The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
Preserve Industrial Areas Or Allow Housing?
<p>As the popularity of condos and lofts in industrial areas rises amongst both developers and buyers, cities such as Chicago, L.A., and New York are taking steps to protect their historic industrial zones.</p>
Three Major Redevelopment Projects Move Forward In California
<p>This article takes a look at redevelopment plans for the Los Angeles River, the San Francisco Transbay Center, and San Francisco Bay's Treasure Island.</p>
Controversy Erupts Over Endangered Species Act
Congress and the Interior Department investigate whether the Bush administration undermined federal protections.
Soggy Subway Plans Advance In Amsterdam
<p>Transportation planners and city officials are trying to find innovative ways to build a subway system in Amsterdam, a soggy city in a country that is mostly below sea-level.</p>
Canada's Building Codes Questioned After Massive Blaze
<p>An enormous fire in Edmonton that destroyed a condo development under construction and damaged more than 70 nearby duplexes has resulted in calls to upgrade Canada's building codes.</p>
Major Downtown Redevelopment Project Killed By Court Ruling
<p>The City of Newark, New Jersey misused its power to condemn 14 acres for a private development, rules a New Jersey judge.</p>
Historic Homes Get Second Life In Phoenix
<p>Preservationists have successfully moved over one hundred homes out of the path of the city's downtown redevelopment.</p>
Mexican Border City Going High-Rise
<p>A new high density residential project adjacent to the U.S.-Mexico border is pioneering the market for high-end condo living in the traditionally sprawling metropolis of Tijuana.</p>
UK Government Planning New Eco-Towns
<p>Public land is being used to solicit proposals from developers to build five new carbon neutral towns.</p>
The Best Cities To Spend Your Golden Years
AARP's annual list of great places to retire focuses on urban areas with amenities that allow seniors to maintain independence -- mixed-use housing, transit, walkable streets.
L.A. Contemplates Tiny Apartments: Studios or Slums?
<p>To help encourage development around downtown and increase the supply of affordable housing, planning officials in L.A. want to relax the rules governing the sizes of housing units. Critics argue that the plan will lead to the creation of tenements.</p>
Activism Through Architecture
<p>When other activist tactics failed, a couple fighting to keep out a monster garbage dump turned to architects.</p>
City of Boston Gets Second Life
<p>Boston officials hope to recreate parts of the city in the popular virtual world "Second Life".</p>
The Threat Of Urbicide
<p>The online scholarly journal Theory & Event has published a symposium of articles dealing with "urbicide" -- the intersections between "urban violence and violent urbanism."</p>
Can You Fight Climate Change From Behind The Wheel?
<p>Lauded city official and smart growth champion Rick Cole argues that California can't reach 'green' goals without changing its car culture.</p>
BLOG POST
Segways, Sidewalks, and Scooters
<p>Should Segways be allowed on sidewalks? Should all bicycles travel only in designated bike lanes? Should motorized scooters be treated as if they are wheelchairs? Where should rollerblades, skateboards, adult tricycles, bikes with trailers or kick scooters travel? The world of personal mobility is expanding. And so is the pressure in favor of alternatives to the grandaddy of personal mobility -- the automobile. In spite of its importance as image-maker and status-definer, a car is just a method for getting a person from Point A to Point B. Moving people -- that’s its basic purpose.<br />
NYC Mayor's Congestion Pricing Plan Back On Track
<p>Thanks to unbeknownst peace-making by NYC Mayor Bloomberg between the Democratic governor and the Republican Senate Majority leader, his congestion pricing plan has been salvaged with a new deadline for legislative approval set for March 31, 2008.</p>
Several States Considering Truck-Only Lanes
<p>In hopes of reducing congestion and improving goods movement, state transportation officials want to create interstate lanes specifically for trucks.</p>
Detroit's People Mover Turns 20
<p>The Detroit Free Press looks back on the city's much-maligned public transit system after 20 years of service.</p>
How Avoiding The London Congestion Charge Has Changed Behavior In The City
<p>There is no doubt about it: London's 5-year-old congestion charge has transformed life in London. More people are taking the bus and trains, more people are biking, and fewer crashes occur. But there can be major hardships when the charge isn't paid.</p>
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