When President Donald Trump unveiled the idea of building “Freedom Cities,” it struck some as bold, others as controversial, but to many, it was exactly the kind of visionary proposal America needed. The nation is currently facing a historic housing shortage, spiraling infrastructure costs, and growing uncertainty about the future of work. In these situations, Trump’s plan represents a frontier moment that could redefine American growth in the 21st century.

Why Freedom Cities?
The United States is short between 3.8 and 5.5 million housing units. For millions of families, homeownership is out of reach, rents are unaffordable, and entire generations are stuck in cycles of financial instability. Traditional approaches, like subsidies, zoning tweaks, and piecemeal housing programs, have failed to keep up with demand.
Trump’s proposal cuts through the incrementalism. Instead of patching old systems, it calls for the creation of entirely new, master-planned metropolitan centers on underutilized federal land. These Freedom Cities would be built from the ground up, with integrated housing, water, energy, transportation, and commerce. This is an industrial-era scale project, something akin to when Henry Ford democratized the automobile or when America built the interstate highway system.
The Design of Growth
Freedom Cities are about scale and integration. Unlike typical housing developments that sprawl haphazardly, these communities would be master-planned to include:
- Housing at Every Level: from starter homes to high-rise apartments, designed for ownership, not just renting.
- Integrated Industry and Jobs: data centers, manufacturing hubs, and energy facilities located within reach of neighborhoods.
- Resilient Water Systems: desalination plants, wastewater reclamation, and aquifer recharge built into the design.
- Reliable Power: using a mix of natural gas, renewables, and small modular reactors to keep costs predictable.
- Transportation Infrastructure: airports, rail, and highways designed from the outset, ensuring mobility and connectivity.
A Vision Backed by Solutions
Robert Simpson’s new book, From Hydrants to Housing: Reframing the Western Crisis, highlights that Freedom Cities are not utopian ideas, but practical solutions to America’s intertwined crises of housing, water, and infrastructure. Drawing from his expertise in construction management and site development, he lays out how these cities could be financed, built, and sustained, not just in the United States, but as exportable models for Baja California, the Middle East, Africa, and beyond.
The book shows how Freedom Cities could restore the American Dream of homeownership, anchor economic stability, and project U.S. leadership abroad. It also warns about what happens if we fail to act and seize the opportunity.
