The Saint Kolbe Studios Podcast
Felix Landry is a city planner at Texas A&M University Extension, where he does data analysis and financial mapping for municipalities across Texas—work he spent a decade doing on staff at cities in Texas and Colorado before moving into a public service role through the state university system. In this conversation, he and Joe work through a question most Christians have never thought to ask: does the way your city is designed make it harder to practice virtue? They trace the connections between urban scale, car culture, virtue, and what Christians actually owe the cities they inhabit. Main Ideas: * The built environment is a moral environment. How streets are scaled, how neighborhoods are designed, and how people move through a city directly shapes whether they can act on their virtuous impulses toward one another—or whether they’re physically prevented from doing so. * The dominant American city design—built around the speed and scale of the vehicle—dehumanizes the people in it. You stop seeing drivers as people and start seeing them as obstacles. Road rage and keyboard warrior behavior run on the same mechanism. * The question of whether to stay in or leave broken institutions—cities, public schools, struggling communities—is a moral question. * Most planning failures come from ideological silver bullets: eliminate the car, ban single-family zoning, build a $300M master plan. Good cities don’t emerge from one big fix. They emerge from getting human-scale incentive structures right across many smaller decisions. Chapters: * 00:00: Introduction * 06:17: Felix Landry’s Career in City Planning * 08:49: What Is Rural Absolutism? * 14:29: Cities as Volume Knobs for Human Nature * 24:44: School Choice and the Least of These * 36:21: When the Built Environment Blocks Virtue * 46:38: Scale, Cars, and the Disembodiment Problem * 53:49: Urban Noise and Why We Want to Leave * 01:01:58: Why Silver Bullets Don’t Fix Cities * 01:30:19: Reading List and Closing Thoughts Resources Mentioned: * Sidewalks in the Kingdom: New Urbanism and the Christian Faith [https://www.christianbook.com/sidewalks-kingdom-urbanism-and-christian-faith/eric-jacobsen/9781587430572/pd/30575] by Eric O. Jacobsen * The Space Between: A Christian Engagement with the Built Environment [https://www.christianbook.com/space-between-christian-engagement-built-environment/eric-jacobsen/9780801039089/pd/039080] by Eric O. Jacobsen * Till We Have Built Jerusalem: Architecture, Urbanism, and the Sacred [https://www.amazon.com/Till-Have-Built-Jerusalem-Architecture/dp/193223697X] by Philip Bess * Crabgrass Catholicism: How Suburbanization Transformed Faith and Politics in Postwar America [https://crabgrasscatholicism.com/] by Fr. Stephen M. Koeth, C.S.C. * On Kingship, to the King of Cyprus [https://www.amazon.com/Kingship-King-Cyprus-Thomas-Aquinas/dp/0888442513] by St. Thomas Aquinas Produced by Saint Kolbe Studios [https://saintkolbestudios.com/] This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit saintkolbestudiospodcast.substack.com [https://saintkolbestudiospodcast.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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