The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
The Quest For Colored Bike Lane Pavement
<p>Bicycle advocates in San Francisco want the city to pave bike lanes with colored pavement, but so far the city has resisted the plan, citing a lack of standards.</p>
The Biggest Bus In The World
<p>With three sections, five doors, and a 300-person capacity, the "world's largest bus" has been unveiled in Shanghai. The new buses will be used for a planned bus rapid transit line in the city.</p>
The Great Global Warming Swindle Video?
<p>Is the growing business behind the Global Warming "problem" perpetuating a myth that is becoming politically incorrect to question?</p>
Central California Cities Team To Address Growth
<p>With Census figures predicting a doubling in the population by 2030, the Central California county of San Joaquin has begun an eight-city planning process to help shape the region's future.</p>
Montana Moving To Limit Eminent Domain
<p>The state legislature is moving to place explicit limits on local government's power to take private land in response to the 2005 U.S. Supreme Court's Kelo ruling.</p>
Governor Calls For Help In Rural Job Growth
<p>The governor of North Carolina has called on a state grant program to dedicate more funding to encourage job growth in rural areas.</p>
The 10 Most Influential Architects
<p>Forbes Magazine names 10 architects who are most influencing today's culture and society.</p>
Racing Towards Modernization, Vietnam's Past Is Threatened
<p>Spurred by extraordinary economic and urban growth, Ho Chi Minh City is experiencing a building boom. But preservationists are worried about the danger to the city's priceless colonial era heritage.</p>
Off The Grid -- Out Of The Question?
<p>One man has set up his home with a series of solar panels, hydrogen fuel cells, and storage tanks to enable him to produce all of his own energy. But many say this system couldn't be feasible on the wide scale.</p>
Creating A Built Environment For Children
<p>A new school master plan for the Western International School of Shanghai looks to create an entire urban environment geared toward children.</p>
Katrina Spurs Mixed-Use Boom In Baton Rouge
<p>Many mixed-use projects have been popping up recently in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Many say this trend is fueled mainly by a population influx of New Orleans evacuees and new development incentives.</p>
BLOG POST
Planning And The Scourge Of The Collective Action Problem
<p class="MsoNormal">In its most forward attempt to ensnare the fabled “discretionary rider,” my local transit agency recently set out handsome billboards touting the pleasures of the bus and the miseries of driving alone. They employed pithy admonishments and graphics such as a hand cuffed to a gas pump and a merry executive knitting and purling his way to the office. <br />
Ridesharing With The 'Net
<p>An Internet networking site intended to help people organize rideshares is being unveiled in the Minneapolis-St. Paul metro area, and many local officials hope the ease of arranging rides via the Internet will encourage more shared rides.</p>
Seattle Voters Say No To Two Viaduct Plans
<p>Seattle residents roundly rejected two options to replace the city's crumbling double-decker Alaskan Way Viaduct highway. Though the vote is not binding, the politicians were listening closely to what the voters had to say.</p>
BLOG POST
A Big City Mayor Makes a Splash!
Big city mayors (and even some smaller city leaders) are making a big splash! LA’s Antonio Villaraigosa is dealing with crime; Chicago’s Richard Daley is turning that dusty city green; Philadelphia’s John Street has agreed to an important re-thinking of seven miles of highly developable waterfront; Miami’s Manny Diaz is working closely with Donna Shalala, President, University of Miami, to harness anchor-institution strength to downtown development. And Michael Bloomberg became a winner when he took on New York City’s school system. But of equal note is his soon-to-be announced PlaNYC, a strategic vision for 2030.<br />
Duany Advocates Putting A There There
<p>During the conclusion of a recent charrette in Jackson, Mississippi, Andres Duany advised redevelopment and placemaking as the most important strategy for the struggling area.</p>
BLOG POST
The Moses Shows
<p><img src="/files/u10403/images.jpg" alt="" hspace="10" width="150" height="113" align="left" />Anyone seen any of the <a href="http://www.mcny.org/exhibitions/current/466.html">three</a> <a href="http://www.mcny.org/exhibitions/current/466.html">museum</a> <a href="http://www.learn.columbia.edu/moses/">shows</a> in New York on Robert Moses, the colossus of urban planning? I myself have not, seeing as how I live 3,000 miles away from them. To recap: highly controversial figure, built many public works from the 1920s through the 1960s, in the end wanted to destroy neighborhoods to build freeways, ultimately brought low by grassroots organizing and the sainted Jane Jacobs via her book <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Death-Life-Great-American-Cities/dp/0375508732/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/105-3662130-2734002?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1173894137&sr=8-1"><em>The Death and Life of Great American Cities</em></a>.</p><p>The exhibits have gotten a lot of ink in the New York press and the planning press. An excerpt from Ada Louise Huxtable's review in the <em>Wall Street Journal</em> today, and other rantings, after the jump.</p>
How Free Wi-Fi Could Change The City
<p>Will Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's plan to provide free wireless access really benefit Los Angeles?</p>
Training Asia's Future Urban Planners And Leaders
<p>The Asian Development Bank has partnered with the Singapore government on a new educational initiative to help improve conditions for poorer residents of the region's cities.</p>
Are 'Gayborhoods' An Endangered Species?
<p>Many so called 'gay ghettos', such as San Francisco's Castro District or D.C.'s Dupont Circle, are succumbing to the forces of gentrification and attracting large numbers of heterosexual residents -- causing some in the GLBT community to worry.</p>
Pagination
City of Moorpark
City of Tustin
Tyler Technologies
City of Astoria
Transportation Research & Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University
Chaddick Institute at DePaul University
Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada
Toledo-Lucas County Plan Commissions
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