The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
Cleveland: Subprime's 'Epicentre'
<p>Cleveland, which last week filed suit against 21 banks to regain revenues lost from a massive wave of foreclosures, epitomizes the extent of America's housing crisis.</p>
New Transit For Venice: No Tourists Allowed
<p>The City of Venice, Italy, has just opened a new waterbus for its canals that is reserved for use by local citizens only -- part of an effort to make the tourist-heavy city more friendly to its own people.</p>
Gulf Coast Oil Operations Worsened Katrina's Impact
<p>Canals dug for oil and natural gas extraction and service may have played a significant role in the weakening of the Mississippi River Delta -- a negative effect of the oil industry's Gulf operations that worsened the impact of Hurricane Katrina.</p>
Controversial Sky Bridge Up For Vote In Salt Lake City
<p>Controversial plans to include an elevated enclosed pedestrian bridge as part of a major development in downtown Salt Lake City will face a vote before the city's planning commission this week. The vote, however, is not expected to be the final word.</p>
Dire Outlook for America's Infrastructure
<p>America's infrastructure is struggling, but from where will the funding and political will come to fix it?</p>
Baby Steps to Downtown Living
<p>Downtown L.A. is redeveloping into a residential neighborhood. But is it baby-friendly?</p>
BLOG POST
Does Vancouver need (or want) Iconic Architecture?
<p><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: Arial">Like many world cities, Vancouver has a growing discussion on the issue of "iconic" architecture, one that I've been a part of and encouraging. This despite the fact that, like many urbanists, the word iconic actually makes me nervous. </span><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: Arial"> </span></p>
Agreement Bans Development Along Mediterranean Coast
<p>A coalition of 21 countries has signed an agreement that will prohibit any development within 100 yards of the Mediterranean coast -- a broad agreement that will affect more than 29,000 miles of coastline.</p>
The Flood-Prone Should Look to the Dutch
<p>Plans for 250,000 new houses on a floodplain in Britain and broad redevelopment plans in New Orleans have many wondering why planners aren't looking to the flood expertise of the Dutch.</p>
Big-Name Politicians Rally For Infrastructure
<p>New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger rallied recently in California, calling on the federal government to do more to address the country's aging infrastructure.</p>
EPA's Executive Privilege Withholds Documents
<p>In response to a request for documentation about why the EPA recently rejected greenhouse gas regulations in California, the agency has handed over limited and censored documents and citing an executive privilege in doing so.</p>
Dry Dry West
<p>This article from <em>National Geographic</em> looks at the increasing strain on the water supplying the western U.S.</p>
Transportation Secretary Opposes Call For Gas Tax Increase
<p>In this opinion by U.S. Secretary of Transportation Mary Peters, she rejects the recommendation by a national transportation commission to increase the gas tax, instead preferring road tolls, congestion pricing, and other private sector investment.</p>
FEMA Trailers Finding New Life
<p>Retired FEMA trailers originally sent to house the displaced after Hurricane Katrina have found new purpose in a government programs that distributes them for use by local municipalities.</p>
Keep Transit and Growth Mutual
<p>Public transit systems must be closely linked with new development and projections of growth for communities to sustain themselves in a changing environment, according to this op-ed.</p>
Texas Town Forced To Forfeit Land For Border Wall
<p>More than 200 acres of public land in Texas were transferred to the Department of Homeland security on the order of a federal judge. The department sought the land as part of its plan to build hundreds of miles of fences along the U.S.-Mexico border.</p>
FEATURE
Not Your Typical Redevelopment Board
With little else to do, teenagers in the rural Indiana town of San Pierre have found a new place to hang out: community meetings. But they're not just hanging out, they are actively participating in the planning and revitalization of their community.
Cleveland Suburbs: Too Close for Comfort?
<p>After black teenagers from Cleveland severely beat a white man, Shaker Heights residents reconsider the safety of their community.</p>
Activist Building Support For Philadelphia Bike-Sharing Program
<p>A community activist in Philadelphia is rallying support to pressure the city to consider a bike-sharing program similar to the Paris Velib system.</p>
Crosswalk Double-Cross: Cars Infringing on Pedestrian Rights
<p><em>Streetfilms</em> presents this brief video montage of cars infringing on the rights of pedestrians.</p>
Pagination
New York City School Construction Authority
Village of Glen Ellyn
Central Transportation Planning Staff/Boston Region MPO
Chaddick Institute at DePaul University
Institute for Housing and Urban Development Studies (IHS)
City of Grandview
Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada
Toledo-Lucas County Plan Commissions
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Planning for Universal Design
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