The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

World's Newest Form of Marine Renewable Energy Launched in Hawaii

It's called Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion, or OTEC, and the world's largest plant was dedicated in Hawaii on August 21. It produces renewable energy by using the temperature difference between the ocean's deep cold water and warm surface water.

August 31 - EcoWatch

Shifting Topographies

BLOG POST

Oakland Is Cool

Building on its physical assets, city planners are succeeding in efforts to bring vitality to the Uptown district in Oakland, CA by supporting new housing development and enlivening what was once a preeminent arts and entertainment district.

August 31 - Linda Day

Lincoln Limos

New York Car Service Companies Go Digital

Facing tough competition from Uber, New York City's neighborhood car service providers are using apps to retain clientele. The jury's still out on whether adaptation will help them stay in business.

August 31 - The New York Times

View of solar panels on roofs

Google Debuts Rooftop Solar Mapping Tool

Currently in its early stages, Project Sunroof tracks how much sun every roof receives. Then it estimates the costs and savings if rooftop solar were installed. Right now, the tool only covers the Bay Area, Fresno, and Boston.

August 31 - Vox

Suburbia

Aging Boomer Suburbanites: The Coming Transit Disaster

The suburbs are not conducive to the aging baby boomers that populate them. How do we prepare?

August 31 - Mother Nature Network


Florida Counties Alter Development Fees to Encourage Compact, Mixed Uses

Hillsborough County, home to Tampa, has already shifted its "transportation concurrency fees" to encourage compact development and a mix of uses. Nearby Osceola County is following their lead.

August 30 - Next City

The Battle for Times Square—Why It Matters, Even Outside New York

The piece begins not in New York but three thousand miles west in Seattle with Janette Sadik-Khan explaining how she triumphed over auto interests by taking back precious road space and returning it to the people in the form of plazas and bike lanes.

August 30 - CityLab


How Growth and Neighborhood Protection Coexist in Pasadena

Pasadena recently elected its first new mayor in 16 years, and the city is completing a 20-year General Plan Update that aims to continue animating downtown Pasadena by addressing growth and mobility simultaneously.

August 30 - The Planning Report

Pyongyang

Disturbing Similarities between Vegas and Pyongyang

Essayist and novelist Pico Iyer visits Las Vegas and Pyongyang in rapid succession to find that the capital of freedom and fun is not so dissimilar from the wan capital of the Hermit Kingdom.

August 30 - New York Review of Books

Rotterdam Development Makes Energy Efficiency History

A 72-unit development in Rotterdam—the town in upstate New York, that is, not its namesake in The Netherlands, is one of the first in the United States to be called net-zero: it consumes as much energy as it produces.

August 30 - News 10 ABC

Bike Amtrak

Amtrak Becoming Bike Friendlier

It's still not bike-friendly, but it's getting better. The Capitol Limited from Chicago to Washington joins a small list of routes allowing for "roll-on, roll-off," though reservations and a $25 fee may apply.

August 29 - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Seattle Bogue Plan

What If Seattle Had a Century-Old Subway?

Virgil Bogue's 1911 Plan of Seattle called for a centrally-planned metropolis with efficient transit, parks, and a cap on building height. It was voted down, but remains an interesting study on planning for the long term.

August 29 - SeattlePI

Legal Marijuana Still a Challenge for Road Safety

The state of Washington is finding that more and more fatal car crashes involve drivers under the influence of THC. But legal limbo, lack of research, and spotty detection makes the question of what to do very hard to answer.

August 29 - Crosscut

Gentrification and the Bay Area's Controversial Growth Management Plan

Is gentrification the inevitable result of land use planning that reduces greenhouse gas emissions by favoring infill development over auto-dependent sprawl? The Urban Displacement Project looks at the unintended effects of Plan Bay Area.

August 29 - Marin Independent Journal

Mexico Train

First Rail Link in a Over a Century Now Connects U.S., Mexico

Instead of building a wall separating the United States and Mexico, officials from both countries celebrated the opening on Tuesday of the West Rail Bypass International Bridge.

August 29 - USA Today

Using Vacant Property Registration Fee Ordinances to Fix Blight

Planners get involved with foreclosure by assisting residents threatened with foreclosure or addressing community impacts such as blight, vacancy, and property disinvestment. A look at vacant property fees as a tool for dealing with foreclosure.

August 28 - Maine Association of Planners

Construction Zone

Zaha Hadid Reimagines the Sidewalk Shed

Attempts to make over the conventional sidewalk shed are pretty but costly. Will Hadid's High Line canopy catch on?

August 28 - The New York Times

Real Time Data Monitoring Salmon Populations in Drought-Stricken Pacific Northwest

Indian Tribes in the Pacific Northwest are using real time data to monitor and support salmon populations on rivers impacted by water and power infrastructure along with the region's ongoing drought.

August 28 - Northwest Treaty Tribes

399 Fremont Street, San Francisco

Observation Decks Don't Sell Well in Hilly San Francisco

Steep views command steep prices in other big cities, but they can't seem to work in San Francisco, where there are plenty of beautiful views available for free.

August 28 - San Francisco Chronicle

On the Sudden Rise to Prominence of the Word 'Infrastructure'

At some point in the past 35 years, the word infrastructure became common in policy discussions and even in the common tongue. But why did we suddenly prefer the word "infrastructure" to other terms like "public works"?

August 28 - Governing

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