A conversation about cities, architecture, history, and why these affect us today. Hosted by Randy Plemel and a weekly cast of characters.
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Here are the last few episodes for you to listen to!
006 Sandra Rothbard – freight matters
In this episode we speak with freight expert Sandra Rothbard, who is an urban planner specializing in freight transportation. After working for public agencies in NYC on city logistics, disaster preparedness and solid waste management, she now supports public, private and non-profit organizations around the world as an independent consultant. She focuses on building sustainable, resilient and safe streets, healthy communities and efficient and economic supply chains.
005 Graham Rossmore – Curbs for People
In this episode we speak with parking expert Graham Rossmore, who helped Los Angeles shift their temporary outdoor dining program to a permanent feature, allowing a greater use of curb and parking space than just car storage. His work found that areas with Al Fresco dining generated an increase of $12 million in gross sales in 2022 compared to 2019. We also speak about new ways to use the city, which just so happens to be how we used to use the city before cars became the dominant form of transportation.
004 Karen Kubey – Cities of Imagination
Architecture professor Karen Kubey speaks about housing justice, how we need to design for abundance, we don’t live in policy, and how housing supply is part of a larger toolbox to provide housing for all.
003 Joanne Cheung – Cities Book of Play
Cities are sites of aspirations and identities, and ‘play’ can be a means for fostering community engagement. Architect and urbanist Joanne Cheung critiques the prevailing forms of community engagement, suggesting that they are often paternalistic and fail to adequately consider the agency of individuals and communities. Joanne further discuss the implications of power imbalances, the need for co-creation, and how play can act as a ‘scaffolding’ for discussing democratic representation. Play has often become commodified causing an unequal power dynamics in society. Joanne suggests the Cities for Play is but a scaffold in tackling very hard problems democratically, and calls for meaningful engagement through more community-oriented spaces for collective action and creativity.
002 Tom Badley – Offline Cash
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Graphic designer and artist Tom Badley shares with us his journey practicing as both a designer and artist, banknote design, digital art, his design of Offline Cash, and his book, Art & Money.

Show Notes
- Tom Badley’s website, buy the Art & Money book
- Blockchain wikipedia article, OECD Blockchain Primer (PDF)
- Offline Cash
Pamphlets, Please
001 Cincinnati’s West End with Josh Junker
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Urbanist and activist Josh Junker (twitter) talks with us about the destruction of Cincinnati’s West End.

Show Notes
- Read Joshua Junker’s twitter feed @JoshJunker2
- West End wikipedia article
- West End Stories Project – Listen to the stories from people in the neighborhood on Apple Podcast or Spotify
- 2020 Vision: Cincinnati’s West End
- Kenyon-Barr: Cincinnati apologizes for razing neighborhood