EPISODE · May 11, 2026 · 39 MIN
110 / A walkable algorithm / with Paul Stout
from good traffic. · host Brad Biehl
Paul Stout — urbanist creator and landscape designer — is back in good traffic this week for a conversation about making urbanism foundational, why the most successful design work often goes unnoticed, and what it takes to translate complex spatial ideas into social media messages that resonate. After a content hiatus and returning with videos that've caught fire, Paul reflects on how the standardized suburban American experience creates a massively untapped audience waiting to discover their daily frustrations have names — and sometimes solutions.Timeline:00:00 Paul Stout returns to the show.02:47 Back making videos on Instagram after time away.03:35 Making urbanism accessible.04:21 The suburban teen Bloomberg CityLab article.05:12 Why the standardized US experience creates relatability.06:36 Building a precedent library for video content.08:23 Reading and being interested for years.09:14 Reverse engineering for people with no education on the topic.10:16 The Central Park "they just left it as is" misconception.11:33 Every square inch of Central Park is planned and maintained.12:43 You don't know what you don't know.13:39 Why landscape architecture is ripe for storytelling.16:54 The best work goes unnoticed when it feels natural.21:10 Showcasing expensive neighborhoods.25:31 Learning to see the world differently.28:27 Parks that receive less funding than Central Park.31:15 People still love their local park despite underfunding.34:12 The sleeper pick: Inwood Hill Park.37:00 Topography making you forget you're in a city.40:15 The commute question returns.43:03 Best commute ever: biking to University of Salzburg.46:33 Fully separated bike infrastructure next to a river with Alps backdrop.49:21 Why Salzburg might not be on your TripAdvisor list.52:24 No map shows architecturally interesting spaces within cities.55:12 Ryan Johnson's advice: go to the oldest part of town.56:01 The tightest streets and most walkable areas.58:04 Urban renewal contrast near historic districts.59:35 Wrapping up and following Paul's work.Links:Follow Paul, on Instagram.Follow Paul, on TikTok.Follow Paul, on YouTube.
What this episode covers
Paul Stout — urbanist creator and landscape designer — is back in good traffic this week for a conversation about making urbanism foundational, why the most successful design work often goes unnoticed, and what it takes to translate complex spatial ideas into social media messages that resonate. After a content hiatus and returning with videos that've caught fire, Paul reflects on how the standardized suburban American experience creates a massively untapped audience waiting to discover their daily frustrations have names — and sometimes solutions.Timeline:00:00 Paul Stout returns to the show.02:47 Back making videos on Instagram after time away.03:35 Making urbanism accessible.04:21 The suburban teen Bloomberg CityLab article.05:12 Why the standardized US experience creates relatability.06:36 Building a precedent library for video content.08:23 Reading and being interested for years.09:14 Reverse engineering for people with no education on the topic.10:16 The Central Park "they just left it as is" misconception.11:33 Every square inch of Central Park is planned and maintained.12:43 You don't know what you don't know.13:39 Why landscape architecture is ripe for storytelling.16:54 The best work goes unnoticed when it feels natural.21:10 Showcasing expensive neighborhoods.25:31 Learning to see the world differently.28:27 Parks that receive less funding than Central Park.31:15 People still love their local park despite underfunding.34:12 The sleeper pick: Inwood Hill Park.37:00 Topography making you forget you're in a city.40:15 The commute question returns.43:03 Best commute ever: biking to University of Salzburg.46:33 Fully separated bike infrastructure next to a river with Alps backdrop.49:21 Why Salzburg might not be on your TripAdvisor list.52:24 No map shows architecturally interesting spaces within cities.55:12 Ryan Johnson's advice: go to the oldest part of town.56:01 The tightest streets and most walkable areas.58:04 Urban renewal contrast near historic districts.59:35 Wrapping up and following Paul's work.Links:Follow Paul, on Instagram.Follow Paul, on TikTok.Follow Paul, on YouTube.
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110 / A walkable algorithm / with Paul Stout
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