Inclusive and Sustainable Development

Embed outdoor recreation in every neighborhood for all to enjoy physical, emotional, and social benefits.

In 2012, Thrive Regional Partnership, or Thrive, was created as a regional partnership serving 16 counties and 76 municipalities across the Tennessee, Georgia and Alabama region. Its work supports “community leaders across the whole tri-state region to make responsible growth choices: from environmental sustainability to transportation, to community development.

Bluff View Art District

“Thrive Regional Partnership inspires responsible growth through conversation, connection, and collaboration in the tri-state Chattanooga region,” it declares.

“We convene stakeholders across the region to ensure that as we grow in industry, prosperity, and population, we also preserve community and natural character for generations to come.”

Thrive publishes a 50-site adventure map bucket list “so that the places we love won’t be loved to death” while helping build the beautiful River to Clouds Route, a 34-mile connector trail crossing land trusts, state and national parks in two states and three counties.

We aren’t Nashville. Don’t want to be Atlanta. We’re Chattanooga, arguably the best mid-sized city in the US, yet, for how long?

This is our most fragile and insecure work. The odds are against us. Until more people share a common experience of the land as precious and valuable, it remains at risk. Farmland frequently turns to subdivisions, but rarely, if ever, do subdivisions turn to forests and wetlands. 

Farmland

This summer, we were named the best city in the state, and more people are moving here than any other Tennessee city, but this creates massive problems on space, development, traffic, housing costs.

Bigger isn’t better. Better is better. 

We have designers and nonprofits whose work is solely devoted to sustainability and responsible growth. Arguably, we are more environmentally conscious than ever in modern Chattanooga’s history. Multiple companies and corporations are pledging to reach carbon neutrality in the coming years. Is it enough? 

Chattanooga bridge

The Chattanooga Design Studio, created in 1981, “seeks to elevate the quality of life for all citizens through guidance, collaboration, innovation, and education that promotes livable, accessible, walkable, and humane urban design.” Led by Eric Myers, the Studio continues the original vision by the great designers Stroud Watson and Christian Rushing.

From public forums, charettes, academic studies and more, the Design Studio engages the public into action and contemplation, believing that: 

Downtown is for everyone.

An inclusive approach to design and planning is essential. Downtown and urban neighborhoods are vitally important. Quality at all levels of design, planning and construction is crucial. The character of the public realm is an expression of community values. Good urban design requires conscious, collaborative and cooperative action.

Urban design can improve quality of life for all Chattanoogans.

Our Inclusive and Sustainable Development Partners

Partner Spotlight

We have champions across the city: nonprofits, families, public and private leaders, gutsy, DIY individuals who start working, come hell or high water.

Thrive Regional Partnership

Thrive is an unprecedented, collaborative organization that unites people across the growing tri-state region to preserve community and natural character for generations to come.

Read More About Our Efforts

November 21, 2024

Challenges to Chattanooga’s Inclusive and Sustainable Development

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What if more and more of Chattanooga truly believed: downtown is for everyone?

What if we framed our public policy around this core statement?

What if we made space and means for people living in all ranges of housing to have access to nature?

What if we thought as much about land preservation as land development?

What if more farms were conserved?

What if we made space and means for people living in all ranges of housing to have access to nature?

What if our new neighborhoods were built with space for nature and people?