The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Lightning

Indianapolis: Where the Streets Have No Lights

The IndyStar shines a light on the city of Indianapolis' neglect of its infrastructure.

September 22 - Indystar

Paratransit

Report Offers Guidance for Improving Paratransit Services

The requirement to provide paratransit services is written into the Americans With Disabilities Act, so transit agencies must continue to find ways to provide these essential services as cost-effectively as possible.

September 22 - Streetsblog USA

Lafayette Park

BLOG POST

CIAM's Third Way

A blog post comparing the Athens Charter, written by modernist architects in the 1930s, to traditional urbanism and modern sprawl.

September 21 - Michael Lewyn

Subdivision

A Message to Suburban Counties: Invest in Transit or Get Left Behind

An op-ed directs a pointed pro-transit message to Gwinnett County near Atlanta.

September 21 - SaportaReport

Grand Central Market, Los Angeles

L.A.'s Grand Central Market at a Turning Point, Faces Gentrification

The historic Grand Central Market has ridden the ups and downs of Downtown Los Angeles better than most retail locations, but can it retain its heart in the face of gentrification.

September 21 - Los Angeles Magazine


kayak

Whitewater Park Proposal Fails for Oregon City's Willamette Falls Project

There's still a lot to be excited about for the Willamette Falls Legacy Project in Oregon City. A whitewater park just isn't one of them.

September 21 - The Oregonian

cafe

Sweeping Parking Reform Approved in Oakland

The City Council of Oakland, California has approved a far-reaching reduction of parking requirements.

September 21 - East Bay Times


Climate Change Protest

Climate Equity Agenda Key to Passage of California's Climate Legislation

Environmental advocacy is not enough. Environmental and social justice must play a role in California's legislative effort to battle climate change, opine two professors from UC Berkeley and USC in the San Francisco Chronicle.

September 21 - San Francisco Chronicle

Tokyo

Help Wanted: Architects to Solve the Housing Dilemma

The housing crisis is a tough nut to crack. Obstacles of politics, economics, and design all stand in the way of the amount of quality housing for all levels of income that U.S. cities need. Can architects come to the rescue?

September 21 - Architectural Record

Houston

Lack of Zoning Leaves Houston Neighborhoods Vulnerable to Pollution

Houston doesn't compare well with other cities when it comes to locating polluting industrial uses near residential neighborhoods. Blame the city's lack of zoning, according to new research.

September 21 - Houston Chronicle

17th Street, Denver, Colorado

Denver Approves First-Ever Affordable Housing Fund

The Denver City Council approved a hard-fought, $150 million affordable housing fund this week.

September 21 - The Denver Post

St. Louis

St. Louis Leading Large Metros in Immigration

Of the 20 largest metropolitan areas in the country, St. Louis had the largest percentage increase in foreign-born immigrants between 2014 and 2015.

September 21 - St. Louis Riverfront Times

Parking Gate

Just Arrived: The First Federal Safety Guidelines for Automated Vehicles

It's a big day for the future of automated vehicles. Federal safety regulators gave first indication, not yet regulations, of how they expect automated vehicles to behave when they hit the road en masse.

September 20 - The New York Times

Tech Shuttle

Tech Shuttles: The Bay Area's Seventh Largest Transportation Provider

A new survey has found that every day more than 800 tech buses are traveling on the region's roadways, carrying around 34,000 passengers daily

September 20 - San Francisco Business Times

Chevrolet Corvair

100 Objects; 100 Ways to Influence Public Health

As the public health and planning professions expand their partnership around the world, consider this list by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health of the 100 Objects That Shaped Public Health.”

September 20 - Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Georgia's 'Highway of the Future' Gets a New Solar Array

A pilot project will install solar power along a highway through The Ray, a highway corridor named in memory of sustainable business pioneer Ray C. Anderson.

September 20 - Southeast Green

Culvert

Court Ruling Mandates Culvert Improvements in Washington

In the state of Washington, 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals delivered what some are calling the "most important ruling on treaty fishing rights since 1974."

September 20 - Crosscut

Black Lives Matter

Lessons of Housing Desegregation—From the 1960s to Today

The New York Times mines historic footage and current research for perspective on the effects of housing segregation.

September 20 - The New York Times

Portland's 10-Cent Gas Tax Gets to Work

Portland isn’t collecting a gas tax approved by voters in May yet, but the city is already finding a way to spend the money.

September 20 - The Oregonian

Galena

BLOG POST

The Cute and The Iconic

Many architects would kill to get a building on Architectural Record's list of 125 Top Buildings. But big cities can learn a few things from the landscapes of small-town America too.

September 20 - Josh Stephens

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.