The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Andrés Duany Visits Sacramento

Paul Shigley reports that Duany spoke to planners at an event in Sacramento, and has a new issue: the broken process for getting things built.

November 2 - California Planning & Development Report

BLOG POST

Healthy, Wealthy and Wise Transportation Policy

<p style="margin: 0cm 0cm 10pt" class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-size: small; font-family: Calibri">An important new book, </span><a href="http://www.convergencepartnership.org/atf/cf/%7B245a9b44-6ded-4abd-a392-ae583809e350%7D/HEALTHTRANS_FULLBOOK_FINAL.PDF"><span style="font-size: small; font-family: Calibri">Healthy, Equitable Transportation Policy: Recommendations and Research</span></a>,<span style="font-size: small; font-family: Calibri"> and its summary report, </span><a href="http://www.convergencepartnership.org/atf/cf/%7B245a9b44-6ded-4abd-a392-ae583809e350%7D/TRANSPORTATIONRX.PDF"><span style="font-size: small; font-family: Calibri">The Transportation Prescription: Bold New Ideas for Healthy, Equitable Transportation Reform in America</span></a>,<span style="font-size: small; font-family: Calibri"> were just published by the <a href="http://www.convergencepartnership.org/transportationhealthandequity">Convergence Partnership</a></span><span style="font-size: small; font-family: Calibri">, a coalition that supports more rational and equitable health policy.</span> </p> <p style="margin: 0cm 0cm 10pt" class="MsoNormal">

November 2 - Todd Litman

The Detroit Money Shot

Journalists may be overplaying the desolation of Detroit by lustily photographing a few key ruins and cropping well-kept factories out of the picture.

November 2 - Vice Magazine

Paris Bike Program's Thousands of Casualties

Paris and JCDecaux promise to forge on with the popular bike program, despite having lost thousands of bikes to recklessness and vandalism.

November 2 - The New York Times

Chicago's Answer to NYC's High Line Will Generate Power & Food

A proposed plan from Gensler and 4240 Architecture would turn an abandoned rail line in Chicago into an energy-generating, food-growing powerhouse. Oh, and a park too.

November 2 - Fast Company


49% Spike in Ridership After Bay Bridge Closes

BART beat previous records for ridership on Weds. after a piece of the Bay Bridge that was fixed over the Memorial Day weekend failed.

November 2 - Transportation For America blog

FEATURE

Starchitecture and Sustainability: Hope, Creativity, and Futility Collide in Contemporary Architecture

Can today's contemporary architects, schooled in modernism and invention, in fact incorporate the sort of green building materials and techniques that make a real difference? And does design really matter? Josh Stephens takes a look.

November 1 - Josh Stephens


How Architects Learn: The Debate

Geoff Manaugh at BLDBLG talks about the role of the architecture student. Should they be allowed create experimental designs, even when the field of practice is so narrow it is unlikely they'll ever be able to design like that again?

November 1 - BLDBLOG

Cars and Houses Brought Back the Economy

The economy is up 3.5% in the 3rd quarter, thanks in large part to government subsidies for car and home buying. Otherwise, the impact of the stimulus has been muted, says The Washington Times.

November 1 - The Washington Times

Sculptures Rise in Iowa, Distract From City's Woes

A Des Moines venture capitalist and his wife have donated a reported $40 million worth of large public sculptures for a sculpture park, part of a significant redevelopment effort by the city.

November 1 - The New York Times

Giving Developers A Break

The City of Wildomar, CA is considering cutting developer fees in half in order to spur the local economy.

November 1 - The Press-Enterprise

Hitting Fast-Forward on Transit

LA Mayor Villaraigosa an ambitious new plan to speed up new rail projects throughout the city, and to complete it all within 10 years instead of the previously proposed 30.

November 1 - The Los Angeles Times

BLOG POST

Mixing It Up at RailVolution

<p><span style="font-size: small; font-family: arial" class="Apple-style-span">BOSTON -- If you&#39;ve ever studied the bar menu at <a href="http://www.tradervics.com/index.html" target="_blank">Trader Vic&#39;s</a> then you know about such wonders as Tropical Passion, Moku Nani, and the Potted Parrot. Each is made of a unique but secret blend of dark rum, light rum, spiced rum, tropical juices, and of course &quot;subtle flavorings.&quot;  But by the time you&#39;d realize that the only real difference is the glass they come in, you&#39;re too probably drunk to notice--or care. </span></p><p><span style="font-size: small; font-family: arial" class="Apple-style-span">Minus the palm fronds, the RailVolution conference is much the same.  </span></p>

October 31 - Josh Stephens

Housing is Recovering - Will It Last?

Business Week looks at the recovering housing market, and believes that even though it was driven by massive government support there are signs that it might actually continue.

October 31 - Business Week

Spoooooky Roads

Celebrate Halloween with this slideshow of America's creepiest roads, accompanied by the scary tales that make them part of urban (or rural) legends.

October 31 - Digital City

Local Canadian Leaders Do What Fed Fails To

While Canada's federal government resists taking action on climate change, its provincial and Aboriginal leaders have set aside over 200 million acres of boreal forest as a carbon vault.

October 31 - Guardian (UK)

Gropius Buildings Slated for Demolition

The Friend Convalescent Hospital was the first of Walter Gropius' modernist buildings to be destroyed at Chicago's Michael Reese hospital. Bulldozing began on Wednesday with more still to go.

October 31 - The Chicago Tribune

The Animated History of Midtown Manhattan

This animation from <em>The New York Times</em> examines the history of Midtown Manhattan -- from pristine island environment to bustling metropolis.

October 31 - The New York Times

Friday Funny: Local Laws Gone Wild

In Huangping, China, schoolchildren are required to salute passing cars in an effort to reduce traffic accidents. This rule is just one of many bizarre local ordinances in China, where the power of local bureaucrats can sometimes get out of hand.

October 30 - The New York Times

A Little Soy for Your Groundwater?

In order to clean up groundwater pollution from dry cleaning chemicals, Orland, California is planning on injecting soybean oil into the problem area. The plan is touted as lower risk and lower cost than other methods.

October 30 - Oroville Mercury Register

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