2021 Highlights
Hope everyone is enjoying the abnormally warm holidays. Time for our annual round-up of the best posts of 2021, with this year featuring as many great posts from Oscar as from me. If you missed them earlier this year – or just didn’t have time to read them then – hopefully the holidays are a more leisurely time for perusal.
I’d also like to thank MyBestPlan for their ongoing generous support. They always have the best and cheapest electricity plan for your Texas home. They have saved me a ton of money on electricity, and I suggest you contact them for a free, no-obligation savings estimate. Mention “HS” so they know you’re with us.
These posts have been chosen with a particular focus on significant ideas I’d like to see kept alive for discussion and action, and they’re mainly targeted at new readers who want to get caught up with a quick overview of the Houston Strategies landscape. I also like to track what I think of as “reference posts” that sum up a particular topic or argument; and, last but not least, they’ve also been invaluable for me to track down some of my best thinking for meetings or when requested by others (as is the ever-helpful Google search).
Don’t forget we offer an email option for the roughly once/week posts – see the Google Groups subscription signup box at Houston Strategies blogspot (scroll to bottom of right sidebar). An RSS feed link for newsfeed readers is also available in the right sidebar (I’m a fan of Feedly).
As always, thanks for your readership.
- Houston should learn from the future of public transit in Las Vegas
- What the Katy Managed Lanes tell us about the NHHIP 45N expansion project
- HCTRA Annual Report Shows Impact of Covid and Toll Diversions
- Houston’s blob is about to eat even more of East Texas… and we should embrace it
- METRO Update, Inner Katy BRT, and Epic Failure of Transit-Oriented Development Ridership in Dallas
- MaX lanes network moves forward
- Astrodome as the world’s largest climate-controlled festival park
- Four drivers of Texas’ rapid growth
- What Houston Could Lose Because of Harris County’s Anti-NHHIP (IH-45N) Lawsuit
- The future of remote work and what it means for Houston
- Bloomberg’s Case for Moving to Houston (but not a city for the soft)
And don’t forget the highlights from the first few years. For what it’s worth, I think the best ideas are found there, often in the first year (I had a lot “stored up” before I started blogging) and most definitely in the best posts from the first 15 years and 1.5 million pageviews.
- 2020 Highlights
- 2019 Highlights
- 2018 Highlights
- 2017 Highlights
- The best posts from the first dozen years and million pageviews
- 2016 Highlights
- 2015 Highlights
- Ten years of Houston Strategies retrospective (March 2015)
- 2014 Highlights
- Best posts of the first 1,000 (February 2014)
- 2013 Highlights
- 5th birthday best-of-the-best retrospective (March 2010, updated thru 2012)
- 2012 Highlights
- 2011 Highlights
- 2010 Highlights
- 2009 Highlights
- 2008 Highlights
- 2007 Highlights
- 2006 Highlights
- 2005 Highlights
This piece first appeared on Houston Strategies.
Tory Gattis is a Founding Senior Fellow with the Urban Reform Institute (formerly Center for Opportunity Urbanism) and co-authored the original study with noted urbanist Joel Kotkin and others, creating a city philosophy around upward social mobility for all citizens as an alternative to the popular smart growth, new urbanism, and creative class movements. He is also an editor of the Houston Strategies blog.