The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
Venezuela Plans New Cities As Socialist Utopias
<p>President Hugo Chávez is guiding government plans to create several brand new cities to serve as models of social and environmental harmony.</p>
Two Projects, 20 Years Apart, Constitute One CEQA Project
<p>A court of appeal in California ruled that a decades-old plan to realign a road and a two-year-old plan to build a big box improvement store nearby only need to undergo one environmental impact analysis under the state's Environmental Quality Act.</p>
Starchitects Designing More Than Just Buildings
<p>With the pipeline of glitzy real estate projects slowing, star designers are branching out with new fashion items and other luxury goods.</p>
BLOG POST
Developing A TND Ordinance
<p><em>When I opened my email this morning I was delighted to see that the City of Flagstaff unanimously approved a <a href="/www.smartcodecentral.com">SmartCode</a> based TND ordinance. The ordinance, created to make a recent <a href="/www.doverkohl.com">Dover Kohl</a> designed project called Juniper Point legal, allows a more compact, pedstrian friendly urban pattern to be established within the City. This is a crucial step in providing alternatives to business as usual sprawl development. Fortunately, more and more cities - From Jamestown, Rhode Island to Miami, Florida, to Montgomery, Alabama - are making smart growth a legal and easy choice. </em> </p>
Making It Cool To Walk To School
<p>A newly released study looked at various programs designed to encourage more students to walk to school, and helps to identify a recipe for success.</p>
Investing In A City's Rebirth
<p>With urban areas on the rise, investors are taking a closer look places like Detroit and Philadelphia, where depressed real estate values can equal opportunity for those with local knowledge.</p>
Can The U.S. Cut Its Energy Consumption?
<p>A Canadian economist says the U.S. is heading for a major collision between rising energy prices and its lifestyle of excess.</p>
The Suburbs Keep On Growing
<p>Even with increased awareness of global warning and more focus on urban living, the process of outward development continues in cities across America -- driven by homebuyers' continuing desire to own a piece of the American Dream.</p>
BLOG POST
Finding Planning Scholarship for Free: Articles with Open Access or Partly-Open Access
<style> <!-- ul li {margin-bottom: 10px;} --> </style> <p>Online versions of journals have made quick inroads at universities. However, subscriptions are expensive and those outside universities seldom have access. A new generation of open access journals is making planning research accessible beyond the campus. </p> <p>Some examples illustrate the range of material now available. Some are fully accessible and some are partially open to non-subscribers:</p>
Where The Affordable Housing Is...And Isn't
<p>California is home to the least affordable housing markets, while Michigan and Ohio are the places with the lowest home prices.</p>
Sydney To Dedicate Parking For Car Sharing
<p>Officials hope the new trial program will help increase the number of residents who join car sharing schemes.</p>
How To Quench Atlanta's Growing Thirst
<p>A severe water shortage is threatening Atlanta, and critics blame the region's unchecked growth as a primary cause for the its current predicament.</p>
'Green' Cities Are Great Cities
<p>A recent editorial argues that creating cities that consume less energy and emit less pollution will also help us create attractive and healthy places to live.</p>
Maryland Gives Home Buyers Cash To Live Near Work
<p>The state has launched a revamped home buyer assistance program that provide grants to employees who buy a home within 10 miles from their work.</p>
Getting Farms And Cities To Co-Exist
<p>Agricultural land around Boise, Idaho is facing increasing development pressure, but some farmers hope that a growing city can boost the demand for locally grown produce.</p>
Which Cities Are Set To Make A Comeback?
<p>History tells us that cities ebb and flow. This first of a three part series looks at a number of U.S. cities that have been in decline, and begins to explore which cities are poised to return to prosperity.</p>
Bringing Back Planning In Philadelphia
<p>With the city undertaking several major planning efforts -- including a complete revision of its zoning code -- Philadelphia is entering a new shining era of city planning. But there's still more work to be done, argues a recent editorial.</p>
Giving Regionalism A Chance
<p>A non-profit group is trying to convince Nashville-area cities and counties to engage in regional planning and cooperation to halt the region's fast-expanding sprawl.</p>
Managing Florida's Ongoing Growth Saga
<p>More than 20 years after he helped the Florida Growth Management Act, Tom Pelham is back at the helm of the state's Department of Community Affairs trying to find a middle ground between residents and developers.</p>
The World's Most Desirable Country
<p>Iceland slips past Norway to rank first in the latest United Nations Development Index. The U.S. slips four places to 12th place.</p>
Pagination
Tyler Technologies
New York City School Construction Authority
Village of Glen Ellyn
Transportation Research & Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University
Chaddick Institute at DePaul University
Institute for Housing and Urban Development Studies (IHS)
Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada
Toledo-Lucas County Plan Commissions
Urban Design for Planners 1: Software Tools
This six-course series explores essential urban design concepts using open source software and equips planners with the tools they need to participate fully in the urban design process.
Planning for Universal Design
Learn the tools for implementing Universal Design in planning regulations.