The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
Central Florida's Growing Affordable Housing Crisis
<p>A recent report highlights the growing divide between incomes and housing costs in the Orlando area, leading many families to commute further and further to find affordable housing.</p>
Fairfax County Moves To Limit Big-Box Retail
<p>Fairfax County Supervisors have approved a new measure to restrict the development of stores larger than 80,000 square feet, against the protests of the business community.</p>
Farmers Not Always Supportive Of Farmland Protection
<p>Planners in Illinois are learning that farmers don't necessarily want their land protected from development -- as many are counting on cashing out the value of their land at some point.</p>
Egypt's Westernized Suburbs Leave Some Uncomfortable
<p>Western-style suburban developments near Cairo, Egypt, have many concerned that about the loss of local culture.</p>
George Monbiot: 'The Great Moral Issue Of The 21st Century'
<p>British journalist and environmentalist George Monbiot talks about global warming, car fuel economy, electric vehicles, manipulation of science, biofuels, the "Axis of Evil" on climate change, and "the great moral issue" of our time.</p>
Global Warming Regulation Warms Up In California
<p>State agencies in California are starting to review projects based on their greenhouse gas contributions, an approach that may conflict with the state's energy policy.</p>
The Politics of Urban Poverty
<p>The divide between extreme wealth and poverty in America's cities is growing starker, at the same time it is becoming more politically invisible, writes Bob Herbert.</p>
Slow Food & Urban Density
<p>The Slow Food movement has lessons for giving cities a humane density.</p>
The Fight Against Billboard Pollution
<p>Are billboard companies exploiting public roadways?</p>
BLOG POST
Ontario’s leaders look for “Places to Grow”
<p>Think big.<br /><br />That’s what the people of Ontario and the Toronto region set out to do more than 5 years ago when they began a visionary planning process for the area known as the Greater Golden Horseshoe in southern Ontario, Canada. (The Greater Golden Horseshoe is the area around Lake Ontario that stretches from roughly Peterborough to the east, west through metropolitan Toronto, and around the west tip of the lake to the southern side and Niagara Falls — hence the horseshoe shape.) </p>
Can Google Set the Standard for Corporate 'Green' Building Practices?
<p>New publication VerdeXchange offers an interview with Google's Director of Corporate Environmental Programs about the company's efforts to transform its campus into a greener workplace and the future model of corporate environmentalism.</p>
BLOG POST
Underwriting Fun
<p>“We underwrite fun,” says Naomi McCleary, Manager of arts for the Waitakere City Council, one of the municipalities that make up the Auckland (New Zealand) metropolitan region. She is referring to the practice of involving artists in the thinking and creation of public places, buildings, streets, bridges; they take an equal seat at the table from conception to completion. According to Ms. McCleary, the results are remarkable. Fun is a partner of beauty and happiness, it is a means toward the creation of objects and places that are beautifully usable. Around the world it is possible to find municipalities that are underwriting this kind of fun, but for every found opportunity, we have several more that are lost. </p>
Plane Crashes And Forest Fires Bring Local NIMBYism To A Boil
<p>A string of accidents at a military gunnery range - including numerous missed-target bombings, resulting forest fires, and shots mistakenly fired at an elementary school - have strained relations between the range and neighboring communities.</p>
New York's 'Green' Yellow Cabs
<p>New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg recently announced plans to convert the city's entire taxicab fleet to hybrid vehicles within 5 years.</p>
What Bike-Friendly Cities Look Like
Photos, videos, and characteristics of truly cyclist-friendly cities.
Sustainability: Required in Europe, Voluntary in America
<p>Unlike European countries, the U.S. has no government standards for green building. Sustainable design is now commonplace in Europe, while American architects may comply with voluntary "green" standards.</p>
Should The Government Sell The Existing Stock Of Public Housing?
<p>The idea of turning over public housing to residents to own or sell is gaining support among some scholars and officials.</p>
To Truly Experience A City, Make No Plans
<p>This column argues that aimless wandering is essential to exploring the character of a city, and offers advice to travelers and city dwellers on letting the urbanism of cities guide their experience.</p>
Boston Metro Plan Calls For Smart, Dense Growth
<p>A new report from a metropolitan planning organization in Boston has outlined the severe land shortages that will face the growing area between now and 2030, and proposes a smart growth plan to preserve open space by growing densely.</p>
The New Definition Of A Farmhouse
<p>Developers are reacting to the market's demand for environmentally-friendly development and locally-grown food by creating housing developments that include farmable land.</p>
Pagination
Central Transportation Planning Staff/Boston Region MPO
Heyer Gruel & Associates PA
Institute for Housing and Urban Development Studies (IHS)
City of Grandview
Harvard GSD Executive Education
Toledo-Lucas County Plan Commissions
Salt Lake City
NYU Wagner Graduate School of Public Service
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.