Talking Place

Tanisha Raffiuddin

Welcome to Talking Place  The podcast bringing placemakers and storytellers together to talk about place. The Talking Place podcast is your go-to podcast for exploring the power of storytelling in shaping narratives and identities for neighbourhoods, towns, cities, and nations. Join your host, Concept Culture’s Creative Director Tanisha Raffiuddin as she talks with experts across the built environment, sharing their knowledge and stories on placemaking, branding, sustainability, language, finance, health, culture, and more. Whether you are an urban designer, architect, planner, developer, investor, marketeer, or simply curious about places and stories, this podcast is for you.Listen to our latest episodes of Talking Place and join the conversation on social media! Follow us on: Instagram: @talkingplacepodcastX: @tppodcast_ LinkedIn: Talking Place PodcastBluesky @talkingplaceTikTok: @talkingplacepodcastHost: Tanisha Raffiuddin Production: Concept Culture 

  1. 024 - Why Retrofit Is the UK’s Most Urgent Climate and Housing Challenge with Anna Moore

    JAN 21

    024 - Why Retrofit Is the UK’s Most Urgent Climate and Housing Challenge with Anna Moore

    Retrofit is often framed as a technical challenge — but what if it’s actually about people, pride and place? In this episode, Anna Moore, founder of Domna, joins Talking Place to unpack why upgrading the homes we already live in is essential for tackling fuel poverty, improving health, and creating stronger communities. From the realities of funding and policy to the role of AI and community engagement, this is a grounded, hopeful conversation about how retrofit can reshape the UK’s housing future — one home at a time. About Our Guest Anna Moore is the Founder of Domna, a UK based retrofit company working across social, affordable, and private housing to improve energy efficiency, reduce fuel poverty, and create healthier homes. Before founding Domna, Anna spent a decade at McKinsey, where she was a Partner leading its UK construction and real estate practice and co-leading its European sustainability strategy. Domna operates at national scale, working on tens of thousands of homes each year and combining machine learning driven stock assessment with on the ground delivery. The company partners with housing associations, local authorities, investors, and community groups to turn retrofit into a viable, investable, and people centred solution. Anna is a passionate advocate for treating homes as critical social infrastructure and believes that creating value and creating values must go hand in hand if the UK is to meet its housing, climate, and social impact goals. Join the Conversation: What would it take to retrofit homes at scale while putting people first? How can better homes reshape health, dignity, and belonging? Share your thoughts with us on Instagram or LinkedIn @TalkingPlacePodcast using #TalkingPlacePodcast Support the show

    41 min
  2. 023 - The role of cultural districts in our cities with Gregorio Scarpella

