WORKServicesNewsPROJECTSCAREERSSay Hi

Hi.

WHAT THE KIDS ARE WATCHING

Who Said Zoning Reform Was Boring??

Credit: TikTok

A recent post by @alanthefisher—a supercut of gridlocked traffic in an expanse of ever-widening freeways, where lanes are added but congestion always remains—is typical of urbanist TikTok. It’s a short, funny, and meme-y (ie, in the “TikTok style”), and it’s educational, effectively communicating the concept of induced demand in all of about 30 seconds. It also has nearly half a million views.

The fields of city planning, transportation, housing, and architecture don’t typically come to mind when thinking about viral social content. Nevertheless, this urbanist corner of TikTok (“CitiesTok”) is flourishing, particularly among a younger generation trapped in the suburbs during the pandemic. From Bloomberg:

In the burgeoning niche that is CitiesTok, dunking on the suburbs does well (800,000 of the 176 million views on the #suburbs hashtag are on a video about the “profoundly sad” homogeneity of modern suburban developments). So do spins on more traditional TikTok trends with a wonkier flavor (“Gorgeous gorgeous girls advocate for affordable and accessible public transit,” proclaims another post). Self-described “teen architecture enthusiast” Louisa Whitmore, 17, has racked up more than 13 million likes on her @louisatalksbuildings account, with critiques of the Watergate’s brutalism and New York’s super-tall skyscrapers. Jonathon Stalls, 39, uses his growing platform as @pedestriandignity to share reflections from his months walking across the US by foot.

While their content varies, these creators share a similar goal: to spread the gospel of urbanism to a new generation, and push policies that advance environmental adaptation and housing affordability.

This generation’s teenage rebellion against their parents consists of showing up at city council meetings to advocate for denser housing, slower speed limits, and more bike lanes. You love to see it.

IN OTHER NEWS

  • The deadliest road in America (yes, it's in Florida).
  • Amtrak's bold vision for the long term future is rail service that's worse than it was in 1940. C'mon.
  • Big week for Facebook: they ruined Instagram, reported their first ever drop in revenue, and just can't figure out how to properly rip-off TikTok.  
  • "Don't Sweat the 'wrong kind' of housing." Excellent essay by Bill Delaney for Jax Today.
  • New Frank Gehry project just got approved.
  • Good new plan to connect even more of Downtown Jacksonville with walkable trails and paths. Between the Emerald Trail and this downtown will be unrecognizable.
  • Jags ticket sales near the bottom of the league in 2021, though higher than Detroit :)

CHECK THIS OUT

Now THIS is an Entrance Statement

Some of our recent work for Del Webb at their new Wildlight location.

BREAK ROOM

New Cybertruck just dropped:

‍

If you enjoyed this edition of Hi From Harbinger, why not get it delivered to your inbox every week?
Success! Thank you for subscribing.
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
  • 2756 Park St
    Jacksonville, FL 32205
  • 1.904.268.4681
Copyright © 2022 Harbinger Sign. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy - We value your privacy, and any phone number or email address you provide via the website contact form or other contact will not be shared with third parties/affiliates for marketing/promotional purposes. All other categories exclude text messaging originator opt-in data and consent; this information will not be shared with any third parties