No Address, No Ice Cream, No Problem: Carmel-by-the-Sea

Carmel-by-the-Sea, California is a place that has spent a century saying no. No street addresses. No chain stores. No ice cream on public sidewalks — technically, at least. This episode unpacks the civic machinery behind Carmel's famous quirks, what it cost them, and what they got in return.

No Address, No Ice Cream, No Problem: Carmel-by-the-Sea
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Carmel-by-the-Sea is a one-square-mile village on the California coast where the civic culture has spent a hundred years being very specific — sometimes absurdly specific — about what kind of place it wants to be. This episode walks through the layered ordinances that shape Carmel's character: the ban on street addresses, the legally-questionable high-heel restriction, the ice cream controversy that briefly made Clint Eastwood the most famous small-town mayor in America, and the serious machinery of zoning that has kept chain stores out of the village for decades. The story is genuinely funny in places, and genuinely uncomfortable in others — the same rules that preserve the cypress trees and the cottage architecture also keep out the apartments and the workers who serve the town.
The comparison to Monterey, three miles up the peninsula, is the sharpest way to see what Carmel chose and what it gave up. Monterey took the mainstream path — commercial harbor, chain hotels, Costco — and has twice the population and far more affordable housing. Carmel has the storybook streetscape, the P.O. box ritual that turns the post office into a daily commons, and house prices that start around two million dollars. Neither answer is obviously right. That tension is the whole episode.

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