The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
A New Model For The Eco-Town
<p>This article from <em>Building</em> looks at a new environmentally sustainable suburb near Stockholm and weighs its applicability in England as a model for Prime Minister Gordon Brown's proposed eco-towns.</p>
Planning Skakeup In Salt Lake City
<p>Responding to pressure from neighborhood residents and a poor grade from a government audit, the city's planning department will be reorganized to ensure proper procedures are followed.</p>
Living Green With Joel Stein
<p>Los Angeles Times humorist Joel Stein gets advice on green living from actor and environmental activist Ed Begley.</p>
Italian Cities Are Slowing Down
<p>More and more Italian cities are getting on board the "Slow City" movement, from the big to the tiny.</p>
San Francisco Bay Area Ponders Gas Tax Hike
<p>With concerns about global warming at an all time high, the region's policy makers think the time is right for a 10 cent gas fee.</p>
Taking The 'Public' Out Of The Public Library
<p>The public library system in Jackson County, Oregon, is part of a growing trend: outsourcing and privatizing public services.</p>
Montreal Announces Bike Rental System
<p>Following the example set by Paris and Lyon, Montreal plans to be the first city in North America to set up a large-scale "self-serve" public bicycle rental service.</p>
APA Lists Best North American Neighborhoods
<p>APA has published a list of its "Top Ten Neighborhoods". The list tends towards the coasts, but includes two inland outliers.</p>
Time For A Vision In Little Saigon
<p>After about 30 years of organic developments, Little Saigon, also named "the capital of Vietnamese America", is seeking a planning and architecture vision.</p>
Property Value Compensation Measure Shot Down In Alaska
<p>An Alaska property rights measure that would have required the government to compensate landowners for any public projects that reduce property values was defeated by more than a 2-to-1 margin.</p>
Friday Funny: No Kitchen, But Close To The Food Court
<p>The leader of an artist's collective was recently charged with trespassing after he was found by security guards inside a small furnished room his group had secretly built more than four years ago on mall property.</p>
Isotopia
<p>More than two decades after a nuclear disaster forced a mass evacuation of the Chernobyl region, forests and wildlife have returned. Now it has become a premier vacation destination and the site of lavish homes.</p>
Man Kills Himself After Zoning Decision
<p>A barber shop owner in Clarksville, Tennessee shot and killed himself in front of the City Council after members voted against his request to rezone his home as commercial property.</p>
Los Angeles Air Will Set Record This Year - For Cleanness
<p>The good news is that L.A., the nation's most polluted city, will enjoy its cleanest year since records were first established 30 years ago. The bad news is that L.A. is still the country's ozone capital.</p>
Housing Slowdown Impacts Baltimore's Rebirth
<p>The housing bubble helped the city spur redevelopment of its central core. With the downturn, officials wonder if Baltimore can hold onto the progress it made towards revitalization.</p>
Idaho Looks For Smarter Growth
<p>As one of the fastest growing states in the nation, Idaho should begin to think hard about what that growth means to the environment, writes Rachel Winer.</p>
Report Calls For 'Unbalanced' Trasnportation Planning
<p>A recent report calling for less emphasis to be placed on cars than on other forms of transport has sparked a lively debate in Toronto.</p>
Rail Project Takes Precedence In New Mexico Budget
<p>A commuter rail project in Sante Fe is stressing New Mexico's state transportation budget, causing officials to announce delays on many road and highway projects. But many are upset that the rail plans will move ahead unhindered.</p>
Digital Signs Inform New York Bus Riders
<p>New York city has unveiled a pilot program that helps bus riders know when their bus is coming by employing GPS tracking devices and digital signs at some Manhattan bus stops.</p>
The Radiation Threat Of Municipal Wi-Fi
<p>This article from <em>The Idaho Observer</em> discusses the negative health impacts of radiation for cell phone towers -- negative impacts also associated with the municipal Wi-Fi networks proposed or already built in cities across the country.</p>
Pagination
City of Moorpark
City of Tustin
Tyler Technologies
City of Camden Redevelopment Agency
City of Astoria
Transportation Research & Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University
Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada
Toledo-Lucas County Plan Commissions
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