The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

What Should The Carbon-Free Futurama Look Like?

<p>The Futurama exhibit at the 1939 World's Fair excited an entire generation about suburbia. At a meeting of the Citistates Group, policy wonks wondered whether it's possible to create a new vision of a Carbon-Free Futurama.</p>

July 29 - California Planning & Development Report

Astor Place Slated for Improvement

<p>New York's DOT is proposing a new plan to transform Astor Place from feeling like a freeway median to a pedestrian-friendly public space.</p>

July 29 - The Villager

Natural Gas Boom Brings New Option to City Drivers

<p>Officials in Fort Worth, Texas weigh regulations for natural gas compression stations arising from a boom in drilling shale for natural gas.</p>

July 29 - Fort Worth Star-Telegram

Can Small Town America Survive the End of Cheap Gas?

<p>With few local job opportunities, residents in small towns have grown accustomed to long commutes to cities. But with high gas prices making those commutes unaffordable, some economists wonder how much longer small towns can retain their populations.</p>

July 29 - The Kansas City Star

Time for Government 2.0

<p>With increasing amounts of data collected and held by governments, there's a lot of opportunity to make use of it for the betterment of communities, according to this column from Neal Peirce.</p>

July 29 - Citiwire


Community Energy Planning Paying Off in Germany

<p>A small town in Germany is demonstrating that a strategy of distributed, renewable and locally-controlled energy production can not only be Earth-friendly but profitable.</p>

July 29 - Victoria Times-Colonist

Urban Neighborhood Seeks Grocery Store

<p>San Francisco's Tenderloin district- notoriously seedy and poor- is also one the densest neighborhoods in the city, and greatly in need of fresh produce and groceries. City officials are trying to attract a store, but it's a tough sell.</p>

July 29 - The San Francisco Chronicle


New York's Suburban Bicyclists

<p>Whether for exercise, eco-consciousness or necessity, a growing number of suburban New York commuters are using two wheels instead of four.</p>

July 29 - The New York Times

A Greener Fannie and Freddie?

<p>Friends of the Earth president Brent Blackwelder and journalist James S. Henry believe that the federal bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac needs to come with some very green strings attached.</p>

July 28 - The Nation

Kids Afraid to Play in Public

<p>A recent report by The Australian Commission of Children and Young People reveals that kids in Sydney are too afraid to play outside or ride the bus.</p>

July 28 - The Daily Telegraph, Sydney

Yukon Ho! The New Rush North

<p>It's Gold Rush days long since passed, Canada's Yukon Territory was until recently a wild, myth-bound place. But now oil and gas revenues are fueling new construction and population growth.</p>

July 28 - The Globe & Mail

Property Owners Spooked By Eminent Domain Letter

<p>1,300 property owners in Camden, New Jersey whose homes are in a new redevelopment zone were sent letters explaining eminent domain, but the city says it has no intention of taking their homes.</p>

July 28 - The Philadelphia Inquirer

BLOG POST

'Expose, Propose & Politicize': The Planners Network Conference, Winnipeg, July 17th – 19th, 2008

<p> <span> <!--[endif]--></span><span>As a grassroots North American organization for “people involved in planning,” <a href="http://www.plannersnetwork.org/">Planners Network</a> (PN) attracts not just professionals and academics but laypersons and activists as well. This year’s PN conference was a dramatic debut for the <a href="http://www.pnmb.org/">Winnipeg chapter of PN</a>, which was only formed in January of 2006. The conference title, “Flat not Boring” was an amusing reference to southern Manitoba’s notoriously unvarying geography.

July 28 - Michael Dudley

Thousands of Bridges Remain in Disrepair

<p>Some states have made progress in repairing old bridges since the 2007 Minneapolis bridge collapse, but many states still have thousands in disrepair. Billions are needed to get them up-to-date.</p>

July 28 - USA Today

Embracing 'Tactility'

<p>Architect Ken-Ichi Sasaki believes that planners have focused too much on the visual to the detriment of the tactile.</p>

July 28 - The New York Sun

Home Economics

<p>Philip Langdon comments on the the economy of oil and its effects on urban design in the July/August issue of <em>New Urban News</em>.</p>

July 28 - New Urban News

Yellowstone National Park, 2011

<p>This editorial cartoon from <em>Mother Jones</em> offers a look at a possible future for Yellowstone National Park.</p>

July 28 - Mother Jones

Exurbs Hit Hard by Housing Crisis

<p>Exurban developments are struggling to control their rampant foreclosure rates and plummeting housing values.</p>

July 28 - The Christian Science Monitor

FEATURE

Columnist Neal Peirce Discusses the Past and Future of the Metropolis

Planetizen talks with journalist and syndicated columnist Neal Peirce about the trends he's seen over the course of his career and the future of America's metropolitan regions.

July 28 - Planetizen

Hercules Backs 'New', 'Smart' Waterfront

<p>Plans for a "new urbanist/smart growth" development on the waterfront of the San Francisco Bay Area town of Hercules has received unanimous approval from the city council, eliminating the need for inclusion on the November ballot.</p>

July 28 - The Contra Costa Times

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