    JAN 8

    023 - The role of cultural districts in our cities with Gregorio Scarpella

    What role does culture play in shaping our cities, and how can collaboration across borders help places thrive? In this episode of Talking Place, host Tanisha Raffiuddin talks place with Gregorio Scarpella, Director of the Global Cultural Districts Network (GCDN), a worldwide network connecting cultural districts at the intersection of culture and urbanism. Drawing on his international journey and his leadership of a global peer network, Gregorio shares how cultural districts can act as catalysts for more inclusive, resilient, and human-centred cities. From governance and stewardship to climate action, equity, and relevance, the conversation explores how culture operates not as an add-on, but as essential urban infrastructure  Together, they unpack how collaboration, care, and curiosity can turn places into shared civic assets and why cultural leadership matters more than ever in a rapidly changing world  In this episode, you’ll learn: 🟣 What defines a cultural district and why GCDN avoids rigid models in favour of shared agendas and collaboration 🟣 How cultural districts sit between institutions and cities, unlocking impact greater than the sum of their parts 🟣 Why stewardship, programming, and “vibe” are as important as physical design in creating great places 🟣 How cultural districts worldwide are grappling with climate change, displacement, and questions of value 🟣 What successful examples like The Bentway in Toronto reveal about long-term, people-first placemaking  About Our Guest Gregorio Scarpella is the Director of the Global Cultural Districts Network (GCDN), a membership organisation supporting more than 70 cultural districts worldwide. Born in Brazil, raised in Switzerland, and now working globally, Gregorio brings an international perspective to cultural placemaking, governance, and urban collaboration. GCDN convenes cultural leaders across continents to share research, practice, and policy on issues ranging from public realm activation and social impact to climate resilience, equity, and digital transformation. Under Gregorio’s leadership, the network has expanded its global reach, research output, and role as a trusted forum for candid, peer-to-peer exchange  A passionate advocate for relevance, collaboration, and care, Gregorio believes culture is fundamental to human connection and that cities thrive when people feel welcome, safe, and able to gather. Join the Conversation: What makes a place feel welcoming, relevant, and alive? How can culture help cities respond to today’s biggest challenges? Share your thoughts with us on Instagram or LinkedIn @TalkingPlacePodcast using #TalkingPlacePodcast 🔗 Links & Mentions: 🌍 Global Cultural Districts Network (GCDN): https://www.gcdn.net 🏙️ The Bentway, Toronto: https://www.thebentway.ca 🎭 Quartier des Spectacles, Montreal: https://www.quartierdesspectacles.com 📍 Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center, Athens: https://www.snfcc.org To learn more about the host Tanisha Raffiuddin – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/tanishaa Website: www.conceptculture.co Twitter: @tanisha.rr Instagram: @tanisha.rr To learn more about Talking Place – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/talking-place-podcast Website: https://www.conceptculture.co/talking-place-podcast Instagram: @talkingplacepodcast X (Twitter): @tppodcast_ Bluesky: @talkingplace TikTok: @talkingplacepodcast To learn more about Concept Culture – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/concept-culture-uk Website: www.conceptculture.co Twitter: @_concep Support the show

    1h 5m
  3. 022 - The Impact of A Good Home with Ruth Skidmore

    12/09/2025

    022 - The Impact of A Good Home with Ruth Skidmore

    How do homes shape our health, happiness, and sense of belonging, and what does it take to design places where everyone can truly thrive? In this episode of Talking Place, host Tanisha Raffiuddin talks place with Ruth Skidmore, Social Impact Lead at Meeting Place, whose journey from architecture into social impact has shaped a people first approach to planning, development, and placemaking. Together, they explore why homes matter far beyond bricks and mortar, how community voices can meaningfully influence development, and why equitable, accessible, safe places are essential to a healthy and cohesive society. In this episode, you will learn: 🟣 How Ruth’s squiggly career from architecture to social impact shaped her perspective on place, community, and responsibility 🟣 How Meeting Place uses creative engagement methods from high street pop ups to school workshops and digital tools to reach people who are often left out of planning conversations 🟣 What The Impact of a Home report is trying to measure and why understanding the social and wellbeing impact of all types of homes really matters About Our Guest Ruth Skidmore is the Social Impact Lead at Meeting Place, where she works with developers, local authorities, institutions, and communities to embed social value, meaningful engagement, and equitable design into development projects of many different scales. Trained as an architect, Ruth’s career includes experience in design studios, sustainability consultancies, and social impact research. Her award winning masters thesis on social value calculators led to published work in The Developer and opened the door to her transition into impact led consultancy. At Meeting Place, she leads on community engagement strategies, social value research, and the development of The Impact of a Home, a new national framework designed to quantify how homes affect wellbeing, opportunity, and community strength. Ruth is a passionate advocate for creating places that are safe, inclusive, and accessible for everyone, prioritising face to face engagement, storytelling, and intergenerational dialogue to shape the future of the built environment. Join the Conversation: What makes a place feel like home, its design, its stories, or the people who shape it? Share your thoughts with us on Instagram or LinkedIn @TalkingPlacePodcast using the hashtag #TalkingPlacePodcast Links and Mentions: Meeting Place: https://www.meeting-place.uk Impact of a home report: https://meeting-place.uk/impact-of-a-home/ To learn more about the host Tanisha Raffiuddin – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/tanishaa Website: www.conceptculture.co Twitter: @tanisha.rr Instagram: @tanisha.rr To learn more about Talking Place – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/talking-place-podcast Website: https://www.conceptculture.co/talking-place-podcast Instagram: @talkingplacepodcast X (Twitter): @tppodcast_ Bluesky: @talkingplace TikTok: @talkingplacepodcast To learn more about Concept Culture – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/concept-culture-uk Website: www.conceptculture.co Twitter: @_conceptculture Instagram: @_conceptculture Sign up to our Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/conceptculture/newslettersignup Support the show

