The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Despite Streetcar Skeleton, Chicago Leans Towards BRT

<p>Transit officials in Chicago are calling on the city to rebuild its historic streetcar system. Rails still exist on many streets, but city officials are leaning away from streetcars and towards bus rapid transit.</p>

June 24 - Chicago Sun-Times

One Blight Down, One To Go

<p>In this op-ed piece, Kevin C. Phelan and Yanni Tsipis argue that Boston's 'Big Dig' has only fought half the battle, calling for a more proactive approach to building over the city's other auto sewer, the Massachusetts Turnpike.</p>

June 24 - The Boston Globe

St. Louis Comes Back

<p>Despite predictions that the city was dying, St. Louis has just won an "All-America City" award. Neal Peirce looks at how the city turned itself around.</p>

June 24 - The Washington Post Writers Group

Airport Easements Cause Uproar

<p>A new airport overlay district in Sioux Falls, South Dakota has nearby homeowners crying 'taking!' Airport officials say, 'All we're trying to do is make sure we have good neighbors.'</p>

June 24 - The Argus Leader

Presidential Candidate Calls on Mayors to Embrace Urban Growth

<p>Building a strong country is reliant on strong urban regions, according to Senator Barack Obama, who recently spoke with a conference of U.S. mayors about the importance of urban growth. Federal funding, however, will be limited, he said.</p>

June 23 - The New York Times


New Orleans Streets Updated

<p>This story from <em>NPR</em> looks at a new bike lane in New Orleans, and other efforts the city is taking to update its street infrastructure.</p>

June 23 - NPR

The Changing Skyline of Beijing

<p>A new building by Rem Koolhaas in Beijing is part of a wave of modern construction that is changing the tightly-planned urban fabric of the Chinese capital.</p>

June 23 - The New Yorker


San FranYuppyland?

<p>San Francisco's rapid loss of low and middle-income residents is taking a toll on the city's social fabric.</p>

June 23 - The San Francisco Chronicle

Traffic Signs Driving Us to Distraction

<p>Traffic signs on American roadways are so numerous and so distracting to drivers that they are having the opposite effect intended, writes John Staddon.</p>

June 23 - Atlantic Monthly

Why Isn't Our Campus Downtown?

<p>Bruce Fisher laments Buffalo's decades-old decision to put their university campus outside of town, missing the lesson that "eds and meds" are central to the prosperity of a city.</p>

June 23 - ArtVoice

Pawnshops 'Inundated', But Facing Hard Times

<p>With gas and food prices climbing to unprecedented levels, many families are turning to pawnshops to cover their bills. Unfortunately, pickups are down and people aren't buying, putting smaller operations at risk of closure.</p>

June 23 - The News & Observer

Zoning Squashes Wedding Plans

<p>Heather Stewart's vision of a country wedding in a resorted country barn are thwarted by code enforcement officers at the last minute. 'We have zoning rules and building codes that always get in the way of dreams,' Reinsborough said.</p>

June 23 - Portland Press Herald

Hate Your Long-Distance Commute? Then Move

<p>A recent L.A. Times series suggests that we should build more Southern California freeways for long-distance commuters, and prevent additional job development in employment-heavy areas. Bill Fulton suggests a different approach.</p>

June 23 - California Planning & Development Report

Of Cyclepaths and Psychopaths

<p>Cyclists Bill Reynolds muses on the freedom offered by the bicycle -- and the tragic tendency for cyclists to fall victim to automobiles.</p>

June 23 - The Walrus

FEATURE

Scooting in a City Built for Cars

Rising gas prices and thickening traffic congestion make small, fuel-efficient scooters seem like a great way to get around. But on roads built mainly for speeding cars, scooting can be scary. Occasional scooter-rider Pam Diaz argues it shouldn't be.

June 23 - Pam Diaz

New Cruise Ship Will Have Its Own 'Central Park'

<p>Royal Caribbean is building the world's largest cruise ship, which will be a city in its own right with seven different neighborhoods and a central public space/urban park.</p>

June 22 - Gizmodo

Learning from Arlington

<p>Columnist Roger K. Lewis reflects on Arlington's Rosslyn-Ballston corridor and what other cities can learn from their success.</p>

June 22 - The Washington Post

'My Winnipeg': City as Myth, Prison, and Home

<p>An international film festival favorite, Guy Maddin's hard-to-classify documentary "My Winnipeg" revels in and at the same time mocks the Canadian city's mythologies.</p>

June 22 - The Globe & Mail

U.S. House Debates Smart Growth

<p>The House Select Committee for Energy Independence and Global Warming met Thursday to discuss smart growth and its ability to reduce energy use and emissions.</p>

June 22 - Grist

Houston Thinks About Changing Lifestyles to Fight Congestion

<p>This segment from <em>NPR</em> features a discussion with Houston Mayor Bill White about the city's increasing congestion, the limits of zoning, and the population's reaction to rising gas prices.</p>

June 22 - NPR

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New York City School Construction Authority

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Village of Glen Ellyn

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