The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
L.A. Pushes Green Building Standards
<p>Los Angeles is moving forward with plans to institute one of the country's strictest green building ordinances.</p>
Salt Lake City Split Over Controversial Skybridge
<p>The City Creek Center is touted as the means to revitalize Main Street in Salt Lake City. However, there are many critics of the claim that a skybridge over Main Street is "critical to the success of the project."</p>
Portland's Homelessness Plan a Model for Canada
<p>Portland's plan for ending homelessness by 2015 has caught the attention of several Canadian municipalities, which are looking to apply the Portland model to their own cities.</p>
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An Algorithmic Antidote To Sprawl
<p>How could a new chamber of commerce algorithm drive decisions about employer locations, improve mobility of workers, while reducing pollution accruing from longer daily work trips? The answer is simple, says the chief economist of the Greater Dallas Chamber, Lyssa Jenkens, “You change the data system to deliver information people never got before.” </p>
Study Says Traffic Growth Slowing In Metro St. Louis
<p>A regional government report shows a slowdown in traffic growth in Metropolitan St. Louis, but state highway officials still plan to expand highways.</p>
Getting a Grip on 'EcoDensity'
<p>Vancouver's plans for "EcoDensity" should be better understood by the public before moving forward, according to this opinion piece.</p>
Rethinking Historic Designations
<p>This op-ed calls on residents and historians to give more recognition to homes built in the last 50 years as true "historic" sites worth preservation.</p>
Freight Considerations May Derail Commuter Transit in Florida
<p>Plans for a commuter rail system in Central Florida may be disrupted by a federal order to weigh the impact of rerouting freight trains to accommodate the new system.</p>
The Missing Urban Discussion
<p>This editorial from <em>The New York Times</em> bemoans the absence of discussion about urban policy in the presidential campaigns.</p>
Deadly Environments?
<p>Mark Ames, author of "Going Postal", wonders if American gun tragedies like last week's massacre at Northern Illinois University might be at least partially explained by the bleak physical built environments of middle America.</p>
Statues and Limitations
<p>Public art in the United Kingdom is coming under increasing scrutiny as artists and the public grapple with the question of who should be memorialized in statue form: significant historical figures or ordinary people?</p>
The 'Most Destructive Project on Earth'
<p>A group of scientists has blasted the Canadian government for allowing tarsands oil exploration to wreak havoc on the environment, calling it the "most destructive project on Earth".</p>
Tijuana-Style Developments in the Gentrifying U.S.
<p>Architect Teddy Cruz is betting Tijuana-style development will flourish in gentrifying American neighborhoods -- and preserve their lower income populations.</p>
New Delta Could Protect Coast From Hurricane Damage
<p>Scientists are proposing a plan to buffer the Gulf Coast from the brunt of hurricanes by engineering more than 1000 square kilometers of new wetlands along the coast.</p>
Challenges for the Next 50 Years
<p>Living more sustainably, tackling infrastructure problems and ensuring a more protected way of experiencing natural disasters are among the top challenges of the next 50 years, according to a group of scientists, entrepreneurs and thinkers.</p>
Artists Up In Arms Over Planned Library Demolition
<p>A proposal to demolish a local library and replace it with a shopping center has angered and mobilized artists in Atlanta who say the building does more for the community than the new revenue from the redevelopment ever will.</p>
Public Market on the Chopping Block in New York City
<p>New York City has made a controversial decision to shut down a Latin American public market -- one of the last of a dying breed of public markets in the city.</p>
Istanbul Version 2
<p>A civil engineer has proposed a plan to create a "satellite" backup city of the Turkish metropolis of Instanbul -- a city precariously sited in a major earthquake area.</p>
Human Impact on Ocean Mapped
<p>A new map has been released that shows the extent of the effects human development and lifestyle have had on the world's oceans.</p>
London's Mayoral Hopefuls Promote Their Green Sides
<p>Candidates for mayor in London are touting their green credentials in the global city as is continues to win acclaim for progressive and environmentally conscious planning and administration.</p>
Pagination
Smith Gee Studio
City of Charlotte
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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