution | This episode continues the discussion begun during Episode 32: What Transit Modes Where? and is co-hosted by Better Atlanta Transit. Atlanta-based experts give Pecha Kucha/Lightning Talks on innovations in micromobility, micro-transit & communication technologies, inclusive transportation, transit policy and legislation. Opening and closing remarks discuss the implications of these innovations on our experience of cities in general, and Atlanta in particular. | 1h 23m 25s | ||||||
| 4/9/24 | ![]() Episode 37: Episode 37: Place-Based Activism and Democracy | How have youth organizations in disinvested neighborhoods reinvigorated models of democratic citizenship and collective life? Can the exercise of collective agency in the physical space of “the commons” provide young people with the practical skills to engage with today’s economic, racial, and ecological crises? Dr. Sharon Egretta Sutton’s newest and sixth book, Pedagogy of a Beloved Commons: Pursuing Democracy's Promise Through Place-Based Activism, makes that case and we discuss her research on how urban design and urban designers can empower the disenfranchised. | 27m 46s | ||||||
| 3/26/24 | ![]() Episode 36: Episode 36_Calthorpe_Ending Global Sprawl | As urban population growth across the globe continues to sprawl outwards, how do we promote healthier development patterns in diverse economies and cultures? With a particular focus on corridors, Peter Calthorpe presents the strategies he developed in association with the World Bank to address the three dominant types of sprawl: high-income sprawl as found in the US, low-income sprawl as found in Mexico, and high-density sprawl as found in China. A prolific author, visionary urban designer, and impactful advocate for linking sustainable growth and policy, Peter Calthorpe delivered this year’s Georgia Tech TSW Lecture, followed by a conversation with Professor Ellen Dunham-Jones. | 1h 21m 23s | ||||||
| 12/12/23 | ![]() Episode 33: Episode 35_Gil Penalosa | Episode 35_Gil Penalosa | 57m 47s | ||||||
| 11/24/23 | ![]() Episode 32: Episode 34_David Dixon | Redesigning SuburbsHow and where are North American suburbs being redesigned to address dramatically changing demographics, technology, market preferences, and climates? The pandemic and Work-From-Home accelerated earlier trends of the urbanization of dead malls and office parks. But they also renewed leapfrog exurban development. Join this conversation between academic host Ellen Dunham-Jones who researches suburban retrofits, and David Dixon FAIA, an award-winning professional who designs and documents them. Vice President and Urban Places Fellow with Stantec, David co-edited Suburban Remix: Creating the Next Generation of Urban Places (2018) and co-authored Design for an Urban Century (Wiley, 2015). Residential Architecture Magazine named David to their Hall of Fame as “the person we call to ask about cities.” | 43m 08s | ||||||
| 11/24/23 | ![]() Episode 32: Episode 33_Robert Fishman | Redesigning Cities for the 2nd Global Urban RevolutionWhat does it mean for humanity that we are transitioning from a rural to an urban species? This is the fundamental question that Professor Robert Fishman is exploring. Professor Emeritus from the University of Michigan, he was trained as an urban historian at Stanford and Harvard, and is the author of the highly influential books Urban Utopias in the Twentieth Century: Ebenezer Howard, Frank Lloyd Wright and Le Corbusier and Bourgeois Utopias: the Rise and Fall of Suburbia. | 50m 08s | ||||||
| 11/24/23 | ![]() Episode 32: Episode 32_Transition Modes | What Transit Modes Where?New modes of getting around are exploding. Now, in addition to fixed rail, bus, and streetcar, smartphones and algorithms have expanded on-demand mobility such as microtransit vans, scooters, and e-bike rentals. Some of our streets already have robotaxis and AV shuttles. Will the skies soon include podcars and UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicles)? What kind of city, social equity, and neighborhood form do these different modes shape? In Atlanta, the Beltline is a 22-mile trail loop that has proven the popularity of walkability and bike-oriented development but promised to include future transit. Should that transit continue the city’s historic but troubled investment in streetcars or bet on emerging technologies like AV shuttles? How should such decisions be made about what transit goes where and what kind of city we want? Features Tejas Santanam, Eric Kronberg, and Rebecca Serna. | 1h 21m 06s | ||||||
| 8/4/23 | ![]() Episode 31: Episode 31: Redesigning Cities for Ubiquitous Wetness | How do we think about the boundaries between land and water? Dilip da Cunha argues that those boundaries have always been much more fluid—literally. And he argues that the history of how we’ve organized cities is one of ever-increasing efforts to control, subjugate, and manage water while colonizing the land into administered parcels of private property. Dilip and his late partner, Anuradha Mathur, argue that climate change is actually helping us recognize how uncertain it is that there’s no such thing as "dry land". It all gets rained on to some degree, and climate change is erasing those lines. We need to better prepare ourselves and our cities for how to design for conditions of ubiquitous wetness. | 35m 14s | ||||||
| 4/1/23 | ![]() Episode 30: Episode 30: Redesigning Cities with Social Infrastructure | Kai-Uwe Bergmann, partner at BIG, the Bjarke Ingels Group, and host, Ellen Dunham-Jones, discuss the how, what, and why of designing joyful social functions into practical infrastructure at all scales. How did their ideas of hedonistic sustainability embolden them to convince clients to build a ski slope on top of a power plant in Copenhagen, build a concert hall on a highway intersection, turn storm surge fortifications around lower Manhattan into public parks and gardens – let alone design new cities in the desert, on the ocean, and on the moon? | 39m 07s | ||||||
| 2/28/23 | ![]() Episode 29: Episode 29: Carfree Urbanism and Missing Middle Housing | Dan Parolek and his team at Opticos Design coined the term and wrote the book on Missing Middle Housing to describe house-sized buildings with multiple units. These duplexes, quadplexes, cottage courts, etc. are essential tools in creating equitable walkable urbanism. In this episode, Ellen Dunham-Jones talks with Dan about their implementation at Culdesac, Tempe, the country’s first and largest carfree and mobility rich community built from scratch. For those interested in images, the podcast is a companion to the video of Dan’s hour-long lecture given the same day and also available at the Redesigning Cities website. | 29m 52s | ||||||
| 2/28/23 | ![]() Episode 28: Episode 28: Redesigning Cities With Public Art | Whether heroic commemorative bronze statues, contemplative experiences of transformed materials, or vibrant activist murals, public artworks give cities cultural and economic value and provide meaningful identity to communities. But how do different kinds of public spaces and community identities influence public artwork? Stephanie Dockery, manager of Bloomberg Philanthropies Public Art Challenge and Tristan Al-Haddad, architect and founder of Formations Studio will present and discuss public art projects they have each worked on and their impact on cities and different kinds of public spaces. | 42m 30s | ||||||
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