The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

A Bipartisan Solution to Global Warming and the Budget Deficit

In another sign of the coming apocalypse, a bipartisan group of House members have devised an entirely sensible way to cut greenhouse gas emissions, grow employment, and shrink the budget deficit in one fell swoop, by placing a price on carbon.

February 28 - The Washington Post

Chinese Architect Wins 2012 Pritzker Prize

On Monday it was announced that the most prestigious annual award in architecture has gone to Wang Shu, a 48-year-old Chinese architect with a "relatively low profile" who has yet to design a building outside of China, writes Christopher Hawthorne.

February 28 - Los Angeles Times

Bringing Crowdfunding to Our Backyards

Michael J. Coren shines a light on an innovative crowdfunding site targeting neighborhood improvements.

February 28 - Fast Co.Exisit

FEATURE

Top Planning Trends of 2011-2012

February 27 - Jonathan Nettler

A Block Too Pretty For Subway Entrances?

East 69th Street is mobilizing to halt the Metropolitan Transportation Authority's plan to add subway entrances on their tony block - needed to handle displaced crowd flows from adding required ADA elevators at the 68th Street entrances.

February 27 - The New York Times - N.Y. / Region


Are 100-Mile Houses the Next Green Building Trend?

Taking a page from the locavore food movement, an architectural competition in Vancouver asks entrants to design a home using materials made or recycled within 100 miles of the city, writes Mark Boyer.

February 27 - Good

If You Build It Will They Come, On Bikes?

Eric Jaffe reports on a new study that aims to conclusively answer the question of whether bike paths and bike lanes actually promote more bike riders.

February 27 - The Atlantic Cities


Is the Era of the Big-Box Ending?

Marina Strauss reports on the changing retail landscape, in which retailers such as Wal-Mart and Staples are counting on smaller stores to draw customers. As McMansions lose their luster, are over-sized retailers the next victim of changing tastes?

February 27 - The Globe and Mail

Baltimore's Strategic Ignorance of Its Abandoned Homes

Yepoka Yeebo reports on Baltimore's newest plan to deal with the tens of thousands of abandoned houses that mar the city.

February 27 - Business Insider

Bringing the Green to Downtown L.A.

As the population of Downtown Los Angeles has grown dramatically over the last decade, the need for park space to serve that population has grown along with it. A new pocket park being built along Spring Street helps meet that need.

February 27 - The Architect's Newspaper

Revisiting Retrofitting Suburbia

Matt Bevilacqua speaks with Ellen Dunham-Jones, renowned co-author of Retrofitting Suburbia, about the key factors impacting suburban redevelopment and the recent retrofit projects across the country that have caught her eye.

February 27 - Next American City

BLOG POST

The Democratization of Big Data

<p> Already a major technology trend, 2012 promises to be a watershed for &quot;big data.&quot; A shorthand term for the proliferation of large datasets, big data also refers to the expansion of analytic techniques for teasing meaning from the vast archives of information produced by the digital world. The New York Times&#39; Steve Lohr declared we have entered the &quot;age of big data&quot; in a <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/12/sunday-review/big-datas-impact-in-the-world.html">recent article</a> that compared it with another revolutionary research tool -- the microscope. </p>

February 27 - Robert Goodspeed

Growing a Green Roof Movement in America

Metropolis blogger Joseph G. Brin interviews Charlie Miller, P.E., of Roofmeadow, to find out why green roofs have been slow to catch on in the United States.

February 27 - Metropolis

HOV-to-HOT Conversion Seen as Key to Easing Congestion

Robert Poole reports on efforts across the country to reduce freeway congestion through HOV-to-HOT conversion and public-private partnerships.

February 27 - reason.com

BLOG POST

Debating Smart Growth

<p class="MsoNormal"> Last Thursday I debated the merits of <a href="http://www.epa.gov/smartgrowth/about_sg.htm">smart growth</a> with <a href="http://ti.org/antiplanner/">‘Anti-planner’ Randal O&#39;Toole</a> at a <strong><span style="font-size: 18pt; letter-spacing: 0.25pt; font-family: Arial, sans-serif; color: #1f497d"><a href="http://www.southfraser.net/2012/01/south-fraser-ontrax-presents-debate-on.html">community forum</a> </span></strong>in Langley, a rapidly-growing suburb of Vancouver, British Columbia. <span style="font-size: 13px; line-height: 17px; font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, 'Bitstream Vera Sans', sans-serif">A recording of the Debate and presenters&#39; slide shows are available at <a style="text-decoration: none; font-weight: bold; color: #005884" href="http://www.southfraser.net/2012/02/smart-growth-debate-media.html">www.southfraser.net/2012/02/smart-growth-debate-media.html</a>. </span>At the end more than three quarters of the audience voted for a <a href="http://www.southfraser.net/2012/01/smart-growth-debate-resolution.html">pro-smart-growth resolution</a>. This may reflect some selection bias – people concerned about sprawl may have been more likely to attend – but I believe that given accurate information most citizens will support smart growth due to its various <a href="http://www.vtpi.org/sg_save.pdf">savings and benefits</a>.   </p> <p class="MsoNormal"> Smart growth sometimes faces <a href="/node/54342">organized opposition</a> by critics. It is important that planners respond effectively and professionally. Here is my critique of O&#39;Toole’s claims and some advice for planners who face similar critics. 

February 27 - Todd Litman

Los Angeles Losing Trust in its Transit Riders

After years of lost revenue from fare evaders, the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro) is looking to implement gate-locking at Metro rail stations within six months, reports Ari Bloomekatz.

February 27 - Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Facing Environmental Double Whammy

Water has played a starring part in the development of Los Angeles (for exhibit A, see the film <em>Chinatown</em>). Christine MacDonald explores how water may take a star turn once again, in its demise.

February 26 - The Atlantic Cities

Why the Geography of Twitter Isn't So Revolutionary After All

Much has been made about the democratizing and geographic obliterating effects of Twitter, however new research shows how parochial Twitter's paths of communication actually are.

February 26 - NPR

How LEED Gives the Cold Shoulder to Historic Preservation

In a guest editorial for <em>Rust Wire</em>, Nick Gurich examines the ways in which LEED discounts the environmental benefits of historic preservation and adaptive reuse

February 26 - Rust Wire

The Growing Attraction of Historic Streetcars

As cities across the country build and revive their streetcar networks, a sense of nostalgia for the time when they could be found in cities across the country is leading to a thriving business in refurbishing old streetcars.

February 26 - Governing

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