The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

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>

July 24 - The Los Angeles Times

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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 />

July 24 - Barbara Knecht

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>

July 24 - Associated Press via Newsday

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>

July 24 - Chillicothe Gazette

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>

July 24 - The Detroit Free Press


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>

July 24 - The Wall Street Journal

Cost of Replacing U.S. Cities' Aging Infrastrucure 'Staggering'

<p>The explosion of an 83-year old steam pipe in Manhattan shouldn't be viewed as an isolated incident, but a warning sign.</p>

July 24 - Associated Press


Big Homes Causing Big Problems

<p>The debate over McMansionization has pitted neighbor against neighbor across the United States.</p>

July 24 - The Los Angeles Times

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Railing About Rules

<p>At the opening dinner of an international workshop on building a better national transportation policy, I found myself seated between Charlotte, North Carolina mayor Pat McCrory and Shirley DeLibero, a consultant who headed transit authorities in New Jersey and Houston, and was a deputy in both Dallas and Washington D.C. </p><p>McCrory&#39;s a Republican, Charlotte&#39;s first six-term mayor, first elected mayor in 1995. While his city has grown 20 percent, McCrory&#39;s presided over a shift from an all-roads strategy to a hybrid model adding rail transit to heavily congested corridors radiated from the region&#39;s center. The first line, a south corridor, is scheduled to open this fall, supported by the half-cent sales tax passed in 1998 to build and operate a better transit system. Now in 2007, the mayor finds himself in a serious cross-fire as he ponders re-election prospects.</p>

July 23 - Anonymous

Paris Embraces New Bike Rental Program

<p>To reduce traffic congestion and parking shortage, Paris launched a bike rental program similar to one implemented in other European cities. After its first week, an average of 45,000 bikes have been rented every day.</p>

July 23 - The Los Angeles Times

Building A New Catholic City In Florida

<p>Tom Monaghan, the founder of Domino's Pizza, has built a Catholic college and a Catholic-focused community in Ave Maria, Florida. The 5,000-acre community will include 11,000 housing units, 1.2 million s.f. of mixed use space, and a 55-foot crucifix.</p>

July 23 - USA Today

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>

July 23 - Minneapolis-St. Paul Star Tribune

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>

July 23 - The Portland Tribune

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>

July 23 - The Los Angeles Times

A Cheaper Way To Build Density

<p>A new design for mid-rise apartments promises to help make more higher-density projects pencil.</p>

July 23 - Apartment Finance Today

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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>

July 23 - Scott Page

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>

July 23 - Small Business Times

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>

July 23 - Apartment Finance Today

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>

July 23 - Money Magazine

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>

July 23 - The Boise Weekly

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