The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

FEATURE

Where Will We All Park? A Slightly Premature Case Study of Hoboken, New Jersey

Hoboken, New Jersey's Department of Transportation and Parking Director Ian Sacs offers this profile of his city and discusses how the dense but car-enamored city is trying to tackle the contemporary urban parking problem.

February 8 - Ian Sacs

Initiative Underway To Suspend California's Global Warming Act

California's Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, or AB 32, is known throughout the U.S. as being the landmark state legislation that addresses climate change. It is the target of an initiative that aims to suspend it unless unemployment drops.

February 8 - Los Angeles Times

NYC's "Bus of the Future" Debuts On Bronx BRT Route

What's good for the Bronx turns out to be good for upstate NY. In this case, a Plattsburgh bus manufacturer has received the first orders for what is promoted as the "bus of the future of NYC transit": 3-doors, articulated, low-floor, & low emission.

February 8 - Second Ave. Sagas

BLOG POST

New Books Depict Car Culture at a Turning Point

<p> <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Crash-Course-American-Automobile-Industrys/dp/1400068630/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1265641815&amp;sr=1-1"><strong>Crash Course: </strong></a><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Crash-Course-American-Automobile-Industrys/dp/1400068630/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1265641815&amp;sr=1-1">The American Automobile Industry&#39;s Road from Glory to Disaster</a><br /> By Paul Ingrassia<br /> Random House, 306 pages, $32</strong> </p> <p> <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Carjacked-Culture-Automobile-Effect-Lives/dp/0230618138/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1265641921&amp;sr=1-1"><strong>Carjacked: The Culture of the Automobile</strong> </a><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Carjacked-Culture-Automobile-Effect-Lives/dp/0230618138/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1265641921&amp;sr=1-1">and its Effect on Our Lives</a><br /> By Catherine Lutz and Anne Lutz Fernandez<br /> Palgrave, 272 pages, $34</strong> </p> <p> Automobiles dominate our economies, our cities and our popular culture. As these new titles make abundantly apparent, they also tend to imbue their makers and owners with either delusions or arrogance that can lead to dangerously misguided decision-making, both behind the wheel and in corporate boardrooms.

February 8 - Michael Dudley

Resort Planned in Russian Nature Preserve

Environmentalists in Russia are fuming over plans to construct a resort in the middle of a nature preserve near the 2014 Winter Olympics host city of Sochi.

February 8 - Der Spiegel


Saving Money By Converting Asphalt to Gravel

In an effort to cut transportation maintenance costs, some cities are ditching their asphalt roads and going back to gravel.

February 8 - USA Today

The Poverty Beneath the Rings

Vancouver is playing host to the Winter Olympics beginning later this week. It's a city admired across North America. But it's also home to a pocket of severe poverty and homelessness.

February 8 - The New York Times


BLOG POST

Why not rail?

<p> &nbsp; </p> <p> When faced with the costs and logistics of rail, planners and city officials increasingly seem to favor Bus Rapid Transit (BRT), a trend likely to continue through the current recession.  But even with the many persuasive arguments for BRT, the nagging question remains:  why not rail? <br /> <br />

February 7 - Diana DeRubertis

Policy Confusion Over Food Trucks

Food trucks are becoming an increasingly visible part of streetlife in many cities, but few have figured out how to deal with them from a policy standpoint.

February 7 - The City Fix

L.A. to Extend Light Rail

Transportation officials in Los Angeles have approved the extension of one of the city's light rail lines out to Santa Monica. The new 7-mile link will connect the oceanside town to downtown L.A.

February 7 - Los Angeles Times

HUD Hearts Portland

Obama's brand new Office of Sustainable Housing and Communities admits to being inspired by Portland's groundbreaking urban planning policies.

February 7 - The Oregonian

Fighting Obesity With Traffic Calming

The latest news in the impact of the built environment on health: A new study says that children who live within 150 meters of congested roads have higher body mass indexes than kids that do not.

February 7 - Streetsblog

Fighting Obesity With Design

Last week, five NYC departments released a new publication on "Active Design Guidelines," presenting ways to address public health considerations through the built environment. Urban Omnibus takes a look.

February 7 - Urban Omnibus

Brooklyn Public Housing Planned for Renovation Instead Faces Demolition

Prospect Plaza, three public housing towers in Brooklyn, were vacated in 2003 for refurbishment. NYC has long renovated their public housing towers instead of tearing them down, so the announcement marks a major change for the city.

February 6 - The New York Times

A Garden in Motor City

Detroit revitalizes urban farming to replace dying industry.

February 6 - Chicago Tribune

One Latvian Town For Sale, Cheap

A secret Russian military facility abandoned by the Russian military when the Soviet Union collapsed was sold at auction on Friday by the Latvian government. Officials celebrated the sale and hoped it could bring new life to the empty town.

February 6 - The Huffington Post

Fewer Bedrooms, Bathrooms in Shrinking Homes

Custom Home Magazine reports that not only are home sizes down for the first time in 30 years, but the number of bedrooms and bathrooms is down in new homes as well.

February 6 - CustomHomeOnline

Hopping the HSR to Future Detroit

America 2050 releases a new video imagining what a commute in future Detroit could look like, including car sharing, high-speed rail, and a light rail connector.

February 6 - America 2050

BLOG POST

In Olympic year, Vancouver chooses LEED™ Gold for private buildings!

<p> Followers of Vancouver city planning will remember that in 2008, as part of the approval of the EcoDensity Initiative, our Council approved what remains (we think) the highest green standard for private sector building design in North America. The 2008 policy requires that buildings that go through rezonings (representing most buildings built in Vancouver) must establish that their design, at approval, is capable of achieving LEED™ Silver. We actually nick-named it &quot;Silver Plus&quot;, because we mandated that there be a minimum of 3 energy points, 1 water point, and 1 storm water point, emphasizing the things that matter most to us.

February 5 - Brent Toderian

Grants Signal Shift in Federal Urban Planning Policy

HUD announced this week the formation of a new Office of Sustainable Housing and Communities, along with $100 million in grants for regional integrated planning initiatives.

February 5 - The Seattle Times

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