The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
Kansas City To Limit Billboards
<p>The Kansas City Council has passed an ordinance that will tightly restrict outdoor billboard advertising within the city. The ordinance effectively bans new billboards from all city streets.</p>
Short-Changing America's Youth
<p>Columnist William Blackburn laments school trailers and their effect on the psyche of America's youth.</p>
Florida River Pumping Plan Is Causing Concerns
<p>Water agency officials in Florida are considering a plan to pump 262 million gallons of water per day from local rivers to satisfy a high population growth rate. But many are calling the plan short-sighted and a futile attempt to control nature.</p>
Resort Project Cut Down To Size, But Objections Remain
<p>Developers of an oceanside resort and housing complex in Hawaii have significantly reduced their project's scope in an effort to win over wary neighbors and public officials. But the project is slated for a plot where "resorts" are prohibited.</p>
Judge Calls For Reduced Water Pumping In California
<p>A ruling in California is expected to greatly reduce the amount of water the state can pump from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta -- a water source for nearly half the state's residents and much of its farmland.</p>
Urbanization Erasing New England Forests
<p>Urbanization is threatening and consuming forests in New England more rapidly than in any other place in the nation.</p>
DIY Gray Water Recycling
<p>This report from <em>NPR</em> looks at a homeowner who has transformed her house's plumping to reuse its "gray water" -- non-potable water from sinks that can be rerouted into gardens and toilets. Some lawmakers are discouraging this method.</p>
Becoming America's Most Sustainable City
<p>U.S. cities such as Chicago, San Francisco, and Sacramento are becoming more energy efficient in an effort to attain the title of the nation's greenest city.</p>
Will China Follow In America's Footsteps?
<p>Scientists who studied pollution from a pair of major cities in both the U.S. and China urge the rapidly developing nation to learn from the past environmental mistakes in the U.S.</p>
Delays Plague Controversial Atlantic Yards Project
<p>Protests, lawsuits, and accidents have caused big delays in the construction of the controversial Atlantic Yards mixed use project in Brooklyn, New York. But the developers say the project will be completed on time.</p>
60 Million Californians? Maybe Not
<p>Despite estimates that the state of California's population will grow to 60 million by 2050, Wendell Cox argues that growth in the state is slowing.</p>
Vegas May Be Too Bright
<p>Home to the bright lights and elaborate signage of Las Vegas, Clark County, Nevada, may revise an ordinance to more effectively regulate the bright signs and displays that illuminate the Las Vegas Strip and other parts of the county.</p>
BLOG POST
Terrorism, Gay Marriage, and...Land Use(!)
<p>This week <a href="http://salon.com" target="_blank">Salon.com</a> published a <a href="http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2007/09/03/richardson_qa/index.html?source=rss&aim=yahoo-salon" target="_blank">remarkable interview</a> with a contender for the White House. The candidate didn't offer the solution to stabilizing Iraq, strengthening the economy, or bringing down the price of a six-pack (at least not directly), but for the first time in the history of American campaigning that I'm aware of, he referred to the issue of "land use." </p>
Landowner To Fight Big-Box Moratorium
<p>A landowner in suburban Atlanta who had planned to sell his property to Wal-Mart is now suing the city of Duluth over a big-box moratorium that he claims is not in the best interest of the city.</p>
Casino Idea A Losing Bet For Toronto
<p>This column from <em>The Toronto Star</em> bashes the city's plan to spur economic activity by developing a city-owned casino.</p>
Dominican Republic Subway Project Sparks Debate
<p>Fast-moving plans to build a subway system in the Dominican Republic have some locals angry over a waste of money and others commending the leadership for good foresight.</p>
How Ireland Became A Leader In Immigration
<p>By increasing the amount of migrant work permits and political rights, Ireland has beckoned immigrants from all over the world, becoming one of Europe's immigration leaders.</p>
Ohio Looks To Embrace Alternative Energy Sources
<p>Newly elected Gov. Ted Strickland (D) has made the pursuit of alternative energies a focus thus far in his tenure. Are the winds finally changing in Ohio?</p>
Hawaii's 'Superferry' Remains Anchored
<p>The controversy over whether the environmental impacts of Hawaii's new "Superferry" should have been assessed continue. The large ferry boat sits idly in a harbor in Honolulu.</p>
Hudson River to Get 24/7 Scrutiny
<p>A new network of sensors will detail how ecological threats to the waterway affect the seacoast.</p>
Pagination
Borough of Carlisle
Smith Gee Studio
City of Camden Redevelopment Agency
City of Astoria
Transportation Research & Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University
City of Camden Redevelopment Agency
Municipality of Princeton (NJ)
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