The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Does The Trans-Texas Corridor Have A Future?

<p>Plans for the construction of several mega-highway and rail corridors across Texas are facing growing opposition.</p>

March 10 - Fort Worth Weekly

Glass Skywalk Extended Over Grand Canyon

<p>Tourists who pay $74.95 will soon be able to enjoy a walk 'over' the Grand Canyon, with the money providing needed income for the Hualapai Indian Tribe.</p>

March 10 - The Arizona Republic

BLOG POST

Geographic Web Resources Hold Great Potential for Place Making

At the <a href="http://www.planetizen.com/www.communitymatters.org" target="_blank" title="CommunityMatters07">PlaceMatters06</a> fall conference, participants were treated to the first sneak preview of <a href="http://outside.in" target="_blank" title="Outside.in">outside.in</a>, a spatially enabled hub for blogs and forums that adds location-based information to online discussions. Steven Berlin Johnson, author of several books including Emergence, and The Ghost Map, and the leading inspiration behind outside.in’s conception, demonstrated the beta site during his keynote session. It created a buzz with conference participants quick to recognize its potential as a tool for encouraging community dialogue and place making. <br />

March 9 - Ken Snyder

Friday Funny: Edinburgh Implements A Pedestrian Congestion Charge

What happens when Edinburgh's implements a pedestrian congestion fee along The Royal Mile?

March 9 - YouTube

Making Plans For 'Complete' Streets

<p>Officials in Louisville, Kentucky, are considering joining the 22 other cities across the country that have adopted a 'complete' streets policy to ensure roads aren't built solely for cars.</p>

March 9 - Louisville Courier-Journal


Building Context-Sensitive Infill Housing

<p>Despite their larger sizes, recent bungalows built in three of Atlanta's most historic neighborhoods nevertheless are sensitive to the look and scale of their surroundings.</p>

March 9 - The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

BLOG POST

The G-Word

<p>Are politicians becoming obsolete in the age of the Internet? Are they simply the &#39;middle-men&#39; that will be replaced by votes cast directly by citizens? This was the issue before a veritable <a href="http://www.usc.edu/schools/sppd/bedrosian/events/dacollpanelists.html">rock-star cast</a> of poliltical insiders from California and around the country. <strong>So what is the G-Word?</strong> </p><p><img src="/files/u4/header2sm.jpg" alt="panelists" title="panelists" hspace="4" vspace="4" width="490" height="55" align="left" /> </p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>

March 9 - Chris Steins


BLOG POST

A Neotraditional Building Boom on Campus

<p>Across the U.S., dozens of colleges and universities are planning or building major campus expansions. However, unlike the 1990s which saw gleaming bioscience research facilities appear on campuses, the new construction is calculated to help attract and retain faculty and students with amenities for living and shopping. Almost without exception, these projects are in a strictly neotraditional design mold. </p>

March 9 - Robert Goodspeed

China May Establish Private Property Rights

<p>A new law facing the National People's Congress of China looks to put in place massive land reform in the country that would essentially establish the right to private property. This legislation has been pushed forward by the central government.</p>

March 9 - Al Jazeera

Wal-Mart Withdraws Supercenter Plans

<p>Wal-Mart has dropped plans to build a "supercenter" store in the East Bay city of Livermore, which has joined many other Northern California cities that have used local powers to prevent the retailer from moving in.</p>

March 9 - The Contra Costa Times

X-Rated Businesses Move Into Town With No Zoning

<p>The prospect of X-rated businesses opening up near homes has residents of the Southern Massachusetts town of Berkley up in arms. With no zoning laws, the location of any new businesses depends on approval by a local governing board.</p>

March 9 - The Boston Globe

States And Feds Push Indiana-Illinois Tollway

As part of a federal plan to accelerate the planning of new multistate highway corridors, Indiana is rallying support for a 63-mile, privately-funded tollway to connect the state to neighboring Illinois.

March 9 - Northwest Indiana Times

Denver Uses Parking Meters To Help Homeless

<p>Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper has campaigned a new program that puts old parking meters to use raising money for homeless services.</p>

March 9 - KEYE-TV 42

BLOG POST

Planners Can Access Planning Research Much More Easily Than in the Past

<p>How useful is planning scholarship to planners in practice? Thirty years ago, the author of a British study of information use by planners found, &quot;The journal is not a source of major importance to the planner in practice, though this statement must be taken to reflect inadequate privision and inadequate timeing for reading&quot; (White, 1974). Perspectives differ, but at least some of the problem has been the difficulty of finding relevant scholarship at the moment it is needed. I believe that these difficulties have greatly reduced in the past few years, and that we are on the verge of an unprecedently increase in the use of scholarship in practice fueled by online bibliographic searching and retrieval. From both the scholar&#39;s and the practitioner&#39;s perspectives, this change will have substantial effects.<br /> </p>

March 9 - Bruce Stiftel

12 Distinctive Destinations For 2007

<p>The National Trust for Historic Preservation has published its annual list of twelve unique communities with a commitment to preservation.</p>

March 9 - National Trust For Historic Preservation

America's Homebuilders Still Not On The Green Building Bandwagon

<p>Even with all the interest in green building, most large scale homebuilders are weary of incorporating green building practices, citing consumers' lack of willingness to pay more.</p>

March 9 - AP via MSN Money

BLOG POST

The Future Of Smart Growth In A World Gone Green

<p>This week, I came to the Planetizen office to find that I had received a package in the mail containing a matching set of men&#39;s and women&#39;s athletic socks. After opening the box, I learned that these were not ordinary socks – which are manufactured from petroleum derived synthetic fibers – but from a new type of fiber made from corn (which, along with soybeans and bamboo, seems set to become one of the most versatile substances of the 21st century). I&#39;m not really sure why I someone thought I should receive a few pairs of corn-fiber socks (perhaps they knew I&#39;d blog about it), but it did seem to me to be another symbol of how the world is slowly but steadily entering a bold, new, eco-friendly future.</p>

March 8 - Christian Madera

A Plan For Helping Second-Tier Cities Prosper

<p>Commentator Neal Peirce argues that the nation's second-tier cities can indeed grow and prosper in partnership with leading metro areas, if we only give them a chance.</p>

March 8 - The Houston Chronicle

The World's Most Connected Cities

<p>Daily Wireless offers a review of the most connected cities in the World. Only two (or five, depending on how you count) are in the US. Several cities might surprise you.</p>

March 8 - Daily Wireless

San Diego Neighborhood Wrestles With Student Housing

<p>Entrepreneurial students-turned-developers are turning houses into dorms around San Diego State University to meet the growing demand for affordable housing, but neighbors want the city to crackdown on the practice.</p>

March 8 - The San Diego Union-Tribune

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