Sidewalk Ballet

The Emotion of Place - Molly Alexander

57 min · 26. maj 2026
episode The Emotion of Place - Molly Alexander cover

Description

Plus - Local Sports as Community Infrastructure What makes a place memorable? Why do certain moments stay with us long after the details fade? And what role do emotion, ritual, joy, and belonging play in shaping the communities we care about most? In this episode of Sidewalk Ballet, Chip explores the idea of “Return on Emotion” — the belief that some of the most important value created in cities and communities cannot be measured transactionally because it lives instead in memory, attachment, trust, and shared experience. The episode begins with a conversation with Molly Alexander, founder of Imagine The Possibilities Consulting and a longtime leader in downtown revitalization and economic development. Drawing from work in Business Improvement Districts and in retail, Molly reflects on the emotional life of places and why belonging, joy, and trust matter more than many traditional civic metrics acknowledge. From there, the conversation shifts from theory into lived experience through a discussion with Chris Murphy, President of the Santa Cruz Warriors, exploring the unique role local sports can play in creating ritual, identity, and collective emotional connection within a community. The episode concludes with a reflection on one of the most iconic moments in Bay Area history through the lens of David Talbot and his book Season of the Witch. David Talbot’s book about San Francisco becomes a story about a fractured region briefly experiencing hope, belonging, and collective identity together. Because in the end, cities are not experienced statistically. They are experienced emotionally. Episode Links Molly Alexander - Imaging the Possibilities [https://molly-alexander.com/] Power of Moments - Heath Brothers [https://heathbrothers.com/books/the-power-of-moments/] - Santa Cruz Warriors [https://santacruz.gleague.nba.com/] Season of the Witch [https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Season-of-the-Witch/David-Talbot/9781439108246] The Catch [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xLsFSsHnoxM]

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22 episodes

episode The Evolution of Business Improvement Districts - Michael Edwards in Conversation with Kathleen Rawson artwork

The Evolution of Business Improvement Districts - Michael Edwards in Conversation with Kathleen Rawson

For most people, the work of managing a downtown is invisible. We notice the festivals, the flower baskets, the clean sidewalks, the thriving restaurants, and the public spaces—but rarely the people whose job is to help all of those things work together. In this episode features a conversation with two pioneers of the downtown management profession: Michael Edwards and Kathleen Rawson. They've each spent decades helping shape Business Improvement Districts and the broader field of place management, watching it evolve from an emerging experiment into a profession that now influences communities across North America and the world. Their conversation explores that evolution—from the early days of downtown revitalization to the increasingly complex role these organizations play today. They discuss how the work has changed, what effective leadership looks like in places where authority is often limited but expectations are endless, and why success depends less on controlling outcomes than on building relationships. If you work in downtown management, this conversation will probably feel familiar. If you don't, it's a rare behind-the-scenes look at one of those professions that quietly shapes the places where we live, work, gather, and celebrate. Whether you're interested in cities, leadership, collaboration, or simply how great places come to life, I think you'll come away with a deeper appreciation for the people who spend their careers caring for the spaces we all share.   Episode Links Chicago Loop Alliance [https://loopchicago.com/] Hollywood Partnership [https://hollywoodpartnership.com/] Mainstreet America [https://mainstreet.org/] International Downtown Association (IDA) [https://downtown.org/] James Rouse [https://jubileehousing.org/2024/05/22/jim-rouse-the-life-and-legacy-of-an-urban-visionary/] The Magnificent Mile [https://www.themagnificentmile.com/] World Business Chicago [https://worldbusinesschicago.com/] Pittsburgh Downtown Partnership [https://downtownpittsburgh.com/] Pittsburgh Lights up for the Draft [https://www.facebook.com/groups/cityscapes/posts/3049764201882388/] Global Business District Innovation Club [https://gbdinnovationclub.com/] Jamestown Renaissance Corporation [https://www.jamestownrenaissance.org/]

