The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
City Moves To Include Public Health Element In General Plan
<p>The City of Richmond, California, has received a grant from the California Endowment to include a Public Health Element in its General Plan -- one of the first in the state.</p>
Automated Garage Comes To Manhattan
<p>Touchless parking garages, more common in Europe, will be opening soon in New York.</p>
Austin Permitting System Goes Online
<p>Developers, neighborhood leaders and all interested parties will be able to track project approvals at every stage of the process.</p>
London's Bold Plan For Greenhouse Gas Reductions Unveiled
<p>Mayor Livingstone set forth a bold, detailed plan to reduce London's greenhouse gas emissions by 60% by 2025. However, many sectors are outside the city's scope, such as an increase aviation emissions, and a nationwide price on the carbon pollution.</p>
The Mega-Problems Of Hyper-Urbanization
<p>Why we should be worried about the rise of the world's new mega-cities.</p>
Boomers Need Immigrants
<p>Within 20 years the baby boomer generation will need the immigrant youth, who are more successful than the public believes, reports USC planning professor Dowell Myers, in his new book, Immigrants and Boomers.</p>
BLOG POST
Such a Sisyphean task this Thing we call Planning
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt" class="MsoNormal"><font size="3"><font face="Times New Roman">What is this thing we do called planning? Are we really planning or just reacting? And visioning? What’s that all about? These the questions that came to mind as I was reading yesterday’s - <em><a href="http://www.planetizen.com/node/23076"><span style="color: windowtext; text-decoration: none">Ineffective Local Planning Efforts Push County To Seek Greater Control</span></a></em></font></font><span style="font-size: 11pt; color: black; font-family: Verdana">. </span><font face="Times New Roman" size="3">And, also, how many articles like this are published on a daily basis?? If you were to add them all up from across the country, I’m sure the number wouldn’t be insignificant. </font></p>
Instead Of Congestion Pricing, Try Parking Pricing
<p>A new report demonstrates that restructured parking fees could resolve a significant portion of Manhattan's traffic congestion, without the need for London-style congestion pricing.</p>
Beijing To Hit The 3 Million Car Mark
<p>With Chinese's new middle class embracing automobiles, gridlock in the capital is set to get a lot worse.</p>
Co-Ops Vs. Condos: A Primer
<p>While condos and co-ops share many attributes, confusion often persists about how the two function.</p>
Sierra Club Backs Ballot Box Planning Measure In Florida
<p>Responding to concerns over the state's rapid growth, the environmental group has pledged to support a proposed measure that would allow voters to decide questions regarding planning and growth.</p>
Creating A Chinatown Without Chinese
<p>With South Korea's historic apprehension towards China, efforts at resurrecting or creating new Chinatowns in Incheon and other cities have been so far been lacking one key ingredient -- Chinese residents.</p>
Selling Roads To The Highest Bidder Won't Solve Transportation Problems
<p>While leasing public roads to private companies for large cash payments might be attractive for some public officials, it doesn't help solve the larger issues facing the country's transportation system.</p>
New SRO Building Gets Starchitect Treatment
<p>Architect Helmut Jahn's design for a new single-room occupancy building on the edge of Chicago's former Cabrini Green project gets high marks, but some criticize the cost of using high-end architects for affordable housing.</p>
Seaside: 25 Years Later
<p>Slate magazine offers a photographic slideshow of the influential New Urbanist community of Seaside, Florida.</p>
HUD Releases Landmark Report On Homelessness
<p>A new HUD report estimates that there are three-quarters of a million homeless Americans.</p>
New Reseach Helps Define Transit Walking Shed
<p>A University of Oregon study, which was awarded Outstanding Paper at annual TRB conference, shows that people value speed and distance over security, and will walk up to 1/2 mile to transit.</p>
Community's Identity Questioned As Demographics Shift
<p>As housing prices decrease, demographics shift again in North Brentwood, Maryland, where a large Latin American population has moved into a primarily African American community.</p>
Little Planning And Few Government Services In Cairo
<p>In Cairo, many argue that the government provides few services and does little to better the lives of its 15 million people. The city's many informal communities were formed without any urban planning.</p>
Where Millionaires Live
<p>Fortune Magazine tracks the states (and homes) that the wealthiest Americans call home.</p>
Pagination
City of Moorpark
City of Tustin
Tyler Technologies
City of Camden Redevelopment Agency
City of Astoria
Transportation Research & Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University
Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada
Toledo-Lucas County Plan Commissions
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.