• mobilitylab.org site logo
  • Mobility Lab main menu search icon:  click to do a search
    • Understanding Transportation Demand Management
    • Transportation Demand Management In Action
      • Arlington Transportation Partners
        • The Practice of Transportation Demand Management
      • Information and Outreach
        • Commuter Services
        • Messaging
        • Champions Program
      • Learn more about TDM
        • Further Reading
    • Our Research
      • Travel Behaviors
        • Transit
        • Bike
        • Walk
        • Ridesharing
        • Micromobility
      • Arlington Analysis
        • Regional Surveys
        • Evaluations
        • Building Studies
      • Market Profiles
        • All Profiles
    • Transit Oriented Communities
    • Urban Planning
    • Resources
      • The Transportation Cost-Savings Calculators
        • ROI Calculator
        • TRIMMS 4.0
      • Research Data
        • Transit APIs
        • Archived Articles
      • Video Library
      • Infographics
      • Glossary Of Key Terms
    • About Us
      • Meet Our Team
      • Careers

Urban Planning

  • Home
  • Urban planning

Roanoke’s Placemaking Shows a City on the Rise

October 7, 2014

Roanoke busker

Big cities aren’t the only places working hard to create terrific communities.

TDM Takeaway High-quality civic spaces and walkable downtowns are the building blocks of community. Public transportation is the next natural step in the process of placemaking.

I was reminded of this fact when visiting Roanoke, Virginia over the past few days to attend CityWorks(X)po, a conference for change agents and placemakers.

Going in, I was completely unfamiliar with the city, but was delighted with what I discovered there during my short visit.

Friendly

It was the friendliness of Roanoke’s residents that I first noticed. This wasn’t just the small-town Southern hospitality that’s a cliché. The congeniality of the city’s residents seemed more significant, somehow, and more genuine. People had an open manner and authenticity I was unaccustomed to in hectic Washington D.C., with its preoccupation on political affiliations and “optics.”

A Public-Gathering Space

Then I discovered Roanoke’s downtown area. “It’s only about five square blocks, but they’ve done a real nice job fixing it up over the past couple years,” said Harry, my hotel shuttle driver. That was a bit of an understatement. The downtown public plaza was actually the result of a crowdsourcing project launched at (X)po in 2011, according to conference organizer Amy McGinnis.

By all accounts, it is a success. During my stay, the public plaza at City Market was a hotbed of activity. The Saturday farmers market drew a crowd of hundreds. Aside from the well-utlized public spaces, the downtown area was also notable for its diversity of small businesses.

Character

I found it interesting that the uniformity of gentrification hasn’t taken hold in Roanoke’s downtown. I couldn’t find a Starbucks or Chop’t in spite of myself. I was thankfully forced to go outside my comfort zone to discover the unique and diverse small businesses populating the downtown, such as Mill Mountain Coffee and Firefly.

Roanoke bike guy Sam Waller

I met a local small-business owner named Sam Waller, whose window-washing company Glass Monkey uses a modified bicycle to carry him and his equipment back and forth to work sites. Waller’s is the only business operating by bicycle in the city, and it might be why he seemed to be a celebrity of sorts at CityWorks(X)po.

“I’m passionate about bikes,” Waller told me, as open and trusting as anyone else I’d met in the city. Either there was Prozac in the water supply or something else was going on.

Happy

Then it occurred to me: could these Roanoke residents be exhibiting the happiness that is produced by living in a really great city? This is the idea Charles Montgomery has written about in his book Happy City, which looks at the intersection of urban design and the emerging science of happiness.

It’s also a theory espoused by Richard Florida, who has argued that where we choose to live is the single most important decision we will make in our lives, above who we marry or what career we choose. In a Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs kind of way, Florida argues that where we choose to live will be the primary determinant of our satisfaction in life. Could these theories explain my experience with the happier-than-normal residents? I think it is possible.

Apparently I wasn’t the only one who was surprised with what they found in Roanoke. CityWorks(X)po presenter Josh McManus, program director of the Knight Foundation, said, “How did I not know about this place? I was texting friends all morning saying, ‘Roanoke, did you know, did you know?'”

Still Work to Do

The city isn’t perfect. Without a major university and with few large private employers, it still struggles financially. Service industries have replaced manufacturing jobs to a large extent, an imperfect substitution to say the least.

Public transportation continues to be an issue as well. While I was able to take the train from Washington D.C. to Lynchburg, there’s no direct service to Roanoke.

Roanoke marketMcGinnis said, “We have that small-city problem of public transportation being almost exclusively used by those who can’t afford private options. Walkability continues to be a concern, particularly as you move out from the city center. Roanoke County in particular needs to address pedestrian/bike access.”

On that front, things may be looking up. The 2013 Virginia transportation bill allows for commuter rail to return to Roanoke after 34 years of inactivity.

In the meantime, the southern Virginia city has been attracting hipsters in droves, brought by the allure of a burgeoning artist community, the aforementioned revitalized downtown area, and Roanoke’s low cost of living. It was also named one of America’s Best Small Cities on the Rise by SmarterTravel.com.

It’s appropriate that CityWorks(X)po, now in its fourth year, should take place in Roanoke. Founder Ed Walker describes his conference as fostering “extraordinary achievement in unexpected places and unexpected ways,” and Roanoke truly encapsulates the unexpected location aspect of that phrase – in all the right ways.

Photos by Paul Goddin

 
share this item

Subscribe to Receive Updates on the Latest Mobility Research and Trends

Arlington Virginia Department of Environmental Services

Arlington County Commuter Services (ACCS) is funded in part by grants from the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT), the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) and the Virginia Department of Rail and Public Transportation (DRPT)

ACCS Family of Sites
  • Arlington Transit
  • Arlington Transportation Partners
  • Bike Arlington
  • Capital Bikeshare
  • Car Free Diet
  • Car-Free Near Me
  • CommuterDirect
  • CommuterPage
  • Dieta Cero-Auto
  • The Commuter Store
  • Walk Arlington
  • Terms and Conditions
Follow Us
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • linkedin
  • youtube
  • instagram

© 2025 Mobility Lab, a program of Arlington County, Virginia