The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
Are The Cities Of The Future Destined To Be Mega-slums?
<p>By 2030, an estimated 2 billion of the 5 billion people who will be living in cities will live in slums, primarily in Africa and Asia.</p>
World's Most Powerful Dam Proposed For Africa
<p>Industrialists in Africa are pushing for the creation of a giant dam on the Congo River that would generate enough energy for the half-billion people on the continent without electricity. The huge project has been called "a Marshall Plan for Africa."</p>
U.S. Cities Follow Californian Opposition To Wal-Mart
<p>Many cities are following the lead of various municipalities up and down California that are using any and all possible powers to prevent Wal-Marts from moving in. But despite the growing opposition, business is booming.</p>
Bostoners Most Likely To Walk To Work
<p>Commuters in Boston are the most likely city dwellers to walk to work, but are second-to-last among commuters in 50 American cities to carpool, according to Census data.</p>
Michael Bloomberg: Chairman Of The Big Apple
<p>New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg views citizens as customers and city workers as assets. How does this translate into a new city hall transparency and vastly improved city services?</p>
Documentary Follows Suburban Development Fight In Austin
<p>"The Unforeseen," a new documentary, takes a thoughtful look at the various interests at stake in the development of sprawling real estate in Austin.</p>
The Corruption Of Smart Growth
<p>With many developers touting their various projects as "smart growth", the term is losing much of it meaning.</p>
Seattle Grapples With Tree Losses
<p>A rash of illegal tree cutting in Seattle has prompted local officials to act on the city's decreasing amount of trees and canopy cover. Tree-planting efforts hope to build the canopy back from less than its current city coverage of less than 20%.</p>
The Longest Escalator System In The World
<p>Hong Kong's unique system of escalators, moving walkways, and pedestrian bridges has transformed the neighborhoods it connects.</p>
New US Embassy In Baghdad Looks Like Suburban Sprawl
<p>LA Times architectural critic Christopher Hawthorne examines the depressing-looking new and massive 104-acre U.S. embassy compound being constructed in Iraq within the 'Green Zone'.</p>
'The Green Wall Of China'
<p>China is establishing a living wall of vegetation to hold back the Gobi desert that is heading southeast to Beijing.</p>
In Miami, Smaller Buildings Captivate Too
<p>Amidst Miami's highrise condo boom, the Design District offers buildings and plazas with innovative design at a more human scale.</p>
Chicago's Green Plans Falling Short
<p>Despite big plans to make the city a national example for environmental friendliness, some say Chicago Mayor Richard Daley's measures have failed to produce the intended results.</p>
Outsourcing Local Government?
<p>Sandy Springs, Georgia, with 80,000 residents, has apparently successfully outsourced all government functions, except for police and fire services.</p>
What Toronto Could Learn From Chicago
<p>Margaret Wente lists Chicago's strengths and criticizes Toronto's mayor for the city's problems.</p>
BLOG POST
What Gotham Tells Us about Mass Transit
<span style="font-weight: normal"><font size="3"><font face="Times New Roman">I recently got <a href="/node/24909" title="Mass Transit Unsustainability">taken to the proverbial wood shed on Planetizen Interchange</a> for arguing that mass transit is unsustainable. So, I decided that it might be useful to look at the mass transit system that seems to be the most successful in nation: New York City. New York has the density and economic activity to sustain transit—perhaps a best-case scenario in the U.S.
Reviving 'Deadmonton'
<p>Despite a booming oil economy and a population of almost a million people, Alberta's capital city of Edmonton finds "place branding" a struggle.</p>
Ranch vs. McMansion
<p>Wayne Senville is on a trip across the U.S. on Route 50. He reports on how Creve Coeur, Missouri, is a well-kept suburb west of the city of St. Louis, is handling the trend of ranch homes are being torn down and replaced with McMansions.</p>
'Flawed' Proposal May Be Last Chance
<p>A long-planned transit tunnel connecting the greater Washington D.C. region to Dulles International Airport is coming up for a vote, but officials say the only way to keep the plan alive is to approve what is a seriously flawed proposal.</p>
BLOG POST
Could Your Rent Pay For More Transit?
<p class="MsoNormal">An acquaintance of mine is trying to decide whether to move to Los Angeles or New York. <span> </span>Having spent most of her life in the Northeast, New York is a familiar city where she has good friends and job connections. However, she can’t help but feel the draw of the West Coast, and on a recent visit to Los Angeles, she was rather keen on settling down in Southern California, especially when she was comparing the rents in L.A. to those in New York. While rents in New York are increasingly stratospheric, L.A.’s are just exorbitantly high.</p>
Pagination
planning NEXT
Appalachian Highlands Housing Partners
Mpact (founded as Rail~Volution)
City of Camden Redevelopment Agency
City of Astoria
City of Portland
City of Laramie
Urban Design for Planners 1: Software Tools
This six-course series explores essential urban design concepts using open source software and equips planners with the tools they need to participate fully in the urban design process.
Planning for Universal Design
Learn the tools for implementing Universal Design in planning regulations.