Spaces Podcast

LYNES // Gābl Media

Discover the powerful forces—environmental, political, cultural, and economic—that shape our built environment and, in turn, our lives. Hosted by award winning architect Dimitrius Lynch, each episode brings you insightful conversations with top industry professionals who reveal how our spaces evolve and impact society. From historical shifts to future trends, SPACES Podcast uncovers the stories behind the places we inhabit and explores how these transformations will continue to influence us all. Tune in to this leading architecture + design podcast to understand the connections between the spaces around us and the lives we lead.

  1. 11: The Tea Leaves of Feudalism 2.0 - LYNES Presents: Built to Divide

    2 DAYS AGO · BONUS

    11: The Tea Leaves of Feudalism 2.0 - LYNES Presents: Built to Divide

    What if the future of America doesn’t resemble a democracy — but a modern form of feudalism? In this gripping episode of Built to Divide, Dimitrius Lynch traces a chilling throughline from 19th-century “other-ism” to the emerging architecture of concentrated power shaping today’s housing markets, financial systems, and governance models. Beginning with the displacement of Chinese and Japanese laborers and the weaponization of fear for economic gain, the episode reveals how crisis has repeatedly been used to reorganize ownership — transferring land, wealth, and opportunity upward. Then the lens shifts to the present. Faith merges with policy. Technology challenges democracy. Capital consolidates control. From Project 2025 and the modern Religious Right… to technocratic visions backed by Silicon Valley billionaires… to privately governed cities, crypto-finance ecosystems, and institutional ownership of housing — a new hierarchy begins to take shape. This isn’t about conspiracy. It’s about alignment. As financial power grows increasingly intertwined with political influence, the episode asks a sobering question: Are we witnessing the quiet construction of Feudalism 2.0 — a system where stability is privatized and dependence becomes structural? If housing is the operating system of economic security, what happens when ownership concentrates and access becomes subscription-based? Listen now to understand the forces redrawing the boundaries of belonging — and why the future of housing may depend on whether we recognize the machine before it fully locks into place. Episode Extras - Photos, videos, sources and links to additional content found during research. Episode Credits: Production in collaboration with Gābl Media Written & Executive Produced by Dimitrius Lynch Audio Engineering and Sound Design by Jeff Alvarez

    1h 32m
  2. 10: Divide & Conquer - LYNES Presents: Built to Divide

    4 FEB · BONUS

    10: Divide & Conquer - LYNES Presents: Built to Divide

    In this episode of Built to Divide, Dimitrius Lynch traces how crisis becomes opportunity — not for everyone, but for those positioned to acquire when others are forced to let go. From psychological influence campaigns and the weaponization of belief to pandemic-era wealth acceleration, this episode reveals how instability reshapes ownership itself. Lynch connects redlining to modern rent burdens, shows how algorithmic pricing may be rewriting competition, and examines how disasters — from COVID-19 to California wildfires — can trigger generational wealth transfers. You’ll hear how institutional investors, lobbying power, and financialization collide with housing supply constraints, why innovation alone cannot solve affordability, and how narratives shape public policy long before laws are written. This is not simply a story about housing. It is a story about power. About who gets to own the future — and who keeps paying for it. If you want to understand why the wealth gap widens after every crisis, why housing increasingly behaves like a financial instrument, and how division itself becomes strategy, this is an episode you cannot afford to miss. Additional Content: 'Changing the Conversation with NIMBYs' with Chris Adams The Revolutionary Power of Biobased Materials with Jacob Waddell Net Zero Community: Veridian at County Farm Pod Hotels: Stay Open Hyperframe Episode Extras - Photos, videos, sources and links to additional content found during research. Episode Credits: Production in collaboration with Gābl Media Written & Executive Produced by Dimitrius Lynch Audio Engineering and Sound Design by Jeff Alvarez

