The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
Rome's Subway Dig 'Slowed Down By The Past'
<p>As Rome tries to provide transit options for its millions of residents and visitors, city planners and preservationists have struck a delicate balance between providing modern transportation and acknowledging the city's rich buried history.</p>
Treasure Valley Idaho Transit Making Progress
<p>Funds have been approved to identify site selection for a multi-modal transit center in downtown Boise. The city is also pushing its public transit system to create fixed bus stops so that riders won't have to flag down buses to get a ride.</p>
A Vision For The End Of Oil
<p>Critical of the current proposals for alternative energy, James Howard Kunstler provides a "wake up call" for citizens, and provides a glimpse at life after the world makes its inevitable transition to a post-oil society.</p>
Gehry's Grand Scheme For L.A.
<p>Can Frank Gehry's plan for Downtown L.A.'s Grand Avenue transform it into the cultural center civic leaders have been chasing for decades?</p>
The Architect's Role In Climate Change
<p>Geoff Manaugh interviews Architect Ed Mazria about his efforts to promote ecological literacy and his challenge to the architecture and planning community to stop climate change.</p>
A Vision Of Dubai's Future
<p><em>Wired</em> presents this slideshow of some of the extravagant and futuristic buildings planned for Dubai.</p>
Using 'Urban Acupuncture' To Begin Healing Cities
By focusing on certain "pressure points" in urban areas, a city can dramatically increase its quality of life, argues Jaime Lerner, the former mayor of Curitiba, Brazil.
New York Out Of Step With Its Past
<p>Some fear that New York has lost its foothold as the pedestrian capital of America.</p>
Three New Jersey Toll Roads For Lease – Perhaps
<p>Leasing the New Jersey Turnpike, Garden State Parkway, and Atlantic Expressway to private companies may bring a payment equal to the state’s debt of $30 billion, but the political repercussions for Governor John Corzine could be severe.</p>
Study Finds Many Wanting Walkability In Atlanta
<p>A broad study of the travel habits and neighborhood choices of more than 18,000 Atlanta residents has found that a third of the people living in suburbs would have preferred a more walkable neighborhood.</p>
Sustainable Design Is A New Focus For Major Corporations
<p>As more and more buildings are designed to be energy efficient and car companies offer to take back and dispose old vehicles for free, sustainable design is increasingly on the agendas of major corporations.</p>
City Of Transit Adds Aerial Tram
<p>Portland, Oregon, boasts one of the most extensive uses of public transit in American cities. The addition of its newly-opened aerial tram adds to transit options, but some still feel the project is not worth the price.</p>
Dismantling Myths About Suburban Sprawl
<p>Who says we have to stop driving in order to prevent global warming? Two columnists present reasons why an auto-oriented society is not only an ideal solution but the preferred choice of Americans.</p>
California's Job Growth Explodes Inland
<p>Since 1990, inland California counties have contributed five times the job growth as coastal counties. Southern California's Riverside and San Bernardino counties accounted for 510,000 of the 1.1 million jobs added by the inland regions.</p>
Award-Winning Affordable And Sustainable Housing
<p>In New York City, the first juried design competition for affordable and sustainable has found its winner.</p>
High Gas Prices Making Americans Drive Less
<p>U.S. drivers changed their driving habits in 2005 and 2006.</p>
Super Bowl's Economic Impact Questioned
<p>Economic development experts debate whether the event's host city will walk away a winner.</p>
Sharing The Burden Of A Drought
<p>In an agreement that could shape the way multi-state water sources are managed, Arizona and Nevada have formed a deal that would distribute between the states the burden of any water shortages in the Colorado River.</p>
Is It Historic, Or Just Old?
<p>Robert B. Tierney, chairman of the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission, has the difficult job of deciding which parts of city are worthy of preservation, and which parts need to make way for something new.</p>
Pagination
City of Mt Shasta
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)
Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada
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