The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Quiet Suburban Road Considered for Toronto's New Subway

Some are calling one of the proposed routes for an extended Scarborough subway route in Toronto a straw man. The discussion about the route provides insight into the city's current transit planning process.

June 4 - Toronto Star

Waterfront Botanical Gardens in the Works for a Derelict Corner of Louisville

A historic neighborhood lost in a flood, covered by a dump, then reclaimed by nature will become the Waterfront Botanical Gardens under terms of a recent land deal.

June 4 - Broken Sidewalk

Boston Aerial

Boston Confronts the Origins of Its Lousy Architecture

For the first 300-or-so years of its history, Boston built some of the most handsome, historic neighborhoods in the country. Lately, says critic Rachel Slade, it has given in to mediocrity. Mayor Marty Walsh is trying to undo the damage.

June 4 - Boston Magazine

Santiago Calatrava

Meet the New Calatrava-Designed Bridge Under Construction in Downtown Dallas

Everything you wanted to know about the Margaret McDermott Bridge, under construction in Downtown Dallas.

June 4 - The Dallas Morning News

Doubts Raised About OneNYC's Energy Efficiency Goals

Following the April announcement of Mayor de Blasio's OneNYC plan (an update to the Bloomberg Administration's PlaNYC), critics are poking holes in the energy efficiency goals included in the new plan.

June 4 - Capital


Does the Loss of 591 Parking Spaces Constitute a Crisis?

That's how two San Francisco Chronicle reporters are painting the loss of 591 parking spaces to bike lanes, parklets, and bus rapid transit this year, after losing 180 downtown spaces last year. Streetsblog's Aaron Bialick responds.

June 4 - Streetsblog SF

San Francisco Houses

BLOG POST

San Francisco's Proposed Housing Moratorium Is a Bad Idea

After San Francisco Supervisors reject housing moratorium, proponents vow ballot initiative. But a moratorium is the wrong solution to the problem and would likely lead to continued price increases, condo conversions, and Ellis Act evictions.

June 4 - Reuben Duarte


Breathe Easier: Six Ways to Improve Air Quality for People on Bicycles

On the Plan.Place blog, planner Jenny Koch describes how planners and bicyclists can make it easier to breathe on a bicycle, by reducing the risks posed by traffic-related air pollutants.

June 4 - Plan.Place

Noise

BLOG POST

City Living Without the Racket

Planners can use building codes and design review to protect city apartments from internal and external sources of noise.

June 3 - Linda Day

Houston Stormwater Infrastructure Falls Short in Recent Flooding

Recent floods in Texas, especially prevalent in Houston, reflect a stormwater infrastructure that both worked as it's designed and is in need of improvements.

June 3 - Houston Chronicle

The Plaza: What Makes a Community Living Room?

The Plaza can behave as the community living room. Why is this so hard to get right in post-WWII U.S.?

June 3 - PlaceShakers

The Code Change That Could Enable Mid-Rise Construction in Washington D.C.

Washington D.C. must wrap up its consideration of the 2015 International Building Code by July. Adoption of the IBC could enable new types of density in the nation's capital.

June 3 - Greater Greater Washington

Lawsuit Takes Issue With Bond Financing for NFL Stadium Plan in St. Louis

A lawsuit filed by Missouri state legislators finds fault with a plan to extend bond funding from the city's last NFL stadium project to help finance a new $985 million stadium located north of downtown along the city's waterfront.

June 3 - St. Louis Post-Dispatch

North Carolina Inks its First Public-Private Partnership for Highway Construction

The state of North Carolina joins the roster of states working with the private sector to invest in highway infrastructure around growing urban areas.

June 3 - Infra Insight

The Supply Side of California's Historic Drought

As General Manager of the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, Jeff Kightlinger is a veteran of the states' wet and dry cycles.

June 3 - VerdeXchange News

New Section of the Chicago Riverwalk Open to the Public

A newly opened section of the Chicago Riverwalk lets the public get up close and personal with the Chicago River. And there's more to come.

June 3 - Chi.Streetsblog

Control Room

FEATURE

Urban Big Data: Where is the Signal in the Noise?

Amid growing skepticism, an international gathering examines the useful benefits for an age of critical urban challenges.

June 3 - Michael Mehaffy

Crowd

Whatever Happened to the Population Bomb?

Biology Professor Paul Ehrlich's 1968 book, "The Population Bomb," took America and the world by storm. The apocalyptic vision based of population outgrowing its resources appeared to make inherent sense.

June 3 - The New York Times - Retro Report

Public Meeting

BLOG POST

Collecting Comments on a PDF Planning Document on the Web?

How do you collect public comments on a web-based PDF planning document? It should be simple. But it isn't.

June 2 - Chris Steins

How the Coal Industry Collapsed

The writing is on the wall for what's left of the coal industry.

June 2 - Fusion

Post News
Senior Manager Operations, Urban Planning

New York City School Construction Authority

Building Inspector

Village of Glen Ellyn

Manager of Model Development

Central Transportation Planning Staff/Boston Region MPO

Top Books

An annual review of books related to planning.

Top Schools

The definitive ranking of graduate planning programs.

100 Most Influential Urbanists

The who's who of urbanism, according to Planetizen readers.

Urban Planning Creators You Should Know

A short list of voices on social, video, and podcasting platforms.

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.