The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
You're Never Too Young To Learn About Planning
<p>In hopes of inspiring future civic leaders, an innovative volunteer program teaches grade school children about how a city works.</p>
Beijing's Parking Crunch
<p>With more than 300,000 new cars hitting the roads each year, the Chinese capital has a serious shortage of parking. The solution? More parking lots of course.</p>
Who Wants To Be A Redevelopment Czar?
<p>The lengthy list of candidates for the top job at the Boston Redevelopment Agency includes architect and Harvard professor Alex Krieger.</p>
Virtual Explorers Of Google Earth
<p>Enthusiasts are using Google Earth and Microsoft Live Search Maps for unexpected purposes.</p>
Sprawl and Obesity: A Review Of Research and Arguments
<p>Science News reviews the research and opinions linking sprawl and obesity, and investigates whether urban sprawl "makes people fat."</p>
How Green Is Your Neighborhood?
<p>The first-ever rating system for sustainable urban neighborhood development is seeking pilot projects.</p>
The Incredible Shrinking City
<p>As many communities across Europe and the United States decrease in size, academics ponder just how to plan for for cities with declining populations.</p>
Manhattan's West Side To See Burst Of Residential Construction
<p>The first apartment buildings will soon begin rising on the former Hudson Yards, made possible by the rezoning of 300 acres two years ago.</p>
High Homeowner Vacancy Rates Could Portend Continuing Housing Slump
<p>The "often-overlooked measure" of homes for sale that are empty is the highest it's ever been. The figure could represent the influence of housing "speculators" and may signal continuing weakness in the national housing market.</p>
Many Factors Delay Disbursement Of Gulf Recovery Funds
<p>This report from <em>NPR</em> looks at the many factors that are delaying the disbursement of recovery and housing funds to hurricane victims in the Gulf Coast region.</p>
Light Rail May Bring A 'There' There
<p>With the expansion of light rail projects in Portland, Oregon, an inconspicuous town center may finally find an identity and truly become a center of activity.</p>
City-Subsidized Tax Breaks Rise Higher For Downtown L.A. Project
<p>Estimates of the tax breaks required by developers of a massive mixed use cultural and business center in downtown L.A. have risen more than 50%, according to a recent report. The city-subsidized tax breaks have upset some residents and officials.</p>
Tourists Flock To Brazilian Slums While Locals Avoid
<p>A new trend appearing in the slums of Brazil is a high number of foreign tourists and expatriates who visit or even move into the impoverished areas. Meanwhile, Brazil's middle and upper classes keep their distance from the dangerous slums.</p>
Innovation Where The Sun Don't Shine
<p>An Italian village that once spent almost three months of each year in the shadows of a nearby mountain has turned to technology to provide sunlight during its annual spell of darkness. A huge sun-tracking mirror now reflects light onto the village.</p>
America's Greatest Builder?
<p>Critic Paul Goldberger suggests that New York planner Robert Moses may deserve another look at the "sheer scale of his achievements." Goldberger reviews the forthcoming book, "Robert Moses and the Modern City: The Transformation of New York".</p>
Recycling Construction Waste
<p>With debris from construction and demolition of buildings accounting for nearly one-half of all solid waste in the U.S., some entrepreneurs are looking at this landfill fodder as a viable source of reconstruction materials -- and a source of revenue.</p>
A New Face For Sacramento Carpool Lanes
<p>In the face of a carpool system that many say is failing, highway planners in Sacramento, California, are proposing a major facelift to the carpool lane system -- creating 50 miles of new carpool lanes on dedicated road bridges.</p>
Building Greener and Cheaper Than LEED
<p>While many argue over the costs and benefits of requiring LEED-certification, some affordable housing developers have shown that building green doesn't require following the program's recommendations.</p>
L.A.'s MTA CEO Says TOD
<p>The CEO of the Los Angeles Metropolitan Transportation Authority recently told a crowd of L.A. city officials that increasing transit oriented development is high on his list of goals.</p>
Making High Tech Commutes Work
<p>Silicon Valley companies are engaging in a competition with each other to reduce the number of employees driving to work each day.</p>
Pagination
City of Moorpark
City of Tustin
City of Camden Redevelopment Agency
City of Astoria
Transportation Research & Education Center (TREC) at Portland State 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.