Humility Versus Hubris in American Urbanism
Feb 16, 2026
Chuck Marohn, founder of the Strong Towns movement and former civil engineer turned planner, shares his journey from small-town engineering to advocating financially resilient communities. He contrasts Jane Jacobs’ humble incrementalism with Robert Moses’ technocratic master plans. The conversation covers how cheap money favors big projects and chains, why local capacity matters, and why Gen Z gives him hope.
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Why An Engineer Became A Planner
- Chuck Marohn moved from civil engineering to planning because he kept asking "why" and hit the limits of routine engineering practice.
- His transition shows technical skill plus moral discomfort can drive systemic critique and new movements.
2008 Crash Sparked Strong Towns
- The 2008 housing crash gutted Chuck's planning business and prompted him to start writing instead of consulting.
- Those posts became the Strong Towns movement as a way to process and explain systemic failures.
Accounting Lens Reveals Urban Fragility
- Marohn's economic curiosity began with engineering economics: project cash flows and lifecycle costs.
- That practical accounting lens unlocked deeper questions about public finance and municipal fragility.



