The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

The Best Small Town You've Never Heard Of

<p>Exeter, California, may lie off the beaten path and be little-known outside the southern San Joaquin Valley. But its thriving, spotless downtown would be the envy of most cities.</p>

June 12 - California Planning & Development Report

The Sudden Death Of The SUV

<p>Gas-guzzling SUVs no longer rule the U.S. auto market.</p>

June 12 - Wired Autopia

'Tele-Nurses' Save Precious Bucks on Ambulances

<p>Instead of sending an ambulance every time someone calls 9-1-1, the Houston City Council voted to contract with a telephone nursing service for non-emergencies.</p>

June 12 - The Houston Chronicle

Report Estimates Economic Value of Philadelphia's Park System

<p>A report announced by Mayor Michael Nutter estimates that Philadelphia's park system has a combined economic value of $1.9 billion in services, income and taxes to the city.</p>

June 12 - The Philadelphia Inquirer

Cloning Speaker's Corner

<p>A charity in Britain wants to replicate the success of London's heavily used Speaker's Corner in other parts of the country to encourage public interaction and discussion. Some say it's an idea that could never be.</p>

June 12 - The Christian Science Monitor


Urban Farms Create Flow of Food and Cash in Cuba

<p>Urban farms in Cuba have proven successful at feeding the country and providing hundreds of thousands of jobs.</p>

June 12 - International Herald Tribune

Re-Imagining Suburbs as Towns

<p>This article from <em>City Journal</em> looks at the anti-modernist architect Leon Krier's plan for remaking suburbs into self-contained towns.</p>

June 12 - City Journal


BLOG POST

Learning from my suburb

<p> <br /> For nearly all of my adult life, I have lived in small towns or urban neighborhoods. But for the past two years, I have lived in sprawl. When I moved to Jacksonville two years ago, I moved to Mandarin, a basically suburban neighborhood about nine miles from downtown. As I looked for apartments in 2006, I noticed that in many ways, Mandarin is typical sprawl: our major commercial street (San Jose Boulevard) is as many as eight lanes in some places, and even most apartments are separated from San Jose’s commerce. [See http://atlantaphotos.fotopic.net/c872477.html for my photos of Mandarin and other Jacksonville neighborhoods.] I thought Mandarin would be a typical suburb: homogenously white and upper-middle class. <br />

June 11 - Michael Lewyn

FEMA Sat On $85 Million in Katrina Relief

<p>Housing groups in Katrina-affected regions are expressing their outrage after a CNN investigation uncovered that tons of supplies intended for hurricane victims sat in storage for two years before being given away to cities and other organizations.</p>

June 11 - CNN

Home, Sweet Clam Shack

<p>In Newburyport, Mass., critics tried to stop Mark Roland from converting an historic clam shack into a home. Roland claims: 'It's recycling.'</p>

June 11 - The Boston Globe

Beyond the Backyard Garden: Urban Agriculture

Thanks to industrialized agriculture, there’s a wide gulf between those who produce food and those who consume it. Too many city-dwellers lack access to nutritious, non-processed foods. Dave Steel thinks that urban agriculture is the key.

June 11 - The Next American City

Racers Battle Civil War Buffs in N.C.

<p>Banker Dave Ridson wants to build a racetrack on a site preservationists say is an historic Civil War site. But where the battle actually fought is a matter of debate.</p>

June 11 - The Houston Chronicle

BLOG POST

Are transit ridership numbers more pomp than substance?

<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt" class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-size: small; font-family: Times New Roman">The </span><a href="http://www.apta.com/"><span style="font-size: small; font-family: Times New Roman; color: #800080">American Public Transit Association</span></a><span style="font-size: small; font-family: Times New Roman"> reports that </span><a href="http://www.apta.com/media/releases/080602_ridership_report.cfm"><span style="font-size: small; font-family: Times New Roman; color: #800080">transit ridership climbed to 10.3 billion trips during the first quarter of 2008</span></a><span style="font-size: small; font-family: Times New Roman">, the “highest number of trips taken in fifty years.” That represents a 3.3 percent increase overall over the previous year while vehicle miles traveled, a measure of demand for car travel, fell by 2.3 percent, they observe.</span>

June 11 - Samuel Staley

Rural U.S. Hit Hardest By Gas Prices

<p>Gas prices have just surpassed the $4 mark, but the impact is far from uniform throughout the nation- poor, rural counties, particularly in the south and west, suffer disproportionately.</p>

June 11 - The New York Times

New Yorkers Can Now Find the Best Bike Routes Online

<p>A new web site that generates directions for cyclists could supplant the New York City Bike Map.</p>

June 11 - Streetsblog

Making Suburbs Act Like Cities

<p>In order to respond to the changing climate and economy, many say suburbs need to start acting more like cities.</p>

June 11 - The New York Times

Federal Funding At Risk If KC Alters Plans

<p>Streetcars and rail in place of bus rapid transit said to jeopardize federal funding.</p>

June 11 - The Kansas City Star

Ad Hoc Ferry System Keeps Businesses Afloat

<p>After MNDOT closed the Highway 43 bridge connecting Winona, MN to western Wisconsin, locals worried about the economic fallout from an extended closure. Within a week, a ferry and bus system was put in place.</p>

June 11 - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Too Many Condos, Not Enough Jobs

<p>Planners in Vancouver are moving to curb booming residential growth to expand commercial development downtown. 'It's all good to walk and bike to work, but if you don't have offices for people to go to, that makes things rather difficult.'</p>

June 11 - The Vancouver Sun

Crime, Rising Costs Draw Concerns for World Cup Host

<p>With the first game of the 2010 World Cup exactly two years away, many in host country South Africa are concerned about rising inflation, increased violence, and skyrocketing costs of stadium construction.</p>

June 11 - ESPN

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Village of Glen Ellyn

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