The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

The Building's Green, But What About The Commute?

<p>This article from <em>Environmental Building News</em> looks at the energy required to get workers from home to work -- often a use of energy that far surpasses that of the workplace itself.</p>

October 4 - Environmental Building News

Corps Looks To Buy Out Gulf City

<p>The Army Corps of Engineers has plans to buyout more than half of the land in the flood-damaged Gulf Coast city of Bay St. Louis, Mississippi. But residents who have already started to rebuild after Hurricane Katrina are fighting the plan.</p>

October 4 - The Los Angeles Times

A Vision Of Pre-Colonized Manhattan

<p>This slideshow from <em>The New Yorker</em> features historic maps and computer-recreations to show how Manhattan may have looked before the arrival of Europeans.</p>

October 3 - The New Yorker

Illegal Aliens To Have Big Effect On Census And Reapportionment

<p>Census 2010 is on the way, and a new report is warning that the high concentration of illegal immigrants in the South and West will skew counts and unfairly reapportion more congressional seats to states with more undocumented people.</p>

October 3 - The Hartford Courant

The Housing Slowdown

<p>Home sales and prices continue to drop to new lows.</p>

October 3 - The New York Times


The 'Greening' of Wal-Mart?

<p>Recent attempts to "greenwash" Wal-Mart in the media don't hold water, write Ruben Garcia and Andrea Buffa.</p>

October 3 - Common Dreams

Can Land Use Planning Save The World?

<p>At their annual conference, California's planners are obsessed with global warming.</p>

October 3 - California Planning & Development Report


Filling Winnipeg's 'Dead Zones'

<p>More than 40 years of revitalization efforts have failed to "fix" downtown Winnipeg. Now a host of new developments -- many of them private or the result of downtown campus expansion plans -- may finally create a vibrant core for the city.</p>

October 3 - The Winnipeg Free Press

Urban Anthropologist Looks At People And Public Spaces

<p>This article from <em>The New York Times</em> briefly profiles Project for Public Spaces Founder Fred Kent, and presents his appraisals of four New York neighborhoods.</p>

October 3 - The New York Times

South American Economic Unification May Threaten Amazon

<p>A new report warns that unless proper precautions are take, a plan to unite South American economies through transportation and infrastructure projects could result in widespread destruction of the Amazon rainforest.</p>

October 3 - Environmental News Network

Where The Housing Market Has Stabilized

<p><em>Forbes Magazine</em> has released a list of the most stable housing markets in America. Included in the list are Seattle, Pittsburgh, and Dallas.</p>

October 3 - Forbes

Mixed Feelings Over New Town In Hanoi

<p>A $7 billion new town is being planned in Vietnam, across the Red River from capital city Hanoi. And though the creation of thousands of new houses is welcomed, many are concerned about development along the sensitive riverfront.</p>

October 3 - VietNamNet Bridge

Residents Call On City To Slow Traffic

<p>Residents in San Jose, California, are calling on the city to do something about a recent increase in speeding on residential streets, but officials feel there is little that can be done.</p>

October 2 - San Jose Mercury News

Security Camera Use To Increase In New York

<p>Looking to London as an example, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg has plans to expand the city's closed-circuit video surveillance camera system.</p>

October 2 - Newsday

Cities Want Piece of Canada's $14 Billion Budget Surplus

<p>Canada's cities are asking that some of the $14-billion federal budget surplus be directed at them, and at upgrading aging infrastructure, rather than to servicing debt.</p>

October 2 - The Globe & Mail

America's First Suburb Turns 60

<p>Levittown, Long Island held a 60th birthday bash for itself on Sept. 30, complete with parades, to celebrate its creation from a potato field for GIs returning from World War II. It would go on to become America's iconic suburb.</p>

October 2 - Yahoo News

Many Renewal Areas Succeed In Salem, But Some Are Struggling

<p>Salem, Oregon has used urban renewal areas to bring economic development to many of its neighborhoods. But the success of these areas is variable, and some say it may be time to stop designating places for renewal.</p>

October 2 - Statesman Journal

Cutting Off The Short Cut

<p>With a historic small town feel and a population that has embraced its compact walkability, the town of Rowayton, Connecticut, has passed a ban on large trucks crossing though the town as a short cut.</p>

October 2 - The New York Times

Mall Hybrids Expand Downtown Character

<p>Enclosed malls are out of vogue, but new mall-condo hybrids are gaining popularity, and bringing what was once an exclusively "downtown" character out to the 'burbs.</p>

October 2 - The New York Times

Advanced Traffic Data Deleted After Days

<p>Los Angeles has one of the world's most advanced traffic detection systems, enabling it to manipulate traffic signals on the fly by using real-time data. But This data is saved for only a few days, limiting the extensive data's long-term use.</p>

October 2 - The Los Angeles Times

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