The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Growth in Gardening

<p>Nearly 100 million American households have tended a garden or lawn since 2005, a significant increase from years past. According to estimates, much of the rise is due to younger adults getting out in their gardens.</p>

February 29 - Publishers Weekly

Experts Consider Streetcar in Indianapolis

<p>Business leaders in Indianapolis are looking to replicate the success of Portland, Oregon, by creating a task force to pursue plans for a streetcar system in the city's downtown.</p>

February 29 - Indianapolis Business Journal

Upturn for Downcity

<p>The Downcity neighborhood of Providence is undergoing an urban revitalization, one hinged on preservation and renovation of historic buildings.</p>

February 28 - The New York Times

The Town That Keeps You in Shape

<p>Prince Charles has initiated an effort to build the world's first "trim town" -- a city form that aims to improve the health of its residents by creating walkable environments.</p>

February 28 - Scotland on Sunday

Colleges Tightening Bonds With Cities

<p>Universities are embracing their interrelationships with their cities, sparking a flurry of university-led urban development projects.</p>

February 28 - The Wall Street Journal


Fighting Gentrification With Historic Designation

<p>Business leaders in New York have proposed declaring Harlem's 125th Street as historic zone in an effort to stop gentrification in the area.</p>

February 28 - The New York Times

Will the National Mall Redesign Put Limits on Free Speech?

<p>A coalition of civil rights groups are concerned that the plans to redesign Washington D.C.'s National Mall will spatially restrict free speech and public protests, a charge the National Park Service rejects.</p>

February 28 - AlterNet


Is L.A. Ready to Rethink Mobility?

<p>Plans to convert major arteries to one-way streets in L.A. are meeting tough criticism. Many say the city needs to rethink what mobility should mean, but others say L.A. isn't ready for such a paradigm shift.</p>

February 28 - The Los Angeles Times

Idaho Cracks Down on Urban Renewal District Abuse

<p>Lawmakers in Idaho have proposed a bill that seeks to limit urban renewal district abuses.</p>

February 28 - Idaho Business Review

Miami Reaches For The Sky

<p>Due to the relaxation of FAA height limits, downtown Miami may see its ever-changing skyline rise even higher.</p>

February 28 - The Miami Herald

Mortgage Crisis a '50-State Katrina'

<p>Filmmaker Danny Schechter reflects on the extent of America's debt crisis, and wonders if we need something like the Oscars to help name and identify those responsible.</p>

February 28 - Common Dreams

Economic Stimulus Package - No Infrastructure Funding...Yet

<p>If a group of bipartisan governors from some of the nation's largest states have their way, the $168 billion economic stimulus package will include $30 billion to repair the nation's infrastructure, including road, rail, and bridges.</p>

February 28 - The San Francisco Chronicle

Free Bus Idea Fizzles in Eugene

<p>A proposal to make Eugene, Oregon's bus system fare-free has been voted down by the regional transit district.</p>

February 28 - The Register-Guard

BLOG POST

Blight in Full Color

<p> Every city has blight – the unsightly, derelict, abandoned, disheveled, and under-utilized spaces of our urban areas. It drains the life out of neighborhoods, drives down the values of surrounding properties, and just looks really bad. So what do cities do about it? Some seize it through eminent domain for redevelopment and others offer incentives to developers to replace it with something better. Many of them, though, don’t do anything at all. But removing blight from a city is not impossible, and it doesn’t have to be an elaborate multi-party scheme or a drawn-out political process. It can be as simple as a coat of paint.<br />

February 27 - Nate Berg

Green Building Requirement Weighed in San Francisco

<p>The city of San Francisco is considering a proposal to require most new commercial and residential buildings to comply with the green building standard LEED.</p>

February 27 - The Christian Science Monitor

'Oldest Urban Site' Unearthed

<p>What may be the oldest urban site in the world has been unearthed in Peru.</p>

February 27 - The Los Angeles Times

Boomers Cause Boom in Hospital Construction

<p>Hospitals are being built and renovated all across the country -- a trend responding to the aging baby boomer population.</p>

February 27 - Planning Commissioners Journal

Temple of Doom

<p>To ward off crop extinctions in the event of some future catastrophe, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault opens today to receive thousands of seed samples from around the world.</p>

February 27 - The Globe and Mail

Bush Denies Infrastructure Funding

<p>The pleas of governors from across the country for more infrastructure funding have been shot down by President George W. Bush.</p>

February 27 - The New York Times

Remaking the Waterfront, Remaking the City

<p>This episode of <em>Smart City</em> looks at riverfront redevelopment as a tool for recreating cities.</p>

February 27 - Smart City

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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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