    1 hr
  4. 021 - Why real estate is broken and how to fix it with Ben Cross

    11/27/2025

    021 - Why real estate is broken and how to fix it with Ben Cross

    How do we fix a broken real estate system built on short-term returns? In this episode of Talking Place, host Tanisha Raffiuddin ‘talks place’ with Ben Cross, Founder of MORE, a purpose-led real estate and development company rethinking how we value, retrofit, and regenerate buildings. Together, they explore why the current real estate model is “broken,” how ethics and care must be central to decision-making, and why true sustainability requires both financial viability and social responsibility. In this episode, you’ll learn: 🟣 What it means to deliver purpose-led development in practice, and why impact matters more than scale 🟣 Why doing the right thing starts with taking responsibility yourself, instead of ‘outsourcing being a good person’ 🟣 How MORE is retrofitting one of London’s most misunderstood postmodern landmarks, No. 1 Poultry, into a future-ready workplace 🟣 The realities behind viability, why “profit” shouldn’t be a dirty word, and how it could be reframed  as “economic vitality” 🟣 How MORE’s collaboration with UK Green Building Council’s to create new retrofit taxonomy could simplify and accelerate the decarbonisation of existing buildings About Our Guest Ben Cross is the Founder of MORE, a development and investment business driven by purpose, design integrity, and impact. With a background in both architecture and real estate, Ben has worked across the full lifecycle of the built environment, from design and planning to investment and delivery. MORE is leading the retrofit of the Grade II* listed No. 1 Poultry in the City of London, while collaborating with the UK Green Building Council to define a national retrofit taxonomy that helps the industry move faster, smarter, and more sustainably. A passionate advocate for ethical decision-making and pragmatic sustainability, Ben believes that the industry must “care a lot more”, about people, place, and progress. Join the Conversation: How do we rebuild trust and integrity in real estate, through policy, people, or purpose? Share your thoughts with us on Instagram or LinkedIn @TalkingPlacePodcast using the hashtag #TalkingPlacePodcast 🔗 Links & Mentions:  🏢 MORE: https://www.more.london  🌆 No. 1 Poultry, City of London: https://historicengland.org.uk 🌍 UK Green Building Council: https://www.ukgbc.org To learn more about the host Tanisha Raffiuddin – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/tanishaa Website: www.conceptculture.co Twitter: @tanisha.rr Instagram: @tanisha.rr To learn more about Talking Place – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/talking-place-podcast Website: https://www.conceptculture.co/talking-place-podcast Instagram: @talkingplacepodcast X (Twitter): @tppodcast_ Bluesky: @talkingplace TikTok: @talkingplacepodcast To learn more about Concept Culture – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/concept-culture-uk Website: www.conceptculture.co Twitter: @_conceptculture Instagram: @_conceptculture Sign up to our Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/conceptculture/newslettersignup Support the show

