Good Intentions, Bad Outcomes: Why Newton’s Housing Rules Aren’t Working - and How the City Is Beginning to Fix Them
Start: 2026-06-17 19:00:00 UTC Eastern Daylight Time (US & Canada) (GMT-04:00)
End: 2026-06-17 20:00:00 UTC Eastern Daylight Time (US & Canada) (GMT-04:00)
Location: Congregation Dorshei Tzedek• 60 Highland Street, West Newton, MA 02465 US
Event Type:
Hybrid (In-Person & Virtual Option)
A virtual link will be communicated before the event.
Tim Love is the founding principal of Utile and leads the firm’s urban design and planning practice. He is also a Lecturer and Senior Fellow in Real Estate and Urban Planning at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, where he teaches courses that focus on topics at the intersection of design, policy, and real estate development. In addition, Love is the Assistant Director of the Master in Real Estate program.
Loren Rapport designs at the intersection of architecture, infrastructure, and urbanism. She is particularly interested in patterns of mobility and their impact on urban form. Since joining Utile as an urban designer in 2021, she has leveraged her design sensibilities for projects at multiple scales: managing the zoning redesign for Newton’s Village Centers, leading a graphic toolkit for the MBTA that proposes strategies for bus priority implementation, and creating architectural test-fits for sites with diverse urban conditions.

Camille Wimpe joined Utile in June 2025 as an architectural and urban designer. She holds a Bachelor of Science in Architecture and a Master of Architecture from Northeastern University. As a Boston-based renter, Camille has become fascinated by the varied residential typologies found in the Northeast. Her thesis explored rethinking the rights of renters in the context of Boston, envisioning a world where renters might be granted the power to individually or collectively repair and modify the building they occupy.