The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Tight Resources Hurt Denver's Historic Preservation

<p>Denver is not providing enough resources to undertake historic preservation efforts, according to this open letter to Mayor John Hickenlooper.</p>

March 13 - The Rocky Mountain News

Is Chicago's 'Transformed' Cabrini-Green 'Too Good for Poor People'?

As a part of Chicago's $1.4 billion "Plan for Transformation," the once massive Cabrini-Green project has been redeveloped into a mix of affordable, public and market housing. But 80% of the former tenants have moved away.

March 13 - GOOD Magazine

BLOG POST

Therapeutic Cities

<p> I'm reposting this from my <a href="http://cities.iftf.net">Future of Cities</a> blog. You're all invited to join our conversation over there: it's sort of for urban studies what Planetizen is for urban planning and design. </p><p> Some of you may know that my wife and I welcomed a little girl to the world last month (Stella!). Despite the fact that my mother was a nurse for 40 years - or perhaps because of it - I've never spent a lot of time around hospitals. In fact, like many of you I share an aversion to the centralization of sick people. </p>

March 13 - Anthony Townsend

Australia's 'White Flight' and the Rise of the Aborigines

<p>The Aborigine population in Australia is on the rise, and the shift in demographics is posing problems for the country's school system.</p>

March 13 - The Sydney Morning Herald

The Implications of Climate Change on Transportation Infrastructure

<p>Recent reports are highlighting the dire effects climate change will have on transportation infrastructure.</p>

March 13 - Associated Press


Russian Army Plans Massive Land Auction

<p>In order to raise money to provide much-needed housing for its soldiers, the Russian Army has plans to auction of millions of dollars worth of property -- from huge mansions to entire towns.</p>

March 13 - BBC

Grand Canal Proposed in South Korea

<p>South Korea's new president has proposed the engineering and construction of a huge cross-country canal -- a plan he hopes will revive much of the country's depressed villages and offer an attractive venue for tourists and shipping companies.</p>

March 13 - The New York Times


Streetcar Plans Move Forward in Cincinnati

<p>Plans for streetcars in Cincinnati are moving forward, as advocates have formally requested nearly $1 million to perform the preliminary studies required to apply for federal funding.</p>

March 13 - The Cincinnati Enquirer

Anti-McMansion Movement May Benefit Architects

<p>A recent ruling that upholds the right of local communities to control overbuilding may prove to increase the crackdown on McMansions -- and demand for design professionals and architects.</p>

March 12 - Architectural Record

Planners Making 'Inadequate' Use of Climate Change Info

<p>New scientific reports laying out the potential impacts of global warming on cities are being directed to planners, whom some say are not reacting to the changing climate adequately.</p>

March 12 - The New York Times

Young Professionals Drawn in by Yonkers Waterfront Redevelopment

<p>Downtown waterfront redevelopment is attracting a new kind of resident to Yonkers, New York.</p>

March 12 - The New York Times

BLOG POST

When Planning Matters

<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt; text-indent: 0.5in" class="MsoNormal"> <font face="Times New Roman" size="3">Why plan? That’s an important question for a planning skeptic like myself. I’m not at all convinced that conventional public urban planning has much value, despite (or because of?) spending eight years on a city planning commission. Yet, I don’t consider myself an “antiplanner”. I’m happy to leave that role to my friend and virtual colleague </font><a href="http://www.cato.org/people/otoole.html"><font face="Times New Roman" size="3" color="#800080">Randal O’Toole</font></a><font face="Times New Roman" size="3"> at the Cato Institute. (He even runs a blog called “</font><a href="http://www.ti.org/antiplanner/"><font face="Times New Roman" size="3" color="#800080">The Antiplanner</font></a><font size="3"><font face="Times New Roman">”.)<span> </span></font></font> </p> <p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt; text-indent: 0.5in" class="MsoNormal"> <font face="Times New Roman" size="3">Urban planning has a role even though, IMO, on balance, its application has had a negative impact on communities and cities. Notably, even the free market (and Nobel Prize winning) economist </font><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Hayek"><font face="Times New Roman" size="3" color="#800080">F.A. Hayek</font></a><font face="Times New Roman" size="3"> recognized a role for planning in his classic book on political economy <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Constitution-Liberty-F-Hayek/dp/0226320847"><font color="#800080">The Constitution of Liberty</font></a></em>. </font> </p> <p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt; text-indent: 0.5in" class="MsoNormal"> <font face="Times New Roman" size="3">The question is: what <em>is</em> planning’s role and, perhaps more importantly, how has this role changed or shifted in modern times?</font> </p>

March 12 - Samuel Staley

Slow Transit? Put it Underground

<p>This piece from the <em>San Francisco Chronicle</em> argues that the best way to improve the city's sluggish public transit system is to put it underground.</p>

March 12 - The San Francisco Chronicle

Prince's Foundation Hopes to Salvage Kingston Ghetto

<p>Crippling violence and dangerous streets in the Rose Town area of Kingston, Jamaica, have motivated Prince Charles to bring his Foundation for Architecture and Urbanism to the island ghetto to attempt a rebirth.</p>

March 12 - The Guardian

South Parked

<p>James Howard Kuntsler muses on how the end of cheap oil will mean the parallel decline of the suburban sprawl economy of the South and its NASCAR subculture.</p>

March 12 - AlterNet

Key West's Main Drag?

<p>Residents and public officials are calling on merchants to clean up Duval Street in Key West, Florida. Long considered the city's economic engine, the opposition believes some of the questionable quirkiness give the street and the city its character.</p>

March 12 - The Miami Herald

Grim Forecast For Transportation Progress In Bay Area

<p>Bay Area political columnist Dan Borenstein examines long-term transportation data and concludes that driving will only increase unless politicians make driving more expensive and transit cheaper, a solution he regards as unlikely at best.</p>

March 12 - The Contra Costa Times

A Lonely Fighter Defending Sprawl

<p>Libertarian economist Randal O'Toole has become notorious for defending sprawl in recent years. This article from <em>The Toronto Star</em> wonders if he might have a valid point.</p>

March 12 - The Toronto Star

Ottawa's $4 Billion Transit Plans

<p>Plans were recently announced for a $4 billion revamping and extension of the public transportation system in Ottawa.</p>

March 12 - Daily Commercial News and Construction Record

Commuter Rail Rolls in San Diego

<p>After three decades of planning, a new commuter rail line has opened in the San Diego area.</p>

March 11 - The San Diego Union-Tribune

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New York City School Construction Authority

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Village of Glen Ellyn

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Central Transportation Planning Staff/Boston Region MPO

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