The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Parking Gate

Just Arrived: The First Federal Safety Guidelines for Automated Vehicles

It's a big day for the future of automated vehicles. Federal safety regulators gave first indication, not yet regulations, of how they expect automated vehicles to behave when they hit the road en masse.

September 20 - The New York Times

Tech Shuttle

Tech Shuttles: The Bay Area's Seventh Largest Transportation Provider

A new survey has found that every day more than 800 tech buses are traveling on the region's roadways, carrying around 34,000 passengers daily

September 20 - San Francisco Business Times

Chevrolet Corvair

100 Objects; 100 Ways to Influence Public Health

As the public health and planning professions expand their partnership around the world, consider this list by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health of the 100 Objects That Shaped Public Health.”

September 20 - Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Georgia's 'Highway of the Future' Gets a New Solar Array

A pilot project will install solar power along a highway through The Ray, a highway corridor named in memory of sustainable business pioneer Ray C. Anderson.

September 20 - Southeast Green

Culvert

Court Ruling Mandates Culvert Improvements in Washington

In the state of Washington, 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals delivered what some are calling the "most important ruling on treaty fishing rights since 1974."

September 20 - Crosscut


Black Lives Matter

Lessons of Housing Desegregation—From the 1960s to Today

The New York Times mines historic footage and current research for perspective on the effects of housing segregation.

September 20 - The New York Times

Portland's 10-Cent Gas Tax Gets to Work

Portland isn’t collecting a gas tax approved by voters in May yet, but the city is already finding a way to spend the money.

September 20 - The Oregonian


Galena

BLOG POST

The Cute and The Iconic

Many architects would kill to get a building on Architectural Record's list of 125 Top Buildings. But big cities can learn a few things from the landscapes of small-town America too.

September 20 - Josh Stephens

Gasoline Shortage Hits South and East Coast after Pipeline Rupture

The rupture reveals the hazards of pipelines, but also shows how important they are to the economy. Six governors declared states of emergency to deal with gasoline shortages resulting from the pipeline shutdown in Shelby County, Alabama.

September 20 - The Huntsville Times

Minneapolis Riverfront

The ASLA's New Guide to Resilient Design

The American Society of landscape Architects is promoting a new guide to resilient landscape design, which examines hundreds of case studies for examples of infrastructure that works with nature, instead of against it.

September 20 - ASLA The Dirt

Swanston Street, Melbourne, Australia

Pedestrianizing Melbourne's Swanston Street: A Weekend to Remember

In the mid-1980s, a tug-of-war over the future of one of Melbourne, Australia's most important streets took place with those wanting full pedestrianization realizing their vision for one brief, shining moment.

September 19 - Kill Your Darlings

A First Look at New Migration Data

The American Community Survey released new data on the who and where of migration.

September 19 - Medium

golf course homes

Back in the Circle of Trust: Home Equity

The Dallas-Fort Worth area exemplifies a renewed faith in the housing market.

September 19 - Dallas News

Before I die

Redefining Success for Younger Generations

A new book by Courtney Martin called "The New Better Off" examines the shift in values among younger generations.

September 19 - CityLab

Transit Oriented Development Breaking New Ground in Atlanta

A $40 million development called Spoke is the latest example of a growing development trend in the Atlanta area: transit oriented development.

September 19 - The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Northwest Portland Hostel

Inclusionary Zoning and Unintended Consequences

The city of Portland is considering a new inclusionary zoning policy, but some believe that inclusionary zoning has the opposite of its intended effect.

September 19 - City Observatory

The Limits of One Perspective on Gentrification

A blogger offers a critical review of a podcast that examines the humans effects of gentrification in East New York, noting especially the lack of policy discussion's effect on the conversation.

September 19 - City Block

Why Don't Environmentalists Support Washington's Carbon Tax Measure?

A largely revenue-neutral carbon tax proposal, similar to the carbon tax in British Columbia which began in 2008, qualified for the November ballot in Washington. Environmentalists and Democrats, not Big Oil, may cause it's defeat.

September 19 - Crosscut

Garcetti Expo Line

Surprising Ridership Data on Los Angeles Metro's New Expo Line Extension

The light rail extension opened May 20 and is already 70 percent toward meeting its 2030 ridership projection. According to a survey conducted in June by Metro, more than two-thirds of riders were new to the Expo Line.

September 19 - KPCC

landfill

The Value of Garbage Has Changed Dramatically

Recycled metals, plastics, glass, and other materials are more economical than ever. Welcome to a new era of waste management.

September 19 - Quartz

Post News

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.