The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Lack of Water Services Racially Motivated

<p>A jury has awarded a poor rural Ohio neighborhood populated mostly by African Americans nearly $11 million, having determined that racist motives lay behind the water authority's decades-long refusal to supply water to the community.</p>

July 13 - Associated Press

Amid High Food Prices, USDA Considers Un-Conserving Land

<p>The USDA is considering a plan to put conservation land back into agricultural production -- a move farmers are trumpeting, but environmentalists are opposing.</p>

July 13 - The Washington Post

Giant Public Sculptures to Transform Ailing Region

<p>Artist Anish Kapoor, creator of the famous "mirrored jellybean" in Chicago's Millennium Park, is creating a new series of massive sculptures for five depressed cities in Yorkshire. Backers hope the art will transform the region.</p>

July 13 - The Guardian U.K.

Broadway To Receive Pedestrian/Bicycle Makeover

<p>A portion of New York City's most storied thoroughfare is being transformed with a physically protected bicycle lane and added space for pedestrians, cafe tables and benches.</p>

July 13 - The New York Times

Ethnic Groups Are Reinterpreting the Burbs

<p>'Fringe Benefits: Cosmopolitan Dynamics of a Multicultural City' is the name of an exhibit open now at the Design Exchange in Toronto. Urban designer Ian Chodikoff explains his inspiration for the show.</p>

July 12 - The Globe and Mail


Irish Alcatraz?

<p>Belfast developers plan on turning a Victorian-era jail into a tourist attraction, hotel, and art gallery. Her Majesty’s Prison Belfast closed in 1996, and is a symbol of The Troubles, the long struggle in Northern Ireland for Irish independence.</p>

July 12 - Global Atlanta

Berkeley's BRT Faces Backlash

<p>Business owners fear dedicated transit lane would discourage shopping along Telegraph Avenue, while proponents look to BRT as a cheap way to clear up traffic.</p>

July 12 - The San Francisco Chronicle


Congestion Parking

<p>New York City officials have announced a plan to raise parking meter rates in certain parts of the city during high traffic times.</p>

July 12 - The New York Times

Fannie, Freddie Falter

<p>With their share prices dropping and prospects for fresh capitalization remote, there are growing concerns that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac may be heading for failure, and with it grave repercussions for the entire U.S. economy.</p>

July 12 - The Washington Post

Friday Funny: Twins Take Transit, Mess With People's Heads

<p>Pranksters load up the New York subway with identical twins, surprising riders.</p>

July 11 - Urban Prankster

Big Business and Small Cities Team Up for Bike Sharing

<p>Residents of small and mid-sized cities in the US and Canada are getting an introduction to bike-sharing thanks to large local companies.</p>

July 11 - Streetsblog

'The Loop' is Back

<p>Chicago's Loop is becoming a hot neighborhood.</p>

July 11 - Reuters

BLOG POST

My Favorite American Neighborhood

<div class="mp_drop"> Last year Project on Public Spaces and I published the <strong><em><a href="http://www.pps.org/info/products/Books_Videos/great_neighborhood_book">Great Neighborhood Book,</a></em></strong> which offers hundreds of ideas from around the world about making community improvements on issues ranging from crime prevention to environmental restoration. Since then almost everyone I meet asks: What&#39;s your favorite neighborhood? </div> <p> I should have an answer ready. But each time the question arises, my mind starts wandering through the great places I&#39;ve explored through the years. Is it the Plateau neighborhood in Montreal, where I became infatuated with cities years ago as a college student? Maybe

July 11 - Jay Walljasper

Plans for High Line 'Banal', Says NY Times

<p>Plans were recently revealed for the much-ballyhooed High Line Park in New York, converting an abandoned elevated railway into a recreation area. But the NY Times says, 'I’d been hoping for a utopia. Instead, I got sumac.'</p>

July 11 - The New York Times

BLOG POST

Please Tax My Carbon

<p style="margin: 0pt" class="MsoNormal"> <span style="font-size: small; font-family: Times New Roman">North American (United States and Canada) policy generally favors low energy prices, with low taxes, production subsidies and other types of energy industry support. As a result, North Americans are energy rich: an average worker can purchase more fuel per hour of labor than almost any other time or place. In response North Americans have developed energy intensive lifestyles and industrial practices, have failed to implement many energy conservation practices common in other parts of the world, and consume more energy per capita than most other times and places.</span> </p>

July 11 - Todd Litman

Chickens Aren't Just For Countrysides Anymore

<p>Residents of Austin, TX are risking violation of city ordinances forbidding loud animals to raise chickens in their central city neighborhood backyards. It's partly a way to cut out-of-pocket expenses.</p>

July 11 - Austin American-Statesman

Local Governments 'Heroes' of the Climate Crisis

<p>If buildings are responsible for almost half of the energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions in the United States, then our energy and building codes are incredibly important tools attaining energy and climate sanity.</p>

July 11 - Gristmill

Where Do Child Care Centers Belong?

<p>A Houston bedroom community decides against allowing childcare centers to mix with other businesses in strip centers.</p>

July 11 - The Houston Chronicle

Water Needs Limit Growth

<p>Formerly small towns near Boston have experienced high growth rates in recent years. But despite their potential to keep growing, water supplies and aging infrastructure will likely be a limiting factor.</p>

July 11 - The Boston Globe

Real Estate Broker Takes Heat in Changing Harlem

<p>Harlem is undergoing a rapid change in terms of demographics and income levels. One real estate broker is at the front of driving this change, and many in the neighborhood are not happy about it. But is this change avoidable?</p>

July 11 - New York Magazine

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