
The Kudzu Effect — When Good Answers Lead to Bad Places
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Questions shape everything—cities, policies, lives. But what happens when we’re chasing the wrong question, even if we’ve found the right answer?
In this premiere episode, architect Clayton Vance dives into a powerful metaphor: the Kudzu effect—how a well-intentioned answer to a crisis in the American South spiraled into ecological disaster. From there, he traces how that same principle explains much of our modern world: soulless suburbs, lifeless freeways, and neighborhoods that feel like nowhere.
Through personal stories—from lonely hotel stays in Syracuse to pedestrian joy in Palm Springs, car chaos in L.A., and a quiet corner of Chicago—Clayton begins a journey toward discovering the right questions that lead to better places, real community, and timeless design.
This is more than architecture. It’s about rediscovering what makes places human—and why it matters more than ever.