The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Doug Farr on Detroit, His Hometown

A Detroit weekly talks to Doug Farr about his life growing up in Detroit and his ideas for bringing sustainable urbanism to the city.

September 30 - Model D

Relating Peak Oil To Auto Dependency And Urban Planning

Daniel Lerch, author of "Post Carbon Cities" presents his thoughts for a new California Dream in a 'post carbon future' in which cars still exist but are used sparingly due to urban planning that reduces their necessity. He looks toward Portland.

September 30 - The Sacramento Bee

BLOG POST

New Orleans on My Mind

<p> <span style="font-size: small"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman">Last Thursday night marked the end of an intense two-week team project in my Gateway: Planning (a kind of Introduction to Planning) course.<span>  </span>In this project, my classmates and I assumed the role of consultants to a fictitious working group of the real-life New Orleans Redevelopment Authority (NORA) and prepared and delivered oral briefings on key challenges to post-Katrina housing recovery.<span>  </span></span></span><span style="font-size: small"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman"> </span></span> </p>

September 29 - Tamika Camille Gauvin

Le Mobilien: Parisian Bus Rapid Transit

Paris has invested big in Le Mobilien, its version of Bus Rapid Transit. Streetsblog has a short video profiling the system.

September 29 - Streetsblog

Rule-Bending Keeps Fresno Sprawling

Despite a 2002 General Plan update aimed at curbing sprawl in the Central California city of Fresno, repeated zoning amendments have allowed hundreds of developments to push the city's edge farther out into the fringe.

September 29 - Fresno Bee


Prague Plans Pedestrian Zones, Excludes Homeless

Prague is building on prosperity and tourism by creating new public-private spaces for shopping and entertainment. Detractors are concerned that they are destroying real public space, and are paired with greater control on unwanted users.

September 29 - The Prague Post

BP's Chief Scientist Advocates Higher Gas Prices

BP's chief scientist provides his insight into solving the energy and climate crises, including the affect of higher gas prices and separating transportation from the heat and power sectors when dealing with strategies to reduce carbon emissions.

September 29 - Technology Review (MIT)


Foreclosed and Disenfranchised?

Thousands of Americans who have lost their homes in the foreclosure crisis may find themselves ineligible to vote in November.

September 29 - The New York Times

Downtown Miami Developer May Bet On Casinos

The developer of a nine block mega-project may pursue casino gambling as an added component to what promises to transform a derelict portion of downtown Miami.

September 29 - The Miami Herald

Twin Cities Spreading

The Minneapolis-St. Paul region is spreading further south, according to a recent study, which shows that projected growth will require more than 50,000 new homes and millions of square feet of retail and office space.

September 29 - Minneapolis-St.Paul Star Tribune

The Real Bailout America's Cities Need

If we can bail out the investment industry, we should be able to bail out our failing infrastructure, according to this column from Neal Peirce.

September 29 - Citiwire

Military Sprawl in Afghanistan

The military presence in Afghanistan is expanding at a rapid pace, creating a military sprawl.

September 29 - The National Post

Secretive Seattle Freeway Replacement Plans Revealed

For the past year, a Washington state legislator has been devising a plan for replacing Seattle's damaged inner-city freeway, the Alaskan Way Viaduct. His plan has mainly been a secret -- until now.

September 29 - Crosscut

Calles Sin Carros: Mexico City's Weekly Car Ban

Once a week, car-flooded streets convert into bike- and pedestrian-flooded public parks in crowded Mexico City.

September 29 - Los Angeles Times

FEATURE

Dharavi: India's Model Slum

September 29 - Prakash M. Apte

BLOG POST

Should the Internet Replace Newspapers for Public Notices?

<p> In thousands of planning and zoning laws across the nation, official announcements are required to be published in the local newspaper of &quot;<strong>general circulation</strong>.&quot; In an era of newspaper decline and expanding diversity of media, are these laws becoming obsolete? Furthermore, should we be concerned with newspapers at all if a newer, more universally accessible medium is available: the Internet? </p> <p> A variety of announcements are legally required to be published in a local periodical of &quot;general circulation,&quot; sometimes in addition to being published in an official government gazette. The practice entered the planning world through the U.S. Department of Commerce&#39;s highly influential <a href="http://www.planning.org/growingsmart/enablingacts.htm">standard zoning and planning enabling acts</a>.

September 28 - Robert Goodspeed

Rural U.S. Losing Out on Innovation

Alex Steffen of WorldChanging observes the growing divide in innovation between urban and rural America.

September 28 - WorldChanging

BLOG POST

Searching for Subversion in Boston

<div> </div> <div> I&#39;ve always wanted, but never quite had the cred, to go to Burning Man. Instead, I went to this year&#39;s rendition of <a href="http://www.parkingday.org/" target="_blank">National Park(ing) Day</a> in the hopes that it would provide a reasonable, if diminuative, substitute in temporary parks across the country. Creative minds can do a lot with 180 square feet, especially when there are straight-laced passers-by to shock and paradigms to subvert. <br /> </div>

September 28 - Josh Stephens

Enough With the Planning, it's Time for Some Doing

This column from the <em>Globe and Mail</em> expresses some common frustrations with a slow-moving regional transportation plan.

September 28 - Globe and Mail

Genius Grant for Urban Farmer

Will Allen began Growing Power, an urban farming non-profit, in an ailing Milwaukee neighborhood in 1993. He has since spread the gospel of urban farming throughout the world, and earned a MacArthur Genius grant for his efforts.

September 28 - New York Times

Post News

Top Books

An annual review of books related to planning.

Top Schools

The definitive ranking of graduate planning programs.

100 Most Influential Urbanists

The who's who of urbanism, according to Planetizen readers.

Urban Planning Creators You Should Know

A short list of voices on social, video, and podcasting platforms.

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.