The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Remember The Electric Car?

A new documentary film asks, "Who Killed the Electric Car?"

July 3 - The Arizona Republic

How New Yorkers Would Use The Smart Car

Dan Barry conjures up unintended uses for DiamlerChrysler new ultracompact Smart Car.

July 2 - The New York Times

Celebrating A New Urbanist Utopia

How is Celebtration, FL, Disney's experiment to build a New Urbanist utopia, faring ten years after the first residents moved in?

July 2 - The St. Petersburg Times

Twin Cities Chooses Light Rail Over BRT

Light rail comes out the winner in another showdown against train vs. bus in Minneapolis-St. Paul.

July 2 - Minnesota Public Radio

China's Maglev Extension Revived?

While the Beijing-Shanghai line has long been scraped, plans for a line from Shanghai to Hangzhou are still in play.

July 2 - China Daily


1950s Ranch Homes Making A Resurgance

A once maligned housing style is returning into fashion.

July 2 - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

'Who Killed The Electric Car?'

A new documentary looks at how the future of the electric car was sabotaged.

July 1 - The New York Times


LEED Recommendations For Public Health and Urban Design

This report evaluates the current state of research linking public health and neighborhood design and provides recommendations for integrating the knowledge into the LEED-ND rating system to improve public health.

July 1 - U.S. Green Building Council

Colorado Mulls Privately-Funded Toll Road

A private developer's proposal to build a 33-mile toll road bypassing a heavy traffic area in Colorado Springs depends on a crucial city council vote. But even if approved, the mostly private public-private development may not be necessary.

July 1 - Colorado Springs Independent

Hong Kong's Big Air Pollution Problem

A new study shows the city's air quality ranks below New York, London, Paris, and even Los Angeles.

July 1 - The Standard

Richard Florida Maps New Megalopolis(es)

Calling an entire country a major economic force just isn't accurate. At least, that's what Richard Florida contends. His article discusses the regional, not national, nature of areas that are making global impacts.

July 1 - Newsweek via MSNBC

'Lofty' Visions For Historic Urban Center

The historic downtown of Santa Ana, CA, is being transformed with lofts, concerts, and an experimental music festival featuring a "carchestra".

June 30 - The Los Angeles Times

Extreme Pressure Building Along California's San Andreas Fault

New research in Nature indicates that conditions are right for a 100-mile stretch of California's San Andreas Fault to release pressure that has been building.

June 30 - Scientific American

Germany Loosens Its Carbon Emission Restrictions

Germany is straying from the European Union's stated goals of compliance with the Kyoto Protocol by postponing emission reduction requirements for some of the country's largest and most polluting industries.

June 30 - International Herald Tribune

North Carolina Wetlands Protected, For A Moment

A recent change in the method of calculating the size of developable land took the state's wetlands out of the acreage. The result could have been vastly expanded stormwater-runoff infrastructure requirements for developers. But it wasn't.

June 30 - The Raleigh-Durham Independent Weekly

Harvard Launches Summer School For Planners

The Graduate School of Design will offer executive education programs for professionals covering topics in real estate development and urban planning.

June 30 - The Chattanoogan

City's Plan For Downtown Falls Short

Residents and officials of one Central Florida community are left wondering where plans for a "viable" downtown went wrong.

June 30 - The Orlando Sentinel

Exploring New York City - A Multimedia Journey

A resident of New York City offers multimedia impressions of the city, its modes of transport, and environmental history.

June 30 - alexreisner.com

Eisenhower's Interstate Legacy

The world's largest public-works project, the Interstate, fully transformed Americans' lives.

June 30 - The Christian Science Monitor

In Seattle, Detached Garages May Be Approved For Apartments

With an aim toward affordable housing and helping homeowners pay their mortgage, Seattle considers allowing backyard apartments, much to the chagrin of local opponents.

June 30 - The Seattle Times

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Learn the tools for implementing Universal Design in planning regulations.