    1h 29m
  3. 07: Eat the Middle Class - LYNES Presents: Built to Divide

    14 JAN · BONUS

    07: Eat the Middle Class - LYNES Presents: Built to Divide

    October 13, 2008: behind closed doors in Washington, the U.S. government forces Wall Street’s biggest banks to take rescue money—no opt-outs, no stigma, no time for debate. What follows isn’t just a bailout. It’s a quiet rewrite of capitalism: stabilize the banks first, let homeowners and workers fight for air. Dimitrius Lynch traces how the TARP bailout, near-zero interest rates, and weak homeowner relief accelerated a new housing order—one where asset prices recover faster than wages, and where homes shift from shelter to portfolio. As the National Association of Realtors pushes demand-side subsidies like the $8,000 first-time homebuyer tax credit, foreclosure prevention tools like principal reduction are resisted—protecting values over people. Then comes the next extraction layer: Airbnb’s normalization of housing as income strategy, followed by private equity and corporate landlords turning foreclosed homes into rentals at scale. Blackstone and Invitation Homes pioneer the machine—buy in bulk, rent to the displaced, then bundle single-family rentals into securities. Meanwhile, policy capture tightens: carried interest survives, lobbying culture “owns” offices, and Citizens United floods politics with corporate money—reshaping who writes the rules of housing, finance, and democracy itself. This episode is a documentary-style timeline of how the middle class gets eaten—not by accident, but by incentives, institutions, and a politics increasingly engineered for capital. The crash wasn’t the end. It was a blueprint for a new future and purpose for housing. Episode Extras - Photos, videos, sources and links to additional content found during research. Episode Credits: Production in collaboration with Gābl Media Written & Executive Produced by Dimitrius Lynch Audio Engineering and Sound Design by Jeff Alvarez

    1h 6m
  4. 05: Shock & Awe - LYNES Presents: Built to Divide

    17/12/2025 · BONUS

    05: Shock & Awe - LYNES Presents: Built to Divide

    In August 1971, Richard Nixon went on television and detonated the global financial system. By severing the U.S. dollar from gold, the Nixon Shock ended Bretton Woods, ushered in fiat money, and unleashed a new era of credit, speculation, and inequality. What followed wasn’t just inflation and currency volatility—it was a fundamental rewiring of housing, wealth, and power. In this episode of Built to Divide, Dimitrius Lynch traces how the end of the gold standard collided with housing policy, stagflation, and a rising market-first ideology. As public housing construction collapsed, Section 8 vouchers expanded, the mortgage interest deduction quietly became America’s largest housing subsidy, and real estate lobbying reshaped Washington. Jimmy Carter framed housing as a moral obligation—but crisis, inflation, and backlash undercut reform. Then came Milton Friedman, Margaret Thatcher, Ronald Reagan, and the think-tank machine, turning deregulation, tax cuts, and privatization into governing doctrine. The result? Housing shifted from shelter to leverage. Neighborhoods hardened. Inequality accelerated. McMansions replaced porches. Master-planned enclaves rose as public responsibility retreated. And the rails were laid for subprime lending, securitization, and collapse. This is the episode where money floats, housing fractures, and the modern economy takes its irreversible turn. Episode Extras - Photos, videos, sources and links to additional content found during research. Episode Credits: Production in collaboration with Gābl Media Written & Executive Produced by Dimitrius Lynch Audio Engineering and Sound Design by Jeff Alvarez

    1h 8m
  5. 04: The Pivot - LYNES Presents: Built to Divide

    10/12/2025 · BONUS

    04: The Pivot - LYNES Presents: Built to Divide

    In the summer heat of Birmingham, children faced police dogs and fire hoses. On a bus in Montgomery, a 15-year-old refused to stand. From Claudette Colvin to Rosa Parks, from Greensboro counters to the March on Washington—the Civil Rights Movement shook America awake. Yet, even as laws changed, maps and mortgages quietly redrew the lines of belonging. In this episode of Built to Divide, Dimitrius Lynch tracks what happened after the marches. The Civil Rights Act outlawed discrimination, but zoning boards found new tools to enforce it. Highways tore through Black neighborhoods in San Francisco and Detroit. Urban renewal became “Negro removal.” Birmingham forced the country to look. Kennedy named it a moral crisis. Johnson created HUD, appointing Robert C. Weaver, the first Black cabinet secretary. Then came the pivot—Section 235, 236, vouchers, block grants, Pruitt-Igoe, Moses vs. Jacobs, Nixon’s New Federalism, and a shift from building homes to subsidizing rent. This is the story of how a movement won rights—but lost ground in planning rooms, mortgage offices, and zoning maps. How public housing gave way to vouchers. How the market replaced the public builder. And how America traded homes as social infrastructure for housing as financial asset. If you want to understand why affordability collapsed, why public housing withered, why vouchers fall short, and how modern inequality took shape—Episode 4 shows the pivot point. Episode Extras - Photos, videos, sources and links to additional content found during research. Episode Credits: Production in collaboration with Gābl Media Written & Executive Produced by Dimitrius Lynch Audio Engineering and Sound Design by Jeff Alvarez

    51 min

Trailers

About

Discover the powerful forces—environmental, political, cultural, and economic—that shape our built environment and, in turn, our lives. Hosted by award winning architect Dimitrius Lynch, each episode brings you insightful conversations with top industry professionals who reveal how our spaces evolve and impact society. From historical shifts to future trends, SPACES Podcast uncovers the stories behind the places we inhabit and explores how these transformations will continue to influence us all. Tune in to this leading architecture + design podcast to understand the connections between the spaces around us and the lives we lead.