Why Public Spaces Fail After the Ribbon Cutting

Why Public Spaces Fail After the Ribbon Cutting

From The Bottom-Up Revolution by Strong Towns

April 23, 2026 · 52 min · Episode 245

About this episode

Max Musicant discusses the decline of public spaces after their opening and the importance of ongoing maintenance and programming.

Well-designed public spaces often look promising at opening, then slowly lose energy and use. Max Musicant explains how that decline comes down to what happens after construction—who maintains the space, how it’s programmed, and whether anyone is responsible for making it work day to day. From simple fixes like better seating and things to do, this conversation gets into why so many spaces never become places. ADDITIONAL SHOW NOTES Max Musicant (LinkedIn) Musicant Group (Site) Practice of Place (Substack) "Placemaking is Dead, Long Live Placemaking!" (Article) Local Recommendations:‍ Grand Rounds Scenic Byway System 612 Sauna Cooperative Birchbark Books Tiffany Owens Reed (Instagram) Do you know someone who would make for a great Bottom-Up Revolution guest? Let us know here! This podcast is made possible by Strong Towns members. Thank you!

People in this episode

Host: Strong Towns

Guest: Max Musicant

Topics covered

  • public spaces
  • urban design
  • placemaking
  • community engagement
  • post-construction maintenance

Keywords

  • public spaces
  • urban design
  • placemaking
  • community
  • maintenance
  • programming
  • design

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: Musicant Group, Practice of Place

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