    1h 9m
  5. 020 - Reimagining Public Practice with John Stiles

    11/14/2025

    020 - Reimagining Public Practice with John Stiles

    How can Local Authorities create places people truly belong to, and what does public placeshaping look like in action? In this episode of Talking Place, host Tanisha Raffiuddin ‘talks place’ with John Stiles, Placemaking Manager at Brent Council, recorded live at the Brent Civic Centre in the heart of Wembley Park. An architect and town planner, John shares his journey from private practice to public sector placemaking, and why he believes the biggest impact in shaping better cities can happen inside local government. Together, they explore how councils are rethinking procurement, partnerships, and value creation, and what it means to shape places that people care for, and that care for them in return. In this episode, you’ll learn: 🟣 How John transitioned from private practice to public placemaking through the Public Practice programme 🟣 Why local authorities can deliver impact faster, despite perceptions of bureaucracy 🟣 How councils are becoming more entrepreneurial, generating value and revenue from in-house expertise 🟣 The challenges and ethics of procurement, and why John calls it “an absolute dark art” 🟣 What makes Brent one of London’s most diverse and dynamic boroughs, from Wembley’s transformation to Neasden’s cultural pride 🟣 How build-to-rent communities are reshaping the idea of belonging and transience 🟣 Why placemaking should be participatory, bringing community voices and young people into the process 🟣 The future of Brent: from growth areas and green infrastructure to AI-driven efficiencies in planning About Our Guest John Stiles is an architect and town planner currently serving as Placemaking Manager at the London Borough of Brent. He leads on strategic masterplans across the borough’s key growth areas, combining built and natural environment disciplines to shape inclusive, sustainable neighbourhoods. Before joining Brent, John worked in private practice with Bell Phillips and McCraner-Lamington, and later joined Transport for London’s Places for London through the Public Practice programme. He is also a member of the Folkestone and Hythe Place Panel, and lectures across UK architecture and planning schools. Passionate about social impact, John believes great places emerge from collaboration, where councils, communities, and designers share responsibility for shaping cities that work for everyone. Join the Conversation: How can the public sector lead the way in creating places people genuinely care about? Share your thoughts with us on Instagram or LinkedIn @TalkingPlacePodcast using the hashtag #TalkingPlacePodcast 🔗 Links & Mentions: 🏛️ Brent Council – https://www.brent.gov.uk 🏙️ Public Practice – https://www.publicpractice.org.uk To learn more about the host Tanisha Raffiuddin – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/tanishaa Website: www.conceptculture.co Twitter: @tanisha.rr Instagram: @tanisha.rr To learn more about Talking Place – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/talking-place-podcast Website: https://www.conceptculture.co/talking-place-podcast Instagram: @talkingplacepodcast X (Twitter): @tppodcast_ Bluesky: @talkingplace TikTok: @talkingplacepodcast To learn more about Concept Culture – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/concept-culture-uk Website: www.conceptculture.co Twitter: @_conceptculture Instagram: @_conceptculture Sign up to our Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/conceptculture/newslettersignup Support the show

    1h 15m
  6. 019 - Designing Cities That Last: Masterplanning The Future with Bob Allies (Part 1)

    10/16/2025

    019 - Designing Cities That Last: Masterplanning The Future with Bob Allies (Part 1)

    What makes a city truly work, and how do we design places that endure the test of time? In this episode of Talking Place, host Tanisha Raffiuddin ‘talks place’ with Bob Allies, Partner at Allies and Morrison, whose work has shaped some of the UK’s most transformative urban projects - from King’s Cross and the Olympic Park to Brent Cross Town, Bath, and the London College of Fashion building at East Bank, recently shortlisted for the 2025 RIBA Stirling Prize. Together, they explore how masterplans evolve over decades, the importance of continuity and connection, and why a city masterplan should room for change, adaptation, and community ownership. In this episode, you’ll learn: 🟣 How Allies and Morrison’s early housing projects in Milton Keynes and Brindleyplace, Birmingham, shaped their approach to urban design  🟣 Why continuity, hierarchy, and enclosure are essential ingredients in creating places people can navigate and understand  🟣 How long-term masterplans like King’s Cross balance flexibility with fixity - and why a masterplan should be seen as a process, not a plan  🟣 The story behind the London College of Fashion at East Bank - and how it captures the creative energy of ‘making’   🟣 What it means to serve as Bath’s first Architect in Residence, and how stewardship and design leadership can help historic cities face modern challenges  🟣 Bob’s reflections on urban change, public space, and why cities must evolve to stay alive About Our Guest Bob Allies is a partner of Allies and Morrison; Architect in Residence for the City of Bath and Professor of Architecture at the University of Bath; member of Council and chair of the Faculty of Architecture at the British School at Rome; chair of Design Review for Design South East; a member of the Council of the Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain and a trustee of the Historic Towns Trust.  Allies and Morrison is the London-based practice behind major urban regeneration schemes including King’s Cross, the Olympic Park, Brent Cross Town, and Bankside. He also serves as the Architect in Residence for the City of Bath, advising on how to balance heritage, climate resilience, and the city’s evolving identity. A passionate advocate for long-term design thinking, Bob believes that cities thrive when they evolve - shaped by collaboration, continuity, and care. Join the Conversation: What makes a city last — its design, its people, or its ability to change? Share your thoughts with us on Instagram or LinkedIn @TalkingPlacePodcast using the hashtag #talkingplacepodcast  Links & Mentions: 🏛️ Allies and Morrison: https://www.alliesandmorrison.com 🎓 London College of Fashion, East Bank: https://lcf.london.ac.uk 🏆 RIBA Stirling Prize 2025 Shortlist: https://www.architecture.com 🌆 City of Bath, Architect in Residence: https://visitbath.co.uk To learn more about the host Tanisha Raffiuddin – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/tanishaa Website: www.conceptculture.co Twitter: @tanisha.rr Instagram: @tanisha.rr To learn more about Talking Place – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/talking-place-podcast Website: https://www.conceptculture.co/talking-place-podcast Instagram: @talkingplacepodcast X (Twitter): @tppodcast_ Bluesky: @talkingplace TikTok: @talkingplacepodcast To learn more about Concept Culture – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/concept-culture-uk Website: www.conceptculture.co Twitter: @_conceptculture Instagram: @_conceptculture Sign up to our Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/conceptculture/newslettersignup Support the show

