The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
Privatization Of Parking Feeds City Coffers
<p>By leasing some of its publicly-owned parking facilities to private developers, the city of Minneapolis is taking a large chunk out of its debt and creating a new stream of tax revenue.</p>
Portland Wants To Be Even More Bike-Friendly
<p>Already one of the nation's most bike-friendly cities, Portland, Oregon, is looking to update its bicycle master plan to make cycling even more attractive in the city.</p>
The Future Of Sustainable Urban Gardening
<p>This year's Chelsea Flower Show in London offers some innovative examples of how gardens can flourish in cities.</p>
A Cheaper Way To Build Density
<p>A new design for mid-rise apartments promises to help make more higher-density projects pencil.</p>
BLOG POST
It's Summer, Inspire Me...
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt" class="MsoNormal"><font size="3"><font face="Times New Roman">Most people use the Summer months to re-connect with pastimes forgotten during winter months.<span> </span>It is this time of the year that sales soar both at the box office and in bookstores.<span> </span>Most normal people I know take trashy novels with them to the beach or submerge themselves in an entire season of 24 (which thanks to Netflix can be accomplished in a few intense evenings).<span> </span>I tend to lean toward the other extreme (although I have indulged in bad TV from time to time).<span> </span>My wife calls me a design geek because my bedside table is always full of design magazines, books and theory.</font></font></p>
Milwaukee Mayor Stumps For Transit Plan
<p>Citing the successful examples of transit-oriented development in Portland and Denver, Mayor Tom Barrett says its time for the Brew City to improve its transit system.</p>
Construction Costs Continuing To Rise
<p>Even with the housing slow down, the cost of building a new apartment building continues to rise -- due to increasing prices for materials and a surge of commercial construction projects.</p>
The Most Affordable Places To Live
<p>Want a buy a home for less than $100,000? Check out these communities profiled by Money Magazine.</p>
Refashioning A Town Down On Its Luck
<p>Home to Chinese immigrants before becoming a town known for vice and sin, Garden City, Idaho, is planning a rebirth that leaders and residents hope will transform the community into a desirable and prosperous part of Metro Boise.</p>
Managing L.A.'s Mounting Waste Flow
<p>Director Rita Robinson discusses the Bureau of Sanitation's pursuit of a cleaner, greener, and landfill-free L.A.</p>
A Taco Stand in Every Neighborhood
<p>A trip to Baja California -- with its ubiquitous taco stands -- inspires one resident of a New Urbanist community to deal with his neighborhood's lack of eateries by developing a plan for a taco stand.</p>
Toronto Looks To Casino To Fill Budget Deficit
<p>Politicians in Toronto are looking to large-scale developments centered around casinos to help boost the city's economy. But the provincial legislation in Ontario may prevent the approval of any new casinos.</p>
Mercury Cleanup Plan Approved For San Francisco Bay
<p>The State of California has approved a plan to clean mercury from the San Francisco Bay. Due to the high concentration of the harmful toxin, the extensive effort has a 70-year timetable.</p>
Green Roofs: Functional And Appealing
<p>For a host of environmental and aesthetic reasons, roof-top vegetation and gardens are catching on -- though there are still many questions about how and when to apply the technique.</p>
BLOG POST
Saving Ginormous Amounts of Energy
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt" class="MsoNormal"><font size="3"><font face="Times New Roman">I couldn’t wait to use the new word, <strong>ginormous</strong>, which Merriam-Webster recently added to the Collegiate Dictionary.<span> </span>My spell checker has been trained and now I can get about the business of saving ginormous amounts of energy.<span> </span>Recent bouts of ecoterrorism in the form of Hummer vandalism in Washington D.C. and the growing media attention to the environmental hypocrisy of the travel and housing habits of card-carrying carbon footprint club members (take a gander at the 10,000 sq. ft. home of Al Gore or the 28,200 sq.
Travelers Pick World's Most Amazing Cities
<p>New York and San Francisco are the American cities to make the list, compiled by the editors of Travel + Leisure magazine. Florence, Italy tops this year's list.</p>
Is Downtown Los Angeles Finally A Neighborhood?
<p>With the reopening of Ralph's Grocery Store -- the first full service supermarket in Downtown Los Angeles in over 50 years -- planners and developers are ready to declare the area's redevelopment efforts an official success.</p>
Ding Dong! The Enclosed Mall Is Dead
<p>With only three enclosed malls built since 2005, it seems safe to say we've seen the last of the shopping mall as we've known it.</p>
Orange County Plans Hybrid Bus-Rail Line
<p>In the latest sign that the once suburban county is now increasingly urban, Irvine, California officials have approved plans for a new bus and streetcar line to connect the city's commuter rail station with several new and existing developments.</p>
Building Green? Move To The Front Of The Permit Line
<p>A San Mateo County supervisor is proposing that the county reward developers of environmentally-friendly projects with faster permit approvals.</p>
Pagination
Heyer Gruel & Associates PA
Ada County Highway District
Institute for Housing and Urban Development Studies (IHS)
City of Grandview
Harvard GSD Executive Education
Toledo-Lucas County Plan Commissions
Salt Lake City
NYU Wagner Graduate School of Public Service
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