Origin Story

15-Minute Cities – How Urban Design Entered the Culture War

37 snips
Feb 25, 2026
A lively look at how the idea of walkable, mixed-use neighbourhoods turned into a culture-war lightning rod. The story traces thinkers from Clarence Perry and Jane Jacobs to Carlos Moreno and shows how pandemic fears, car identity, and online conspiracies warped a planning concept. It asks whether local urban design can survive the political backlash and why driving stirs such strong emotions.
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INSIGHT

Jane Jacobs Sidewalk Ballet Makes Streets Safe

  • Jane Jacobs argued vibrant mixed-use streets create safety and civic life through 'eyes on the street' and short blocks.
  • Her sidewalk ballet, density and mixed uses oppose zoning that produces dead, single-use areas.
INSIGHT

Carlos Moreno Coined The 15 Minute City

  • Carlos Moreno coined '15-minute city' in 2015, adding digitalization to Jacobs's density, proximity and diversity.
  • Moreno framed it as reducing harmful commutes by ensuring living, work, commerce, healthcare, education and leisure nearby.
ANECDOTE

Personal Commute Stories Show What 15 Minute Cities Fight

  • Ian Dunt recounts relatives in Guatemala commuting four hours daily, illustrating the personal toll Moreno's idea targets.
  • He links long commutes to lost leisure, poor food choices and diminished well-being to justify proximity planning.
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