The Pulse of Place

The Pulse of Place

Regenerative Living with Tony Cho
Regenerative Living with Tony ChoApr 22, 2026

Key Takeaways

  • Regenerative placemaking prioritizes deep listening to a place’s history.
  • Generation Regeneration Summit (July 10‑12) offers global regenerative design insights.
  • Mycelium networks illustrate nature’s model for collaborative community building.
  • Five core principles guide projects: listening, reciprocity, bridges, uniqueness, motivation.

Pulse Analysis

Regenerative placemaking is emerging as a counter‑movement to traditional sustainability, which many critics argue has become politicized and stagnant. By rooting design decisions in the geological, ecological, and cultural narratives of a site, practitioners aim to create environments that not only endure but actively restore the ecosystems they inhabit. This shift aligns with broader ESG trends, as investors increasingly demand measurable outcomes that go beyond carbon footprints to include biodiversity, community health, and social equity.

The Generation Regeneration Online Global Summit, scheduled for July 10‑12, gathers thought leaders, architects, and indigenous knowledge keepers to share practical tools for this new paradigm. Central to the dialogue are five principles: deep listening, sacred reciprocity, building bridges, honoring uniqueness, and checking personal motivation. These guidelines echo natural systems—like mycelial networks—that thrive on cooperation and information exchange, offering a blueprint for cities to become living, adaptive organisms rather than static infrastructures.

For businesses and municipalities, embracing regenerative placemaking translates into tangible benefits: reduced risk, enhanced brand reputation, and access to emerging funding streams focused on nature‑based solutions. As the upcoming book "Generation Regeneration" outlines, the approach is scalable—from neighborhood projects to regional planning—making it a viable strategy for stakeholders seeking resilient growth. By integrating these concepts now, leaders can position themselves at the forefront of a movement that promises both ecological renewal and economic opportunity.

The Pulse of Place

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