The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Clinton Backs Transit Bill

<p>Streetsblog reports that Hillary Clinton has followed the lead of Congress and introduced a version of their recent transit bill.</p>

August 5 - Streetsblog

Is Globalization Slowing?

<p>Alex Steffen of WorldChanging proposes that globalization could soon change direction as transportation costs increase.</p>

August 5 - WorldChanging

Placemaking is Alive and Well in Denver

<p>Simmons Buntin tours metropolitan Denver with local planner Carolyn Dooling and finds a host of vibrant developments.</p>

August 5 - The Next American City

Affordable Housing Gets Sexier

<p>In Boston, architecture firm Utile and non-profit developer Urban Edge bring a new, stylish look to affordable housing.</p>

August 5 - The Boston Globe

The City-Suburb Commute is Not What it Used to Be

<p>Wendell Cox looks at commuting patterns, and finds that the old supposition that most commuters are going from suburban housing to urban jobs no longer holds water.</p>

August 5 - newgeography


Canada Looks to Boost Security on Mass Transit After Slaying

<p>In the aftermath of a grisly and unprovoked murder on a Greyhound Bus, Transport Canada and municipalities are looking at how to improve security on buses and trains.</p>

August 5 - The Montreal Gazette

Maine Planners Come Around to Transit and Density

<p>Southern Maine planners, who have long subscribed to the idea that they worked in rural, car-dependent communities, are beginning to embrace density, mixed-uses, and transit.</p>

August 5 - Portland Press Herald


Excessive Highway Building To Blame For Bridge Woes

<p>Official sources show that Minnesota had been long diverting bridge repair funds to build new highways.</p>

August 5 - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Inner-City Suburbs Rebranded as 'Classic Towns'

<p>The Delaware Valley Regional Planning Commission, the MPO for the Philadelphia metropolitan region, has introduced an innovate way of making people aware of the benefits of older, established suburbs: market them.</p>

August 5 - The Philadelphia Inquirer

Cities Forge Ahead With Transit, But Atlanta Lags Behind

<p>Neal Peirce sums up the movement across the country in cities like Houston, Denver, and Charlotte towards improved transit systems, while latecomer Atlanta wakes up to their transit deficit.</p>

August 4 - Citiwire.net

Missouri Town Goes Off the Grid

<p>Rock Port, Missouri, population 1300, has become the first community in the country with more wind power that it can use.</p>

August 4 - National Public Radio

Duany On High Gas Prices And Urban Revival

<p>Andres Duany and other experts discuss how the convergence of high gas prices and the foreclosure crisis may reverse years of cheap gas and cheap exurban land. He's pushing mixed uses and reformed zoning in suburbia, and he's betting on Texas.</p>

August 4 - U.S. News & World Report

NIMBYism Strikes as Residents Fight Senior Housing

<p>Citizens in Weston, Massachusetts, one of America's toniest suburbs, continue to block a local college's effort to build senior housing, raise its endowment and provide scholarships for low-income students.</p>

August 4 - The Boston Globe

Decline in Homeless: Figures in Question

<p>HUD's new report shows an astonishing decline in homelessness across the United States, but some groups are saying that they are too good to be true.</p>

August 4 - Newsday

Planner Faces 'Withering Criticism' on Revitalization Plan

<p>City planners in Charleston, SC would like to see some local malls redeveloped as mini-downtowns, filling in their parking lots with buildings, but local developers think they're insane. 'This really horrifies me,' says one business person.</p>

August 4 - The Post & Courier, Charleston, S.C.

China's Architecture of Control

<p>For China, the Olympics represent a struggle between letting people in and controlling what they see and do. This is a problem, writes Andrew Yang, that implicates the Olympics-related architecture in a bad way.</p>

August 4 - The Architect's Newspaper

Mississippi Holds Onto Title as Fattest State in U.S.

<p>This is Mississippi's third year in a row topping CalorieLab's United States of Obesity report. The BBC goes to Jefferson County, MS to find out why.</p>

August 4 - BBC

Bike Warriors in L.A.

<p>In many cities across the U.S., commuters are taking to their bikes as gas prices climb. But as the Wall St. Journal reports, it takes guts to bike in Los Angeles, where bike lanes and racks are a rarity.</p>

August 4 - Wall St. Journal

FEATURE

'Place First' Parking Plans

Wes Marshall and Norman Garrick illustrate the problem with parking plans today, and how to fix them.

August 4 - Wes Marshall and Norman Garrick

Builder Says Inclusionary Zoning Doesn't Work

<p>In this op-ed, a builders association representative argues that proposals for inclusionary zoning laws in Minnesota that require a certain percentage of affordable housing do not achieve the goals they aim for.</p>

August 4 - The Pioneer Press

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