The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Moving Day for Portland's 'Right to Dream Too' Homeless Camp Delayed

Two years of work by the city to move the location of the Right 2 Dream Too homeless encampment, including the purchase of land for a new location, has stalled in the final hour.

September 29 - The Oregonian

Transportation Bond Funding Divides Suburban County in Texas

It's a case of the haves vs. the have-nots in transportation spending for a rapidly growing suburban area of Houston.

September 29 - Houston Chronicle

workspace

More and More Americans Working From Home

In a pattern evident in communities all over the country, U.S. Census data shows more Americans are working from home. Researchers from the Brookings Institution are hoping that planners have noticed the trend.

September 29 - Brookings Institution

San Diego Rail

New San Diego Regional Plan Focuses on Public Transit

The San Diego Association of Government on October 9 will consider a 35-year regional plan that prioritizes public transit in its management of an expected 1 million new residents.

September 29 - The San Diego Union-Tribune

Closed Beach

The Dangers of Dumb Luck for Hurricane-Zone Transplants

The relative calm of the last decade may be luring hundreds of thousands of new coastal residents into a false sense of comfort.

September 29 - Five Thirty Eight


Coit Tower

Beyond the Big One: Real Recovery in San Francisco

What does it mean to be a Chief Resilience Officer for one America's largest cities? Doggerel spoke to Patrick Otellini, Chief Resilient Officer for San Francisco, to find out what it takes to make a truly resilient city.

September 29 - Doggerel

$7 Billion Later, Shell to Withdraw from Arctic Oil Drilling

Environmentalists could have saved themselves a lot of demonstrating had they known that Shell Oil would pack up their drilling rigs after only six weeks of exploratory drilling in the Chukchi Sea off Alaska. Insufficient oil and other reasons cited.

September 29 - Reuters


Parking Sign Blue

Three Parking Solutions for Three Growing Cities

As a new wave of people flood cities to live, work, and play, many arrive on four wheels: cars, which are creating massive headaches for city planners and drivers.

September 29 - Elevation DC

Ocean Grove Sidewalk

Sidewalk Cafes—Silver Bullets of Walkable Places

No single tool builds "walk appeal" as powerfully as sidewalk cafes, which are both a cause and an effect of places we love to walk.

September 29 - The Original Green Blog

Montville, Connecticut

How Chinese Immigrants Are Urbanizing a Connecticut Suburb

Next City provides a case study in the urbanization of suburbs—in this case the result of a large influx of Chinese immigrants.

September 28 - Next City

Witness a Car-Free Paris

We call them Open Streets events. In French it's Journée Sans Voiture. On September 27, the world saw a car-free Paris.

September 28 - Gizmodo

Water Dripping

How the Internet of Things Can Help Solve Water Woes

New tools and technologies of the so-called Internet of Things are helping cities get a better handle on water scarcity and overabundance.

September 28 - Data-Smart City Solutions

The Unkickable Can: Toward a 'Livability Synthesis'

Ben Brown points out the potential political upside to the aging population.

September 28 - PlaceShakers

Bike Cop

As San Francisco Debates Idaho Stop, Gov. Brown Gives All Cyclists a Break

Regardless of how San Francisco's proposed Bike Yield Law fares, all California cyclists who are ticketed for not stopping at stop signs may have the option to pay a reduced fine if they opt to attend bike school thanks to a new law signed Sept. 21.

September 28 - Streetsblog LA

Editorial: Patience, Planning Needed as Trinity Park Takes Shape in Dallas

The Dallas Morning News argues for a full and complete visioning process for a park along the Trinity River in Dallas.

September 28 - The Dallas Morning News

Bus Stop

Does Consolidating Bus Stops Speed Up Buses?

The practice of consolidating bus stops—or stop thinning—is a controversial method to speed up buses. Los Angeles Metro is considering consolidation as part of its ongoing Strategic Bus Network Plan.

September 28 - Streetsblog LA

Parking Requirements Among Changes in a Big Week for Planning in New York

Streetsblog NYC reviews new zoning and development rules proposed by the de Blasio Administration and finds incremental progress, not a major breakthrough, for parking policy.

September 28 - StreetsBlog NYC

School bus with stop sign

Exclusionary Schooling: The Forces that Widen the Achievement Gap

Sixty years after Brown v. Board, exclusionary zoning and school district rules still promote the economic and racial segregation of public schools.

September 28 - City Observatory

The old and the new

Once in the Great City of Detroit

A new book by Washington Post associate editor David Maraniss examines the glory years of Detroit.

September 28 - Detroit Free Press

Austin Pedestrians

BLOG POST

Economic Benefit of Increasing Neighborhood Walkability: Is it a Myth?

Researchers from Texas A&M blog about their study of the economic benefits of walkability in neighborhoods in Austin, Texas.

September 27 - JPER

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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.