The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Staidums Slowly Growing Greener

<p>Stadium design and renovation creates the opportunity for massive energy savings from these large complexes, but not many of the most energy-efficient designs have moved past the drawing board. But some projects are taking incremental steps.</p>

October 26 - Sustainable Industries

Tackling Climate Change With Land Use

<p>This opinion piece looks at how technology alone can't be depended on to solve the environmental threats of climate change. Land use and development patterns must also be addressed.</p>

October 26 - The San Francisco Chronicle

Help! My Stadium Needs A Parking Plan

<p>Major league stadiums are turning to planners to help deal with the parking snafus that can keep fans from coming to games.</p>

October 26 - The Street

A Nation Of NIMBYs?

<p>Recent polls show that anti-development sentiment is stronger than ever, with 75 percent of Americans opposing new development in their communities.</p>

October 26 - CNN/Money

Austin Mayor Wants City Passenger Rail System

<p>The mayor of Austin, Texas, wants his city to consider funding a passenger rail system to traverse the city -- a more extensive system than the commuter rail line currently being built in the Austin area.</p>

October 25 - Austin American Statesman


Environment Faces Sacrifice As Alberta Explores Oil Reserves

<p>Oil reserves in Canada have the mouths of investors watering, and many Canadians willing to accept the vast environmental degradation that will result from the oil's extraction.</p>

October 25 - OnEarth

From Red to Green: China's Awkward Embrace of Alternative Energy

<p>China's rapid development is creating a demand for electricity that far outpaces the ability of suppliers to insert alternative energy sources -- those with fewer greenhouse gas emissions -- into the supply chain.</p>

October 25 - The New York Times


An Olympic-Sized Car Pool

<p>Planners of the 2010 Winter Olympics are discussing ways to encourage Vancouverites to ditch their cars during the games.</p>

October 25 - The Globe & Mail

Dump Recycled And Reused

<p>A former dump in Israel will be converted into a theme park focusing on recycling -- the centerpiece to what will be a 2,000 acre public park.</p>

October 25 - The New York Times

Oil Wealth Fuels Saskatchewan Growth

<p>Thanks to oil and gas development, the cities in the once-sleepy Canadian province of Saskatchewan are now facing a construction boom.</p>

October 25 - The Globe & Mail

Growth Pushes People Into Fireplace

<p>Increased development in wooded and fire-prone areas is one of the major causes of California's recent "megafires".</p>

October 25 - The Christian Science Monitor

Flip That Brownfield

<p>As brownfield redevelopment escapes from its "avoid-at-all-costs" stigma, <em>Sustainable Industries</em> offers a look at five common remediation and redevelopment projects for the country's brownfields.</p>

October 25 - Sustainable Industries

Houston: Peak Oil Metaphor?

<p>James Howard Kunstler attends the annual meeting of the Association for the Study of Peak Oil and Gas (ASPO) and finds downtown Houston a "ghastly" environment that shows that even without zoning a city can achieve "miserable" results.</p>

October 25 - Energy Bulletin

The Struggle To Clean Up Cairo's Air

<p>Cairo has one of the most severe air pollution problems in the world. Now efforts are underway to clean up the source of much of this pollution, the brick manufacturing industry.</p>

October 25 - AlterNet

What Canada Can Learn From U.S. Cities

<p>An urban renaissance is underway in many American cities, one fueled by the "common sense" of focusing on fundamentals. Canadian cities are looking south to pick up some good ideas.</p>

October 24 - The Globe & Mail

Flashback: Ignoring Warnings, Feds Cut San Diego Fire Prevention Funds

<p>This past April, agencies responsible for fire prevention in the San Diego area were warning the Bush Administration not to cut funding for deadwood removal, saying it was only a matter of time before another major fire.</p>

October 24 - The San Diego Union-Tribune

The Ugliest City In America - The People, That Is

<p>Survey says: Philadelphians are the ugliest (and perhaps the fattest) people in the U.S, while the beach-loving residents of San Diego and Miami are the most gorgeous.</p>

October 24 - Yahoo News

The New American Dream

<p>Walkable neighborhoods will be the new American dream, according to land strategist and developer Chris Leinberger in this interview from <em>Smart City</em>.</p>

October 24 - Smart City

Not Putting Out The Fire With Land Use Planning

<p>As fires devastate Southern California and cause the evacuation of more than half million people, Bill Fulton laments how land use planning has largely been ignored as a fire risk reduction method.</p>

October 24 - California Planning & Development Report

Urban Renewal For Whom?

<p>Urban renewal projects intended to help the poor in struggling neighborhoods really do the opposite, writes Timothy B. Lee.</p>

October 24 - The American

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