The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
Big Box Retailers Skew Vancouver's 'EcoDensity' Plans
<p>Plans for "EcoDensity" in Vancouver are at odd with the city's willingness to allow big box development, according to this article.</p>
Beavers Allowed To Stay Despite Flood Threat
<p>Beavers that have moved into and made a home of part of a creek in the Bay Area city of Martinez will be allowed to stay, despite the flood threat their dam poses to the city's downtown. Many are calling the beavers the city's new tourist attraction.</p>
Affordable Housing Projects Demolished But Never Replaced
<p>A rash of building demolitions has erased more than 700 units of affordable housing in the Washington D.C. area, but replacement buildings have not been constructed.</p>
Keeping Hope Alive After Seattle Votes Down Transit Funding
<p>Voters in Seattle recently voted down a proposition to significantly fund roads and transit in the region. Advocates are pushing forward with efforts to keep the transportation funding issues alive and attain the money needed.</p>
Alma Mater Nature
<p>More and more universities and colleges are working on greening their operations. Here's the top 10.</p>
Bay Area Drivers Would Support Global Warming Gas Tax
<p>A surprising poll shows that Bay Area residents -- who already pay the nation's highest gas prices -- would agree to a 25-cent gas tax if revenue were applied to reduce global warming. Efforts are underway to put that support to a vote.</p>
Bike Business Booms
<p>Internationally regarded as one of the most bike-friendly cities, Portland, Oregon, has also become friendly to bike-related industries and small businesses.</p>
What To Do About New York's Congestion? Readers React
<p><em>The New York Times</em> recently asked its readers to offer their suggestions on improving the city's traffic congestion. This article reveals their ideas -- and puts them up to the scrutiny of two transportation experts.</p>
Air Boards & MPOs Must Team Up To Reduce Carbon Emissions
<p>The key to meeting carbon reduction goals lies in reducing transportation emissions through changing land use. But to do so requires air resources boards and the many metropolitan planning organizations to play key roles.</p>
Is Desalination The Solution To Water Shortages?
<p>Advances in reverse osmosis membrane technology are convincing more and more cities to invest in cleaning their own used water instead of piping it in from far-off reservoirs.</p>
Changing Tides In Chinese Planning
<p><em>Metropolis Magazine</em> talks with Chinese architect and planner Huasheng Sun about how the two fields have changed as the country transitioned from communism to a more capitalist society.</p>
Can Recreating A 16th-Century Garden Heal Kabul?
<p>A $5 million garden restoration in the heart of Kabul is drawing hundreds of visitors and reminding us that beauty always matters, even in a time of war.</p>
Charlotte Residents Vote In Favor of Transit ... Again
<p>The effort to repeal Mecklenburg County's half-cent transit tax was defeated by a wide margin at the polls on Tuesday.</p>
The 'Ad-Hoc' Redevelopment of New Orleans
<p>Rebuilding and redevelopment continues is New Orleans, with a wide variety of architectural styles creating a patchwork in the city. Some say this free-form redevelopment is good for the city, but others are calling it a mistake.</p>
Everglades Restoration Bogged Down By Politics
<p>Ambitious effort to restore the Florida Everglades faces lack of funds and political complications.</p>
The World's Skinniest House
<p>Take a tour inside what may be the skinniest house ever built -- the bite-sized answer to the McMansion.</p>
People Power
<p>Volunteer-run neighborhood councils in Los Angeles are gaining political power and showing what a new kind of politics could look like.</p>
Oregon Voters Approve Property Rights Reduction Measure
<p>Oregon voters yesterday approved Measure 49 -- a property rights initiative that scales back the development rights landowners were granted by the state's Measure 37 in 2004.</p>
Is Detroit Doomed?
<p>Despite loft conversions and a rash of casino developments, Detroit continues to lose population and seems unlikely to recover any time soon, writes Lisa Rochon.</p>
Urban Revitalization Through Libraries
<p>Cities across the world are investing in their libraries as opportunities to create world-class architecture and tourist attractions.</p>
Pagination
City of Charlotte
Municipality of Princeton
Roanoke Valley-Alleghany Regional Commission
City of Camden Redevelopment Agency
City of Astoria
Transportation Research & Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University
US High Speed Rail Association
City of Camden Redevelopment Agency
Municipality of Princeton (NJ)
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