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What does a place feel like when your nervous system trusts it? In this episode of The Sidewalk Ballet, Chip talks with placemaking researcher, author, and practitioner Cara Courage for a conversation about the evolving field of placemaking, how it is understood, misunderstood, and why it matters. Together they explore the relationship between people and place, the stories our environments carry, and the growing understanding of trauma-informed placemaking. From questions of belonging and care to memory, healing, arts, language and creative participation What happens when places help us feel safe? What happens when they don't? And what responsibility do placemakers have in shaping those experiences? Also in this episode, Chip reflects on the enduring fable of Stone Soup and the surprising role that soup has played throughout history as a tool for gathering, nourishment, connection, and care. The exploration of Soup leads to conversations with Amy Kaherl former Founder Director of Detroit Soup and Cristin Cooper from Coop’s Soup.   Episode Links Dr. Cara Courage [https://www.caracourage.net/] The Routledge Handbook of Placemaking [https://www.routledge.com/The-Routledge-Handbook-of-Placemaking/Courage-Borrup-RosarioJackson-Legge-Mckeown-Platt-Schupbach/p/book/9780367684099] Trauma Informed Placemaking [https://www.routledge.com/Trauma-Informed-Placemaking/Courage-McKeown/p/book/9781032443102?gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=23345041667&gbraid=0AAAAACWuhHW7CSBNLAlX6mIhvgKSavuxS&gclid=Cj0KCQjwornRBhCrARIsAON5exH3VcRG6xlMD8flgBeoud9EghGw0-U3WRMMIigG87wjnBXG5Zm2_AgaAlvMEALw_wcB] Long Live Placemaking, Placemaking is Dead [https://practiceofplace.substack.com/p/placemaking-is-dead-long-live-placemaking] Max Musicant [https://substack.com/@maxmusicant] and Shina Shayesteh [https://substack.com/@shinamehr] Creative Placemaking Ann Markusen and Anne Gadwa [https://www.arts.gov/sites/default/files/CreativePlacemaking-Paper.pdf] Coop’s Soup [https://www.coopssoups.com/] Warm Cookies of the Revolution [../../episodes/evan-weissman]

16. juni 20261 h 5 min
episode Chamber of Connection artwork

Chamber of Connection

For more than four hundred years, Chambers of Commerce have helped businesses thrive by bringing people together around shared interests and common goals. But what if we applied that same idea to human connection? In this Small Block episode, Chip talks with Charlotte Massey of the U.S. Chamber of Connection, a growing movement that treats connection as something more than a personal responsibility—it treats it as civic infrastructure. Together they explore the science of friendship, the role of third places, why connection takes more effort than we often realize, and the Chamber's "Six Points of Connection" framework. Most importantly, they discuss a simple but powerful idea: that one of the best ways to find community may be helping to build it. Because sometimes the shortest path to belonging is helping someone else belong first. Episode Links US Chamber of Connection [https://www.chamberofconnection.org/]

4. juni 20269 min
episode The Emotion of Place - Molly Alexander artwork

The Emotion of Place - Molly Alexander

Plus - Local Sports as Community Infrastructure What makes a place memorable? Why do certain moments stay with us long after the details fade? And what role do emotion, ritual, joy, and belonging play in shaping the communities we care about most? In this episode of Sidewalk Ballet, Chip explores the idea of “Return on Emotion” — the belief that some of the most important value created in cities and communities cannot be measured transactionally because it lives instead in memory, attachment, trust, and shared experience. The episode begins with a conversation with Molly Alexander, founder of Imagine The Possibilities Consulting and a longtime leader in downtown revitalization and economic development. Drawing from work in Business Improvement Districts and in retail, Molly reflects on the emotional life of places and why belonging, joy, and trust matter more than many traditional civic metrics acknowledge. From there, the conversation shifts from theory into lived experience through a discussion with Chris Murphy, President of the Santa Cruz Warriors, exploring the unique role local sports can play in creating ritual, identity, and collective emotional connection within a community. The episode concludes with a reflection on one of the most iconic moments in Bay Area history through the lens of David Talbot and his book Season of the Witch. David Talbot’s book about San Francisco becomes a story about a fractured region briefly experiencing hope, belonging, and collective identity together. Because in the end, cities are not experienced statistically. They are experienced emotionally. Episode Links Molly Alexander - Imaging the Possibilities [https://molly-alexander.com/] Power of Moments - Heath Brothers [https://heathbrothers.com/books/the-power-of-moments/] - Santa Cruz Warriors [https://santacruz.gleague.nba.com/] Season of the Witch [https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Season-of-the-Witch/David-Talbot/9781439108246] The Catch [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xLsFSsHnoxM]

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episode Pico - The District Dog artwork

Pico - The District Dog

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