    42 min
  7. 019 - Designing Cities That Last: Masterplanning The Future with Bob Allies (Part 2)

    10/16/2025

    019 - Designing Cities That Last: Masterplanning The Future with Bob Allies (Part 2)

    What makes a city truly work, and how do we design places that endure the test of time? In this episode of Talking Place, host Tanisha Raffiuddin ‘talks place’ with Bob Allies, Partner at Allies and Morrison, whose work has shaped some of the UK’s most transformative urban projects - from King’s Cross and the Olympic Park to Brent Cross Town, Bath, and the London College of Fashion building at East Bank, recently shortlisted for the 2025 RIBA Stirling Prize. Together, they explore how masterplans evolve over decades, the importance of continuity and connection, and why a city masterplan should room for change, adaptation, and community ownership. In this episode, you’ll learn: 🟣 How Allies and Morrison’s early housing projects in Milton Keynes and Brindleyplace, Birmingham, shaped their approach to urban design  🟣 Why continuity, hierarchy, and enclosure are essential ingredients in creating places people can navigate and understand  🟣 How long-term masterplans like King’s Cross balance flexibility with fixity - and why a masterplan should be seen as a process, not a plan  🟣 The story behind the London College of Fashion at East Bank - and how it captures the creative energy of ‘making’   🟣 What it means to serve as Bath’s first Architect in Residence, and how stewardship and design leadership can help historic cities face modern challenges  🟣 Bob’s reflections on urban change, public space, and why cities must evolve to stay alive About Our Guest Bob Allies is a partner of Allies and Morrison; Architect in Residence for the City of Bath and Professor of Architecture at the University of Bath; member of Council and chair of the Faculty of Architecture at the British School at Rome; chair of Design Review for Design South East; a member of the Council of the Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain and a trustee of the Historic Towns Trust.  Allies and Morrison is the London-based practice behind major urban regeneration schemes including King’s Cross, the Olympic Park, Brent Cross Town, and Bankside. He also serves as the Architect in Residence for the City of Bath, advising on how to balance heritage, climate resilience, and the city’s evolving identity. A passionate advocate for long-term design thinking, Bob believes that cities thrive when they evolve - shaped by collaboration, continuity, and care. Join the Conversation: What makes a city last — its design, its people, or its ability to change? Share your thoughts with us on Instagram or LinkedIn @TalkingPlacePodcast using the hashtag #talkingplacepodcast  Links & Mentions: 🏛️ Allies and Morrison: https://www.alliesandmorrison.com 🎓 London College of Fashion, East Bank: https://lcf.london.ac.uk 🏆 RIBA Stirling Prize 2025 Shortlist: https://www.architecture.com 🌆 City of Bath, Architect in Residence: https://visitbath.co.uk To learn more about the host Tanisha Raffiuddin – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/tanishaa Website: www.conceptculture.co Twitter: @tanisha.rr Instagram: @tanisha.rr To learn more about Talking Place – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/talking-place-podcast Website: https://www.conceptculture.co/talking-place-podcast Instagram: @talkingplacepodcast X (Twitter): @tppodcast_ Bluesky: @talkingplace TikTok: @talkingplacepodcast To learn more about Concept Culture – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/concept-culture-uk Website: www.conceptculture.co Twitter: @_conceptculture Instagram: @_conceptculture Sign up to our Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/conceptculture/newslettersignup Support the show

