The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Beloved Bicycles, in Oil and Acrylic

Artist Taliah Lampert paints portraits of bicycles, particularly well-used and loved bikes. She sees them as symbols of freedom and empowerment.

December 15 - bicyclepaintings.com

Counting Bikes in Copenhagen

Streetsfilm reports from Copenhagen during the UN climate summit, looking at the city's innovative bicycle infrastructure, including a prominent bicycle counter next to a lane to inspire civic pride.

December 14 - Streetsblog

Boxcars Getting in the Way of High-Speed Rail

In Chicago, plans to make passenger and commuter trains faster are limited by the freight trains that share the tracks. The Chicago Region Environmental and Transportation Efficiency (CREATE) is working to improve that relationship.

December 14 - Chicago Sun-Times

Historic Preservation vs. Revitalization?

In Willmar, Minnesota, city officials were not pleased when a mandated environmental review concluded that the 68-year old airport building they wanted to demolish was historically significant.

December 14 - West Central Tribune

Streetcars: Old is New Again in Rockford

Rockford, Illinois used to have a system of streetcars, interurban rail and long-distance passenger trains like many cities. Planners now say the time is right to consider rebuilding.

December 14 - Rockford Register Star


Rivers Reworked in South Korea

South Korean officials have begun work on a $19.2 billion effort to remake the country's four largest rivers. The project would slightly reshape the rivers and add towns and bike trails to their waterfronts.

December 14 - The New York Times

Is Riding Transit Necessarily Better For The Environment Than Driving?

In the third of a 5-part "Rethinking Green" series, the National Post casts doubt on public transit's ability to reduce global warming while praising driving; applying similar scrutiny to recycling and aquaculture in the first and second installments

December 14 - National Post via The Vancouver Sun


FEATURE

Water Planning After the Age of Infrastructure

December 14 - Nate Berg

U.S. Megaprojects Are Not in the U.S.

Some say the age of mega infrastructure projects is over in the U.S., but this piece from <em>Foreign Policy</em> argues the U.S. megaproject lives on -- just not inside the U.S.

December 14 - Foreign Policy

3D Motown

The team at Google has released a 3D model of Detroit.

December 14 - Official Google SketchUp Blog

Land Use and Medical Marijuana

Like many cities in California, San Diego is struggling to form a policy around the booming medical marijuana dispensaries that have popped up around the city. The first place they're starting is with land use restrictions.

December 14 - KPBS

Green Retrofits Required in New York City

The New York City Council has passed a suite of bills hat require green retrofits on the city's buildings.

December 14 - The Architect's Newspaper

Old Buildings See New Life As Schools

School officials in the UK are increasingly looking at old office buildings and other existing facilities that can be converted into school houses more affordably than building from scratch.

December 14 - Guardian

Ancient Irrigators

Irrigation canals dating back to the year 1200 B.C. were discovered in Arizona this year, answering a long-asked question about how natives were able to farm the arid land.

December 13 - Archaeology

Banning the Cul-de-Sac and Building Bike Highways

From bicycle highways to a ban on the cul-de-sac, the built environment is the focus of many of <em>The New York Times Magazine</em>'s ideas of the year.

December 13 - The New York Times Magazine

Austin Limits Home Sizes

In 2006, Austin, Texas established rules limiting the size of homes in the central city for reasons of historic character. Residents of South Austin may soon face similar restrictions.

December 13 - Austin American-Statesman

Regionalism is Alive in Pittsburgh

Some say the greater Pittsburgh area needs to think more "regionally". This piece from <em>Pop City</em> argues it already is.

December 13 - Pop City Magazine

The Role of City Parks in Creating Climate Friendly Communities

Parks and trails can be used to create low carbon cities.

December 13 - City Parks Blog

BLOG POST

Two Separate Problems

<p> Conventional wisdom dictates that middle-class families would find urban schools more tempting if we only “fixed the schools”- a concept that implies that urban public schools are simply unable to educate anyone, because they are either horribly underfunded (in the liberal version of this claim) or horribly mismanaged (in the conservative version). </p>

December 12 - Michael Lewyn

The Detritus of Dead Malls

Photographer Brian Ulrich has been taking pictures of dead mall and big-box retail across the country. The Morning News presents a photo gallery of his work.

December 12 - The Morning News

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.