The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

California's 'Missing Bear' Relocating To Nevada For Lower Costs

Nevada's latest tongue-in-cheek marketing campaign to lure California businesses features a missing California Grizzly Bear and 'California happy cows'.

January 29 - The Mercury News

The Latino New Urbanism

Latino new urbanism is quickly gaining popularity in California and Texas, the nation's two most populous states and the ones with the largest numbers of Hispanics.

January 29 - USA Today

California County Embraces Plan For Car Independent Future

The Ventura County Board of Supervisors agreed to a new transportation policy calling for increased use of alternative forms of transportation.

January 29 - The Los Angeles Times

BLOG POST

The Deep Internal Conflict of Urban Planning

No, seriously. As I keep getting into arguments with urban planners about community involvement (they're in favor of it) and bitching about marquee architetecture (and marquee architects) someone else voiced my inner conflict before I got to a keyboard. Here's Robert McDonald on the <a href="http://www.urbancartography.com/">Urban Cartography</a> blog:<br /> <br /> <blockquote>MIT's new Stata Center lurches impressively over Vassar Street, a mélange of surfaces and cylinders intersecting at odd angles. Designed by Frank Gehry, it's seen as the pinnacle of hip, postmodern architecture in Boston (which ain't saying much), and supposedly is surprisingly functional inside despite its odd form. I therefore feel decidedly square saying it but I must: I think it's rather ugly. More than anything, its ornamentation seems ostentatious to me, arbitrary, like a sculpture pretending to be a building. Part of me still believes in that mantra of modernist architecture, form follows function. Politically and spiritually, this at least seems like an honest goal, far more than mere irony and whimsy.<br /> <br /> Yet as I've been reviewing the works of Mumford and Kunstler, I've been realizing how much of modern architecture and modern town planning has been a disaster. Often the scale of the projects has been all wrong, and the projects have not really been focused on human needs at all. There's typically no respect for public space, no creation of places for human interactions. And they are often just plain ugly, all gray concrete and blacktop, which on our New England winters gets pockmarked with salt stains.<br /> <br /> And so I've been struggling between these two parts of myself. I want architecture and urban planning to reflect some of the honesty of modernism, and yet I want beauty and even a bit of whimsy and ornamentation. It strikes me that both post-modernism and modernism have same fault, at least as they are often practiced: An utter lack of interest in what the users of the space want, and what will seem beautiful in the context of its surroundings. Form does not follow the true, human function of the building but instead a perverted function set by someone other than the users. For modern architecture, it became cheapness of construction; for post-modern architecture, it has become hip irony; for urban planners, it became moving cars efficiently. The solution, in my humble opinion (as an ecologist who is admittedly not trained in architecture), is not to abandon "form follows function” but to make sure society gets the function it wants.</blockquote>

January 28 - Anonymous

Free Parking For Green Cars

Salt Lake City offers free parking for fuel-efficient vehicles.

January 28 - MSNBC


Home Depot Meets Hudson Square

The mega-merchandiser of home furnishings is looking to cash in on Lower Manhattan's residential renaissance, with Trinity Church as facilitator.

January 28 - The Slatin Report

Cleanup Of Times Square A Model For Downtown LA?

Can downtown Los Angeles' problem with homelessness on skid row be solved by the same principles that changed the image of Times Square?

January 28 - The Los Angeles Times


White House Rejects Additional Katrina Relief Spending Plan

In order to avoid creating 'another bureaucracy', Bush does not support creation of a federal corporation to purchase and redevelop damaged homes.

January 28 - The Advocate

American Suburbia Sprawls Its Way To India

With rampant globalization and growth, Indian architects and developers are using as many established planning models as they can -- including 'New Jersey Suburban'.

January 28 - Hindustan Times

Friday Funny: Parrot Quiz

Take San Francisco Weekly's quiz to find out if you are an apologist for the Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill.

January 27 - San Francisco Weekly

It's Sprawl For Nothing

In an excerpt from her new book, 'The Place You Love Is Gone: Progress Took It Away', author Melissa Holbrook Pierson offers her lament for a sprawling nation.

January 27 - Orion

What Car Buyers Want

Ford, GM, and Chrysler have been caught off guard and need to make products that consumers want.

January 27 - Abhijeet Chavan

The New Confession: 'I Am A Suburbanist'

A columnist confesses publicly that he is a heretic and that he 'loves suburbia.'

January 27 - The Australian

Studies Find Sprawl Decreases Health, Increases Pollution

Two comprehensive studies conclude that sprawl has negative effects on public health and pollution; however, many remain skeptical.

January 27 - The Seattle Times

U.S. 28th-Best On Environmental Issues, Study Says

Yale and Columbia based the rankings on an Environmental Sustainability Index, gauging each nation's rate of success in meeting a set of critical environmental goals.

January 27 - The New York Times

Controversial Getty Villa To Re-Open After 12-Year Hiatus

The palatial urban masterpiece is finally back, but its art collection has been called into question by international critics.

January 27 - The Guardian Unlimited

L.A.: Proud Home Of The Car Chase

In The New Yorker, Tad Friend discusses the city's weird relationship with the crime and television phenomenon, highlighting some 'classic', 'fondly remembered' chases.

January 27 - The New Yorker

Will The Big Dig Ever Be Finished?

Former Massachusetts Transportation Secretary Fred Salvucci defends the Big Dig and calls for the State to honor its transit commitments.

January 27 - The Boston Globe

Boon Or Blight? Studentification Study Released In UK

As student enrollment spikes in the UK, university cities are scrambling to find new and better ways of planning for the up and downsides of waves of students moving into near-campus areas.

January 27 - The Guardian

Leaving New Jersey: The Hunt for Affordable Housing

Residents of New Jersey are migrating to Atlanta, Florida, and even the Bronx in search of affordable housing choices.

January 26 - The New York Times

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