The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Make Public Art Public

<p>Pubilc art should be guided by public input, according to this commentary.</p>

May 13 - The Guardian

BLOG POST

Myth and Reality About European Sprawl

<span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman'"> <p> Some commentators argue that sprawl is an inevitable result of affluence, based on European development patterns. These pundits tell a simple story: European urban cores are losing population and becoming more automobile-dependent - just like American cities. So if Europe can’t beat sprawl, neither can America. </p>

May 13 - Michael Lewyn

Road Building Requirement Lifted For Arizona Homebuilders

<p>Homebuilders have been removed from the language of a transportation funding bill that would have required developers to pay for new roads.</p>

May 13 - Arizona Daily Star

CBS: 'America in Disrepair'

<p>CBS' "Early Show" highlights the sorry state of the country's infrastructure, warning that the U.S. may become a "second-rate country" if the necessary repairs aren't made [Includes video].</p>

May 13 - Raw Replay

New Details About Chicago's Bus Rapid Transit System

<p>Chicago's federally funded pilot program will target some of the city's most congested arteries with new bus-rapid transit lines that will feature dedicated lanes, pre-paid boarding, "next bus" signs, and potentially bicycle sharing.</p>

May 13 - The Chicago Tribune


Adding Housing To Office Parks

<p>Facing a shortage of affordable housing, Westchester, New York, is considering using the excess parking lots of local office park campuses for new housing development.</p>

May 12 - The New York Times

Is A Prius Greener Than Light Rail?

<p>Light rail vehicles aren't as green one might think, and cities that really want to lower carbon emissions might want to take a harder look at new hybrid-electric buses, argues a recent column.</p>

May 12 - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel


Neighborhood Zoning Offices Give Residents Help And Answers

<p>Following the lead of law enforcement, San Diego's code enforcement department is opening storefront offices where residents can come in with questions and complaints.</p>

May 12 - The San Diego Union-Tribune

New State Laws Making It Easier To Build Green

<p>States are helping homeowners who want to have a more eco-friendly lifestyle by overturning homeowner association regulations that ban solar panels and wind turbines.</p>

May 12 - USA Today

A Day In The Life Of An Urban Farmer

<p>With growing numbers interested in urban agriculture, American Public Radio's Marketplace interviews one urban farmer in Pasadena, California.</p>

May 12 - Marketplace Radio

Americans Turn To Transit For Gas Price Relief

<p>Record gas prices have helped the nation's transit systems attract record numbers of riders. Notably, the biggest increases have occurred in the South and West, where public transportation has traditionally been underutilized.</p>

May 12 - The Seattle Times

BLOG POST

End Powerpoint Abuse

<p> <span style="font-size: 9pt; font-family: Verdana">We’ve all been subject to them – the endless powerpoint presentations that extol the worst aspects of animated text and mind-numbing bullet points.<span> </span>While Edward Tufte has written about the <a href="http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/11.09/ppt2.html">horrors of powerpoint</a>, I see it as just a tool and like any tool it can be used wisely or poorly.<span> </span>After all, David Byrne, the former Talking Heads front man, makes <a href="http://www.davidbyrne.com/art/eeei/index.php">art with powerpoint</a> so it can’t be all bad.<span> </span>But one thing struck me at the American Planning Association’s (APA) conference two weeks ago:<span> </span>some sessions would have been much better if the powerpoint presentation (or abuse thereof) didn’t get in the way.<span> </span>In actuality, some of the best presentations I attended didn’t use powerpoint at all.

May 12 - Scott Page

Taking The Politics Out Of Parking

<p>UCLA Professor Donald Shoup has criss-crossed the nation lecturing about the many benefits from market pricing of parking -- but he says too many cities are still making decisions based on politics.</p>

May 12 - The Toronto Star

Curing Ills in Suburban Melbourne

<p>Melbourne, Australia, has its own brand of suburban sprawl: suburbia without the space. A new comprehensive plan aims to address the woes of suburban Melbourne, but some say it doesn't go far enough.</p>

May 12 - The Age

Inside the Plans for a Carbon-Neutral City in the Desert

<p>This segment from <em>NPR</em> looks at plans for the carbon-neutral Masdar City in Abu Dhabi.</p>

May 12 - NPR

District of Rats

Washington D.C. has successfully invested more than $600 million in a new baseball stadium, but the city's infamous infestation with rats is nowhere near resolved. Reason's Matt Welch asks why.

May 12 - Reason

America's First Wind-Powered City

<p>The city of Rock Port, Missouri, recently celebrated the fact that its four wind turbines produced more energy than the town needed, becoming the first community in America to be completely powered by wind.</p>

May 11 - KOMU

Market Downturn Is Good News For Land Conservationists

<p>While plenty of investors and homeowners are feeling the pain of the current real estate market, groups trying to protect land from development are welcoming the downturn.</p>

May 11 - The Wall Street Journal

A Congestion Pricing Plan For America's Most Famous Bridge

<p>Plans call for raising the tolls on the San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge depending on the time of day, but commuters have so far reacted negatively to the plan, arguing there are too few alternatives.</p>

May 11 - The San Francisco Chronicle

Street Signs And Traffic Islands As Art?

<p>A Los Angeles activist and artist has taken to placing street signs mimicking the city's no parking signs on traffic islands, declaring them parks.</p>

May 11 - The Los Angeles Times

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New York City School Construction Authority

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Village of Glen Ellyn

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