The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
The Challenge Of Rebuilding The Past
<p>In Boston's Fort Point Channel district, redeveloping historic warehouses into luxury residences is easier said than done.</p>
BART's Vision For The Future
<p>Now 50 years old, BART looks to the future with a 50-year plan for vast system improvements and expansions throughout the Bay Area including a new transbay tube between Oakland and San Francisco, and an East Bay station in downtown Martinez.</p>
The Downtown That Doubles As A Movie Set
<p>Downtown Los Angeles has long stood in for other cities in Hollywood movies. But the area's new burgeoning residential population is clashing with movie makers over filming.</p>
Army Looks To Expand Training Bases
<p>Citing the need for larger battle spaces for military exercises, the U.S. Army has announced plans to acquire up to 5 million acres to expand its bases.</p>
Musician's Village Rises In New Orleans
<p>Successful recording artists Harry Connick Jr. and Branford Marsalis teamed up with Habitat for Humanity to develop a neighborhood specifically for the city's musicians.</p>
Detroit Riverwalk Ushers In New Redevelopment Model
<p>After pursuing a single-player, single-project strategy for decades, Detroit seems to have found a winning recipe for redevelopment with its new RiverWalk, which stressed regional cooperation from various public, private and non-profit organizations.</p>
Friday Funny: Two-Years' Salary To Park
<p>A single parking space in a small beachside community in England has been put on sale for nearly $50,000, twice the town's average yearly salary. But some say the price is not unreasonable.</p>
Shaping America's Cities: Part 3 - A Debate Over Mass Transit
<p>Author Robert Bruegmann and activist Gloria Ohland continue their week-long debate on planning issues. Today's topic is mass transit and the automobile.</p>
Not Your Typical Town Hall Meeting
<p>Once a month, a Minnesota drug store transforms itself into a neighborhood town hall meeting place where Democratic candidates vying for nearly any Minnesota office come to discuss and debate issues with the people they look to represent.</p>
Bill To Protect Cyclists From Careless Drivers Passes
<p>The Oregon Legislature has passed a bill that will increase penalties to drivers who carelessly injure or kill pedestrians, cyclists, and other "vulnerable" road users. Convicted offenders could face a one-year license suspension.</p>
Second Home Owners Engaging In Activism
<p>Vacation home owners are getting involved in local issues in their second communities.</p>
Flood Risks Persist In New Orleans
<p>A recent report from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has revealed that despite billions of dollars in improvements, many areas of New Orleans still face a significant threat of flooding.</p>
Big City Farming On the 20th Floor
<p>'Vertical farming' -- the idea of growing crops and livestock in high-rise buildings -- could be a solution to the high environmental costs of transporting food from distant farms to dense urban areas.</p>
New Orleans Woos South Florida's Construction Firms
<p>With nearly $17 billion dollars available for reconstruction, New Orleans officials are calling upon south Florida's construction firms to help handle the demand.</p>
How A Blighted Downtown Is Resurrected
<p>Once-blighted areas of downtown Louisville, Kentucky, have seen huge increases in development and property values recently -- a trend many attribute to public initiatives that encourage private investors. But other factors are also causing the boom.</p>
Streetcars Seeding Economic Development Across U.S.
<p>While some decry streetcars as expensive and inefficient, evidence is building in cities across the U.S. that the systems can serve as powerful boons to economic development.</p>
New Yorkers OK Congestion Pricing, With One Exception
<p>A majority of New Yorkers say they would support the proposed congestion pricing plan for the city if it guaranteed that transit fares and bridge tolls would not increase.</p>
Shaping America's Cities: Part 2 - A Debate Over Smart Growth
<p>Author Robert Bruegmann and activist Gloria Ohland debate Smart Growth.</p>
Which Cities Will Be Abandoned by 2100?
<p>A special Forbes series on the Future of Cities includes estimations about the types of communities and major cities may face extinction by 2100.</p>
Guerrilla Bike Lanes
<p>After a plan to add bike lanes falls behind schedule, cycling activists paint their own bike lanes.</p>
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