    35 min
  8. 018 - Architecture That Travels: From Expos to Olympics with ES Global

    09/30/2025

    018 - Architecture That Travels: From Expos to Olympics with ES Global

    What if buildings didn’t just get demolished, but were moved, reused, and reborn? In this episode of Talking Place, Tanisha Raffiuddin ‘talks place’ with Olly Watts (Joint CEO) and Amy Casterton (Business Development Director) of ES Global, the company pioneering relocatable, modular architecture for some of the world’s biggest stages - from World Expos and Olympic Games to the ABBA Voyage arena in East London.  Together, they dive into the fascinating world of delivering demountable structures for global events, and how reusable and relocatable architecture is reshaping the future of events, cities, and the circular economy. In this episode, you’ll learn:  🟣 How World  Expos and Olympic pavilions can become catalysts for innovation and legacy in construction  🟣 The challenges of delivering multiple national pavilions across cultures, time zones, and politics on projects like the Osaka World Expo 2025  🟣 What it takes to build high-quality, code-compliant venues designed to move and adapt to new locations  🟣 How projects like the ABBA Voyage arena and the Jakarta International Velodrome prove that circular design can leave a lasting cultural impact About Our Guests: Olly Watts is Joint CEO and co-founder of ES Global, leading its global expansion from music touring roots to landmark projects across Expos, Olympics, and beyond. Amy Casterton is Business Development Director at ES Global, focused on forging partnerships and new opportunities across the company’s international offices in the UK, Japan, Australia, Saudi Arabia, and the US. Resources & Links Mentioned: Osaka Expo 2025: https://www.expo2025.or.jp/en/ ABBA Voyage: https://abbavoyage.com Whether you’re a developer, designer, or urbanist curious about the future of the built environment, this episode reveals how architecture can travel, and how reuse and modular design are redefining placemaking on a global stage. Join the Conversation: What role should reusable, relocatable architecture play in shaping our cities? Share your thoughts with us on Instagram or LinkedIn @TalkingPlacePodcast with the hashtag #TalkingPlacePodcast 🔗 Links & Mentions: ES Global:  https://esglobal.co.uk Olly Watts Linkedin: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/olly-watts-78059635 Amy Casterton LinkedIn: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/amy-casterton-85aa0926 To learn more about the host Tanisha Raffiuddin – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/tanishaa Website: www.conceptculture.co Twitter: @tanisha.rr Instagram: @tanisha.rr To learn more about Talking Place – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/talking-place-podcast Website: https://www.conceptculture.co/talking-place-podcast Instagram: @talkingplacepodcast X (Twitter): @tppodcast_ Bluesky: @talkingplace TikTok: @talkingplacepodcast To learn more about Concept Culture – visit here: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/concept-culture-uk Website: www.conceptculture Support the show

    1h 13m

About

Welcome to Talking Place  The podcast bringing placemakers and storytellers together to talk about place. The Talking Place podcast is your go-to podcast for exploring the power of storytelling in shaping narratives and identities for neighbourhoods, towns, cities, and nations. Join your host, Concept Culture’s Creative Director Tanisha Raffiuddin as she talks with experts across the built environment, sharing their knowledge and stories on placemaking, branding, sustainability, language, finance, health, culture, and more. Whether you are an urban designer, architect, planner, developer, investor, marketeer, or simply curious about places and stories, this podcast is for you.Listen to our latest episodes of Talking Place and join the conversation on social media! Follow us on: Instagram: @talkingplacepodcastX: @tppodcast_ LinkedIn: Talking Place PodcastBluesky @talkingplaceTikTok: @talkingplacepodcastHost: Tanisha Raffiuddin Production: Concept Culture