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IncDev Book Club: Pocket Neighborhoods: Cohousing Communities: How Much Intentionality Is Enough?

Introducing, IncDev Book Club.

IncDev Book Club meet-ups are virtual discussions that create space for deeper, more intentional thinking about what it means to be a neighborhood developer.

Time advertised is in Central Time.

Pocket Neighborhoods: Creating Small-Scale Community in a Large-Scale World

IncDev Book Club Series with Ross Chapin, author and architect

Pocket Neighborhoods: Creating Small-Scale Community in a Large-Scale World explores how small clusters of homes can be places where residents can easily know one another, share daily life, and still enjoy privacy. Drawing on historic precedents, contemporary built work, and lived experience, Ross Chapin examines design patterns that work across contexts — from infill parcels in small towns and urban neighborhoods to their role within larger neighborhood plans.

This four-part IncDev book club invites practitioners to engage these ideas not as theory alone, but as practical tools to test, adapt, and apply in real projects. Across four weekly conversations, participants will explore historic precedents, contemporary pocket neighborhoods, cohousing communities, and strategies for working within existing neighborhoods. Each session includes a short framing presentation followed by facilitated discussion, creating space for shared inquiry among small-scale developers, planners, designers, advocates, and public-sector staff.

Reading the book is encouraged but not required. These conversations are designed to support thoughtful, grounded discussion about how neighborhood-scale decisions shape daily life — and how incremental development can foster stronger, more resilient communities over time.

part 3: Cohousing Communities: How Much Intentionality Is Enough?

In Conversation with Ross Chapin, author and architect

Pocket Neighborhoods: Creating Small-Scale Community in a Large-Scale World offers an alternative to single-family subdivision development — small clusters of homes where residents can easily know one another, share daily life, and still enjoy privacy.

The third part of the book examines cohousing communities as a model for intentional neighborhood building, where residents actively participate in designing and governing their shared spaces. These examples show how communities can be built around shared values and commitments to neighborliness, offering lessons for anyone interested in creating pocket neighborhoods with strong social bonds at their foundation. Join us to engage in questions about how much intentionality and resident participation makes sense for the communities you want to build.

We recommend purchasing the book from your local book store, Bookshop.org, or ThriftBooks.com

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ross Chapin, FAIA

Ross Chapin, FAIA, is an architect, author, and community designer based on Whidbey Island, Washington. Since the early 1980s, his work has focused on modestly sized homes and small clusters of nearby neighbors organized around shared outdoor space. In the 1990s, he coined the term pocket neighborhood and helped demonstrate its viability through built projects and supportive zoning. Ross is the author of Pocket Neighborhoods: Creating Small-Scale Community in a Large-Scale World and works with practitioners, nonprofits, and developers on human-scaled, incrementally feasible housing.

REGISTRATION
Book Club meet-ups are a membership benefit for Associate and Charter Members.

Register here

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Recordings will be sent to those who register following the session. This event will be held in Central Standard Time. Details will be sent to attendees upon registration.

Contact

For any questions, message us at training@incrementaldevelopment.org.