The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
Predicting Where The Traffic Will Flow
<p>IBM announced the development of a new traffic prediction tool that could help cities maximize their existing infrastructure investments.</p>
Why Gentrification Is Good
<p>Opponents to gentrification often have a romanticized view of neighborhoods that prevents them from seeing how development is beneficial to everyone in a community -- rich and poor.</p>
What To Consider When Planning Commuter Rail
<p>Cities contemplating commuter rail systems should first look at the characteristics of other successful systems.</p>
Downsizing The American Dream
<p>Are Americans ready to shed their preference for oversized homes? With new regulations in the pipeline, and sustainability all the rage, opponents of McMansions certainly hope so.</p>
Congestion Pricing For Los Angeles: An Open Letter To Mayor Villaraigosa
<p>Robert W. Poole of the Reason Foundation argues for HOT Lanes on Los Angeles freeways.</p>
Concerns Surface Over Plans For Urban Riverfront Park
<p>Some residents of Columbia, South Carolina's Granby neighborhood, near the banks of the Congaree River, are concerned about how plans to redevelop the land along the river into a new riverfront park might alter the land's natural features.</p>
Two Examples Of Green Building: Fancy And Frugal
<p>While pricey eco-chic homes garner lots of attention, living green doesn't have to mean expensive materials and complicated retrofits.</p>
Learning Architecture And Planning In The Land Of Suburbia
<p>Ellen Dunham-Jones, director of the architecture program at Georgia Tech, thinks architects and planners need to understand suburbia better before they can begin the work of retrofitting our sprawling development patterns towards smart growth.</p>
Making Mexico City More Livable
<p>The city's new mayor is hoping to follow the footsteps of Bogotá's Enrique Peñalosa and transform the Mexican capital of 20 million inhabitants into a people- and environmentally-friendly metropolis.</p>
BLOG POST
Tender is the Strip Mall
Every summer I make a pilgrimage to Scott and Zelda's graves, in Rockville, Maryland. Sure, I could pay homage by going to Cap d'Antibes, where they whooped it up every summer, but the Euro is so high. And Rockville is so ... scenic.<div><br /></div><div><br /></div><div>F. Scott Fitzgerald and his rather nutty wife are buried under a huge live oak next to St. Mary's Church, where their daughter moved them in the 70s. She probably wouldn't have done it if she had known what would happen to Rockville: the Rockville Pike, an endless strip mall that crescendos with Bloomingdale's and eventually fizzles out with Marlo Furniture. </div><div><br /></div><div>
Americans: Don't Stop Me From Driving (Or Parking) My Car
<p>Whether is a proposal for congestion pricing in 2007 or the advent of parking meters in the 1930s, Americans have a way of being hostile towards plans that interfere with their 'constitutional right' to free driving and parking.</p>
When People Run Away From Their Home
<p>Municipal officials, real estate professionals, and neighborhood residents are struggling with the new suburban phenomenon of home abandonment.</p>
Working Together For Great Neighborhoods
<p>In Kalamazoo, Michigan, citizens of all ages are engaging each other to create and maintain safe and active neighborhoods.</p>
The Rise Of The Surburban Slum?
<p>William Fulton observes that while high-income households are flocking to the inner-city and gobbling up pricey condos, poor families are having to double and triple up just to afford a home in the suburbs.</p>
A 'Giant Step Forward' For Downtown Los Angeles
<p>City officials are considering ordinances that will allow builders to construct more housing units downtown.</p>
Chicago Misses Out On Congestion Pricing Funding
<p>Though officials proposed several promising schemes, a lack of quickly executable plans knocked the region from contention for federal funds.</p>
Georgia Hill Country A Case Study For Stopping Sprawl
<p>Planners and environmentalists are hopefully that the use of transfer development rights (TDR) in the Chattahoochee Hill Country south of Atlanta can serve as a model for land conservation efforts nationwide.</p>
Kansas City Behind In Light Rail
<p>Even with a voter approved plan, the Kansas City metro region is only beginning to talk about light rail construction -- to its determent, argues one columnist.</p>
$500 Million Trailer Park Sale Falls Through
<p>A developer that had offered to make the residents of a Florida seaside community overnight millionaires has walked away from the deal after negotiations stalled.</p>
A Turning 'Ponte' for Jo-Burg?
<p>Johannesburg's Ponte City, a once-exclusive whites-only address now at the center of a dangerous, abandoned part of the city, will undergo a major renovation project featuring affordable housing, with the aim of turning the neighborhood around.</p>
Pagination
City of Moorpark
City of Tustin
Tyler Technologies
City of Astoria
Transportation Research & Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University
Chaddick Institute at DePaul University
Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada
Toledo-Lucas County Plan Commissions
Urban Design for Planners 1: Software Tools
This six-course series explores essential urban design concepts using open source software and equips planners with the tools they need to participate fully in the urban design process.
Planning for Universal Design
Learn the tools for implementing Universal Design in planning regulations.