I'On Dialogues Pt. 3 - "Beauty, Scale and Order"
Part 3: "Beauty, Scale and Order"
“Subsidiarity is the principle that government works best — most responsibly and responsively — when it is closest to the people it serves and the needs it addresses. Fiscal accountability is the principle that institutions collecting and disbursing taxes work most responsibly when they are transparent to those providing the money.” ~Jane Jacobs
Session Panelists/ “Provocateurs”:
Lead Provocateur: Geoff Graham, Partner, The I'On Company, Owner of Geoffrey Graham Development
Fellow Provocateurs:
Andrés Duany, Founding Partner, DPZ CoDesign
Tom Fleming, President, The Fleming Foundation
Don Livingston, Founder, Abbeville Institute
Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Essayist, mathematical statistician, former options trader, risk analyst and philosopher
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Full Series Description:
“Ancora Imparo” (I am still learning), attributed to Michelangelo, then 87, while working on the design for St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome.
In 1995, a radical new neighborhood was proposed for Mt. Pleasant, South Carolina. Radical in the sense that its design departed from the conventional post-WWII growth patterns. But also radical in that the vision for I’On built upon the foundational root of human settlement patterns. Opposed at the outset, the neighborhood’s founders, Geoff, Tom and Vince Graham, together with supporters of their vision, endured years of political and legal wrangling to secure approval. Though acclaimed as South Carolina’s most celebrated neighborhood of the past 25 years, I’On continues to be viewed as a radical departure from the norm. Because it is!
In honor of the 25th anniversary of I’On’s approval and groundbreaking, the Grahams invited urban designers who helped shape the vision for I’On, as well as builders, scholars and activists who have inspired their thinking over the last quarter century, for a gathering called The I’On Dialogues.
Held October 23-25, 2022, the Dialogues drew upon lessons learned from I’On and elsewhere for the purpose of raising the level of awareness and discourse surrounding land use and transportation policy reform. Divided into eight sessions interspersed with walking tours, The I’On Dialogues sought to provoke opportunity-opening discussion that would advance the endeavor to achieve a more beautiful and humane built environment.