As our name implies, we're not just a planning and design firm. Instead, we address the full scope of placemaking — planning and urban design, context-specific coding, community engagement, implementation, and the marketing of great places -- and put our focus on the kind of viability that turns vision into reality. United by a mutual passion for creating timeless and endearing places, we're a unique collection of professionals -- planners, designers, coding fanatics, economic strategists, and storytellers schooled in journalism, public relations and marketing -- rigorous in our insistence that every skill, every strategy, every tool serve the goal of making places in which families and businesses of all kinds can thrive for generations to come.
Operating in both the United States and Canada, we're relentless connectors. Our extensive relationship building and broad network of strategic partnerships allows us to transcend the limitations of a static, in-house staff with custom project teams, tailor-assembled to the specifics of each unique engagement.
General Inquiries
info@placemakers.com
Hazel Borys
Principal | Managing Director
Winnipeg, MB
"Belief creates the world we know.
I help people see the possibilities."
As PlaceMakers' Managing Principal, Hazel inspires the company to deliver an exceptional product to a developing marketplace. She guides governments through zoning reforms -- allowing walkable, mixed-use, compact, resilient places to develop by-right -- and helps developers get things built under the increasingly prevalent form-based codes and character-based land use laws of the new economy.
Read: How Hazel thinks
Email: hazel@placemakers.com
Phone: (204) 960-0100
Ben Brown
Principal | Storyteller
Franklin, NC
"Lasting places have lasting stories.
I help you tell yours."
Ben connects, helping build environments of trust so planning can be about testing ideas instead of protecting turf and battling through cynicism. With solid communications and facilitation skills, he fosters a genuinely inclusive process and coaxes fence-sitters and doubters towards common ground -- a place where shared goals stand in bold relief against divisive perspectives. Leveraging skills acquired through training and years of experience in fiercely competitive, deadline-driven arenas, Ben helps keep the promise of placemaking as a community-building exercise.
Read: How Ben thinks
Email: ben@placemakers.com
Phone: (828) 508-5002
Scott Doyon
Principal | Storyteller
Atlanta, GA
"I make sense of place."
Scott Doyon tells stories that help connect people. To the idea of place. To productive, collaborative participation. To opportunities that build community ties and inform successful implementation. In his work with cities and towns, he helps navigate the politics of public engagement with communications strategies rooted in context. Leveraging his ten years with global branding powerhouse J Walter Thompson and 15 years since in the dedicated service of place, he delivers clarity of both purpose and value to the myriad endeavors that bring us together.
Read: How Scott thinks
Email: scott@placemakers.com
Phone: (404) 372-5394
Susan Henderson
Principal | Town Planner
Albuquerque, NM
"Place begins as a state of mind.
I turn it into something you can use."
As an architect, urbanist and writer, Susan combines a wealth of practical experience with stellar project management skills to lead even our most complicated engagements. LEED-AP certified, she brings an expertise in sustainability to code writing, and continues to helm an ever-increasing number of PlaceMakers’ town planning and coding endeavors.
Read: How Susan thinks
Email: susan@placemakers.com
Phone: (505) 975-3258
Kaid Benfield
Senior Counsel
Washington, DC
“For a place to work for the environment, it must also work for people.
I help communities protect and create places that do both.”
Kaid Benfield is among the nation’s leading voices on how to make cities, towns, and neighborhoods work better for both people and the environment. A longtime leader of the smart growth movement, he served for over two decades as director of the smart growth and sustainable communities programs at the Natural Resources Defense Council, driving positive, forward-thinking approaches to environmental challenges in the places where Americans live, work, and play. Before that, he led the litigation of some of NRDC’s most important legal cases. He also co-founded Smart Growth America, as well as LEED for Neighborhood Development, a national process for defining and certifying smart, green land development, and conceived and led NRDC’s Green Neighborhoods project, helping underserved communities and community development corporations create strategies for inclusive, neighborhood-led revitalization. A prolific public speaker and writer, Kaid was voted one of “the 100 most influential urbanists” worldwide on the prominent city planning website, Planetizen.com, and previously was named one of “the most influential people in sustainable planning and development” by the nonprofit Partnership for Sustainable Communities and “one of the top 100 city innovators worldwide” by the website Future Cities. For years, Kaid also taught law and policy for sustainable communities at the George Washington University School of Law. Kaid’s latest book is People Habitat: 25 Ways to Think About Greener, Healthier Cities.
