The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

A Big Idea: Solar-Powered Cargo Ships

Toyota has hired two firms to build solar panels to augment the diesel engines on their car-carrying behemoths. The result will be a cut in CO2 emissions of 1 to 2 percent per year, or about 20 tons.

September 4 - Wired

Community Participation Shapes Katrina Recovery

Steven Bingler of Concordia Planning and Architecture discusses the process and thinking behind the Unified New Orleans Plan, which engaged large numbers of citizens to plan the recovery of their neighborhoods in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.

September 4 - The Planning Report

The Middle East's 'Urban Prison'

In this article from <em>Progressive Planning</em>, Tom Angotti looks at Gaza and the land use regulations that have imposed an "urban apartheid".

September 4 - Progressive Planning

FEATURE

The Black Cloud: Using Games to Understand Air Quality

Human behavior and land use affect air quality, and those effects are very distinct at the local level. A new environmental game fusing public participation, air quality sensors and web technology shows how.

September 4 - Nate Berg

The Quest for the Perfect City

The director of the Design Museum in London reflects on the mostly unfortunate quest for perfection in city planning and architecture, as the museum's new exhibit, <em>Design Cities,</em> opens.

September 3 - The Times Online


China Takes Bus Rapid Transit Seriously

China is investing in complete Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) systems in cities from Beijing to Kunming.

September 3 - chinabrt.org

Can Land Trusts Keep Housing Affordable?

At a time of extreme housing market volatility, community land trusts are seen as a more sustainable form of tenure.

September 3 - Yes! Magazine


Architect Says 'Stop Planning For Cars'

Columnist and architect Arrol Gelner comes to grips with the end of the automobile era.

September 3 - Inman News

The Disappearing American Barn

Historic barns are disappearing across the country, along with the way of life they represent. But a growing number of towns and citizen groups are working to preserve them.

September 3 - The Christian Science Monitor

Housing Discrimination Adding to Post-Katrina Hardships

People of color are finding it more and more difficult to secure housing in New Orleans, as new and old forms of housing discrimination -- and overt racism -- are conspiring to keep them out.

September 3 - The Nation

Instant Cities in the Persian Gulf

Rami Khouri of the Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and International Affairs notes the unprecedented phenomenon of the "instant" cities of the Persian Gulf which, for all their wealth, lack civil societies.

September 3 - The Globe and Mail

Forget Everything You've Learned

Bill Thompson of the ASLA reports on a public space in Silver Spring, Maryland that upends everything landscape architects and planners think they know about what makes a successful public space.

September 3 - ASLA's The Dirt blog

New York Full of Possibility for Green Roofs

The Governor of New York recently signed off on tax abatements for developers who install green roofs

September 3 - The New York Times

Gas at 87-Cents a Gallon? Yes, But it's GAS!

Utah appears to be just what Texas oilman, T. Boone Pickens, had in mind with his new energy plan that calls for widespread use of natural gas to replace gasoline and diesel, even though only one vehicle is manufactured to run on it.

September 3 - The New York Times

Bicycle Couriers Up, Motorized Couriers Down

In New York City, bicycle courier businesses are witnessing new growth, while motorized couriers struggle to turn profit in an age of rising full-costs.

September 3 - The New York Times

BLOG POST

The Mystery of Ground Transportation

<p> Despite the rising costs of belonging to the jet set, I took my share of flights for a few business trips and boondoggles this summer. Though most of my plane tickets were paid for, my transportation to and from my respective airports were not. Like any good urbanist, I approached each airport as a challenge to see how cheaply and quickly I could get from the airport to my in-town destination. <br /> <br /> These were challenges that I -- or, rather, the cities -- failed more often than they passed. <br />

September 2 - Josh Stephens

What Cities Have the Best Brands?

A new study ranks European cities on their brand, taking into a account sense of place, civic pride, and business climate. Paris ranks first (no surprise), but the research also reveals a handful of 'undervalued' cities.

September 2 - Citymayors.com

'Pay As You Drive' Insurance

'Pay as you drive' insurance will soon be a reality in California, surviving the state senate as a voluntary program that environmental groups say will encourage people to drive less by saving them money on their car insurance.

September 2 - San Francisco Examiner

Milwaukee More Bike-Friendly than Residents Realize

One resident finds it surprisingly easy to live on Milwaukee's East Side without a car.

September 2 - Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel

Mixed-Use for Volgograd

Volgograd, Russia (formerly Stalingrad) is getting a new mixed-use city center, designed with the idea of "shopping as museum and exhibition space".

September 2 - World Architecture News

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