The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
New Downtown Design Center Trains Architects In Kansas City
<p>A new downtown facility will serve as a training ground for architecture students from Kansas State and the University of Kansas.</p>
Atlanta Seeks To Regulate McMansions
<p>The city council is considering new rules to prevent oversized homes on small lots, but some residents in older areas of the city are worried that the new regulations will stall redevelopment.</p>
University of Toronto Snags Richard Florida
<p>Florida is moving to Toronto, a city that ranks high on his own Creativity Index, to teach at the University of Toronto's Rotman School of Management.</p>
Politics And Assembly Report Appear To Doom NYC Congestion Plan
<p>In a bizarre unfolding of political events in Albany, it appears that the London-style congestion pricing plan proposed by Mayor Bloomberg will be replaced by a simplified TDM approach including telecommuting incentives and funding for express buses.</p>
The Greenest Generation
<p>Mike Davis reminds us that during World War II, recycling, conservation, car-pooling, bicycling and growing your own food were considered patriotic.</p>
California 2050: Sprawl Or Skyscrapers?
<p>Study predicts that by 2050 California's population will grow by 75%. Experts weigh in on what this means to planning for the state's growth.</p>
Preservationists Breathe Life Into Route 66
<p>Once a major tourist destination, Route 66 has lost much of its vigor since being decommissioned as a highway in 1985. But preservationists and entrepreneurs are attempting to revive Route 66 by renovating its many historic motels.</p>
Paris Looks To Revitalize Former Central Marketplace
<p>After numerous roadblocks and failed attempts at renovation, the city of Paris seems to have a promising jump on bringing new life to Les Halles, once one of the city's main marketplaces and now an area many Parisians completely avoid.</p>
Are America's Chinatowns A Thing Of The Past?
A development battle in Boston highlights the ongoing and controversial transformation of American's Chinatowns.
Environmental Concerns Surround Panama Canal Expansion
<p>As the Central American country moves forward with plans to expand the width of its heavily-used canal, locals and scientists question whether a reforestation plan along canal banks will affect the area's supply of drinking water.</p>
A Recipe For Grassroots Community Building
<p>A new book bills itself as a do-it-yourself guide for residents looking to strengthen the sense of community it their neighborhood.</p>
Betting On The Downtown Miami Renaissance
<p>Businesses are hoping the redevelopment activities in Downtown Miami will create a thriving commercial center. Until then, they are just trying to stay afloat.</p>
Philadelphia Quakers Set An Example Of Green Efficiency
<p>A religious group known for embracing simplicity presents a bold green vision for Center City.</p>
Wind Turbine Shortage Makes U.S. Look To Europe To Meet Demand
<p>President Bush has often looked toward American technology to make voluntary carbon emission reductions, but that technology often must come from abroad, where industrialized countries are required to make emission reductions per the Kyoto Protocol.</p>
Debunking Portland
<p>Randal O'Toole, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, argues the planning model that has made Portland, Oregon, a planner's dream has taken a far greater toll than the benefits it provides.</p>
BLOG POST
Where Are the Star Planners?
<p>I recently discovered the Greek urban planner <a href="http://www.doxiadis.org/page/default.asp?la=1&id=10">Constantinos Doxiadis</a> (1913-1975) through a biographical sketch by Ray Bromley in a <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/product-description/0470851600/sr=8-2/qid=1184009865/ref=dp_proddesc_0/102-0473148-3796168?ie=UTF8&n=283155&s=books&qid=1184009865&sr=8-2">collection of essays</a>. An energetic polymath, Doxiadis launched his career overseeing postwar reconstruction in Greece after WWII. Through involvement in the United Nations he developed an extensive international network of contacts concerned with urban development. </p>
Duany Prepares Houston For The 21st Century
<p>DPZ finished three designs late last week detailing a level of urbanity that promises to make the sprawling 650 square mile City of Houston a more attractive place in the 21st century.</p>
The Awful Folly of Sports Stadiums
<p>In city after city, stadium-building with tax dollars is taking priority over more important priorities like public schools.</p>
Seven New Wonders of the World?
<p>A privately-financed campaign allows web visitors to vote for the "New 7 Wonders" of the world.</p>
BLOG POST
Mixed Use A Mixed Bag
<p class="MsoNormal">BELLAGIO – No, not that Vegas hotel, but the ancient village of Bellagio, Italy – on the gorgeous rocky shores of Lake Como, a deep water lake that winds around the Dolomites in northern Italy. Here to cover a month-long summit about 21<sup>st</sup> century urban futures, I rented an apartment and rather quickly woke up to realize that, after many years writing about the virtues of mixed-use urban centers, I had never actually known a single residential night in one. Lots of nights in big hotels of course, but that’s not really the same thing as living in a residential unit of a small building over retail shops and restaurants.
Pagination
Tyler Technologies
New York City School Construction Authority
Village of Glen Ellyn
Transportation Research & Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University
Chaddick Institute at DePaul University
Institute for Housing and Urban Development Studies (IHS)
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.