Read: How Kaid thinks
Email: kaid@placemakers.com
Andrew von Maur
Urban Designer
Berrien Springs, Michigan
Having lived, studied, and worked in Europe extensively, Andrew von Maur brings a particular interest in craft cultures, historical precedent, placemaking, pedestrian-centered urbanism, and traditional understandings of stewardship and beauty to PlaceMakers’ projects. One of our long-time collaborators, he’s had a hand in many of our most elegant design endeavors.
A well-credentialed professor with Andrews University, von Maur’s professional qualifications include extensive experience in urban design, town planning and zoning reform. This includes a diverse range of projects -- infill, suburban retrofit, resort communities, and transit-oriented development. Other professional work includes significant experience with residential and mixed-use building design, traditional heavy timber frame design and construction, and freelance building design consultation for custom homes.
Paul Crabtree
Civic Engineer
Ojai, California
Often a part of PlaceMakers projects, Paul is a Civil Engineer who has focused his work on the integration of intelligent urban infrastructure with New Urban and Smart Growth Planning. Paul combines historic and contemporary design and engineering techniques to create innovative civil infrastructure plans and construction documents in order to implement unique visions which expand the cannons of sustainability, livability, and lovability of place.
Paul is the founder and president of the Crabtree Group, Inc. He is a faculty instructor for the Form Based Codes Institute and a leader in the Congress for New Urbanism Rainwater Initiative, as well as an author and lecturer on sustainable infrastructure, from water to transportation. Paul is a founding member of the Transect Codes Council, and a contributing author of Sustainable and Resilient Cities (Wiley, 2011).
Scott Bernstein
Economic Strategist
Chicago, Illinois
It’s no wonder Scott Bernstein is such a valued PlaceMakers’ contributor. Appointed by President Clinton to the President’s Council for Sustainable Development, where he co-chaired its task forces on Metropolitan Sustainable Communities and on Cross-Cutting Climate Strategies, he’s contributed to Federal panels on climate change, development strategy, and science policy.
As the Co-Founder and Chief Strategy + Innovation Officer of the Center for Neighborhood Technology (CNT), Scott works to understand and better disclose the economic value of resource use in urban communities, and helps craft strategies to capture the value of this efficiency both productively and locally. He studied at Northwestern University, served on the research staff of its Centre for Urban Affairs, taught at UCLA and was a founding Board member at the Brookings Institution Metropolitan Centre. He serves as a Fellow of the Centre for State Innovation, and works with governors, mayors and metropolitan organizations.
[…] Albuquerque, NM | Atlanta, GA | Calgary, AB | Franklin, NC | Montgomery, AL | San Diego, CA | Winnipeg, MB 866.268.8696 | info@placemakers.com | Client Zone […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Howard Blackson […]
[…] –Nathan Norris […]
[…] high-speed car traffic on a 6- to 8-lane section of road without on-street parking,” PlaceMaker Nathan Norris noted, “… [then] Trader Joe’s should not be required to build an urban-friendly building […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Nathan Norris Series Overview: Through a series of periodic posts, Nathan Norris will explore how cities hinder their own placemaking efforts, wasting time and money by investing in tools, policies and programs that deliver lousy results. In the process, we’ll be looking to you to help flesh out the content through examples, personal experiences and links to additional resources. The goal? A one-stop, crowdsourced primer for cities and towns seeking advantage in an ever-competitive world. […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Howard Blackson […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Nathan Norris […]
[…] –Nathan Norris […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Howard Blackson […]
[…] Here’s to all of us doing what we can to nurture more walkable — and runable — places that make for healthy, happy people. –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Howard Blackson […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] in TouchMeet and Contact Us We're planners, urban designers, form-based code wranglers, storytellers, marketers, advisors and […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Howard Blackson […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Howard Blackson […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Howard Blackson […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] Long term thinking, not easy short term answers: some thoughts from San Diego based Placemaker Howard Blackson. Placemaking is rapidly becoming a planning buzzword which could become just as meaningless as “mixed use” (an oxymoron when you think about it), but I’d like to think of it simply as: identify and work with the specific characteristics of the place – Northfield – rather than overly generic solutions. Here’s another good one from the Placemakers. […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Howard Blackson […]
[…] Studies and Public Programs and Professor of Sociology at the University of California, San Diego, Howard Blackson, Director of Planning for Place Makers and Rob Quigley, famed architect and community developer. […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Geoff Dyer […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Geoff Dyer […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Geoff Dyer […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Howard Blackson […]
