Climate change has become a focal point of urban planning in the U.S. and abroad as cities grapple with so-called sustainability. I’ve been a critic of many attempts to implement sustainability plans, not so much because I disagree with the intent as much as I believe the tools used to achieve sustainability are not particularly effective.
Urban Sustainability
Using Adaptive Reuse to Scale the Urban Future
LA City Council Moves Closer To River Centric Development
Urbanism Without Effort
"No Net Loss" for Third Places?
Fusion Businesses as Indicators of Urban Change
Most Successful Bus Rapid Transit Stalls Out
Sustainable Practices Find a Home in the Americas
Should Retrofitting Our Suburbs Take Center Stage?
Mass Transit on Track in Tehran

What is Green Urbanism?
The term Green Urbanism keeps showing up unexpectedly in newspaper articles, conference session titles, blog posts, and casual conversation. While there is an innate, intuitive sense of the meaning, green urbanism may also seem as elusive as it is evocative. Having given this topic a fair amount of thought over the past several years, I, and my colleague and collaborator Ted Bardacke, arrived at the following working definition:
green urbanism: the practice of creating communities mutually beneficial to humans and the environment





