[…] –Susan Henderson […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] thanks for input provided by Howard Blackson, Placemakers, especially re narrower streets, pedestrian and bike prioritization, and healthier […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Howard Blackson […]
[…] –Howard Blackson […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] whatsoever — to be played in the process. In response to the latter, my fellow PlaceMaker, Ben Brown, did a far better job of articulating my position in a discussion that emerged […]
[…] these numbers right in your form-based code also means getting the sequencing and ownership right. Scott Doyon and Nathan Norris wrote about this last October, in their Chicken or the Egg: Who takes the lead on […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] So there you have it. Come! Meet your ‘Makers. And if you need to line up anything in advance, feel free to get in touch. You can find all our contact info here. […]
[…] flow, design conundrums, lecture topics, as well as of those — like my much missed colleague, Geoff Dyer — who didn’t attend this […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] Until then, –Hazel Borys […]
[…] | Franklin, NC | Montgomery, AL | San Diego, CA | Winnipeg, MB info@placemakers.com | Client […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Howard Blackson […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Howard Blackson […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] PlaceMaker’s Howard Blackson generously took time out of his day to discuss social media strategies with my SDSU Social Media Marketing class yesterday. As he explained in class, social media has changed the way we market ourselves. Spam is too prevalent, he said. You can no longer simply create an advertisement or send an email asking people to buy your product. You need to provide meaning and value from the beginning. It’s about building a voice, starting a conversation, and sharing ideas that matter – even if people don’t always agree with what you have to say! […]
[…] –Susan Henderson and Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Andrew von Maur […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] 01. Scott Doyon of Placemakers, Harvi & Anna Sahota of Hamstead, Scott Ball of Commons and Dekalb County Commissioner Jeff […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Susan Henderson […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] I’m breaking my inspiring person rules today, to highlight someone I’ve only met virtually. Yet, when I read their writing, I feel like I already know them. Plus, pretty soon, I plan to fix the fact that we only know each other through our blogs. That person would be Kaid Benfield, currently in transition from the NRDC to Placemakers. […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –PlaceMakers […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Kaid Benfield […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –PlaceMakers, with Scott Bernstein […]
[…] –Kaid Benfield […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Susan Henderson […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Kaid Benfield […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Susan Henderson […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –PlaceMakers […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] for a post soon by PlaceMakers’ Kaid Benfield preparing for his Urbanism & Sustainability lecture at CNU24 in Detroit in June. Kaid is the […]
[…] –Susan Henderson […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] for a post soon by PlaceMakers’ Kaid Benfield preparing for his Urbanism & Sustainability lecture at CNU24 in Detroit in June. Kaid is the […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Kaid Benfield […]
[…] –Susan Henderson […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Susan Henderson […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Kaid Benfield […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Kaid Benfield […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Susan Henderson […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Kaid Benfield […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Susan Henderson […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Kaid Benfield […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Kaid Benfield […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Susan Henderson […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Kaid Benfield […]
[…] –Kaid Benfield […]
[…] –Scott Doyon […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Kaid Benfield […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] F. Kaid Benfield– Ulusal Kaynaklar Savunma Konseyinin sürdürülebilir topluluklardan sorumlu eski müdürü, çeşitli şehircilik yayınlarında ve çeşitli kitaplar yazan bir yazar. […]
[…] –Kaid Benfield […]
[…] –Susan Henderson and Matthew Lambert […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] Placemakers Управляющий директор Хейзел Борис принимала участие в проекте Beechmont. Placemakers – фирма по планированию, маркетингу и внедрению. Она сказала, что слушание сообщества помогло вести проект, и отдача окрестностям важна для урбанизма. […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Ben Brown […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] 79. F. Kaid Benfield – Former director for sustainable communities for the National Resources Defense Council and high profile author, writing at numerous urbanism publications and authoring several books. […]
[…] –Hazel Borys […]
[…] —Hazel Borys […]
[…] —Ben Brown […]
[…] —Hazel Borys […]
[…] —Kaid Benfield […]