The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
Britain Cuts Poverty Using U.S.-Style Methods
<p>Borrowing rhetoric and programmatic ideas from U.S. efforts, the Blair administration in Britaan has managed to cut the nation's child poverty rate by more than half. But anti-poverty policies have not been without their critics.</p>
Austin To Consider New Fund To Save Downtown 'Mom and Pops'
<p>With new development threatening quirky non-chain restaurants and other retail stores, the City of Austin wants to create a fund to support and attract certain types of downtown businesses.</p>
Cities Switching Back One-Way Streets To Two-Way
<p>To make downtown more livable, cities across the nation are converting one-way streets to two-way streets.</p>
Planning And Preservation In St. Petersburg, Russia
<p>A new report from <em>The Classical City</em>, a journal dedicated to preserving St. Petersburg, Russia, describes the destructive effects of the city's new plan and calls for architecture that is consistent with the city's character.</p>
Arizona Is Nation's Fastest Growing State
<p>The U.S. Census Bureau reported it's findings for the year ending July 1, 2006: Arizona overtook Nevada to grow the fastest; Texas grew the most, followed by Florida and California, which remains the most populous state.</p>
When Going Gets Tough, Struggling Small Towns Get Creative
<p>Across America, small towns are struggling to get by economically as many residents move out and businesses follow. But some small towns are employing some creative ideas -- from giant killer bee statues to storytelling festivals -- to stay afloat.</p>
More Canadians Taking Transit
<p>New statistics from the Canadian Urban Transit Association show that larger cities with better, more frequent transit service, and incentives such as universal bus passes for university students, saw major increases in ridership.</p>
Friday Funny: Accessibility To The Extreme
<p><em>The Onion</em>, America's "Finest News Source", brings this image of an office building that takes the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA) a little too far.</p>
Tacoma (Re)Considers Streetcars
<p>An advisory task force has been formed to consider rebuilding a historic streetcar system in Tacoma, Washington. Infrastructure and funding issues are proving to be major hurdles.</p>
Brooklyn's 8 Million Square Foot Atlantic Yards Project Approved
<p>The Ghery-designed project, to be built largely on a fallow open railyard, atop the 2nd largest transit station in the U.S., will be filled by 8-million square feet of housing, offices, retail and a new home for the New Jersey Nets basketball team.</p>
Ohio Tax-Sharing Program Looks To Boost Regional Economy
<p>Representatives from seven Northeast Ohio counties are looking to form a regional partnership that would include tax-sharing, comprehensive regional planning and an equitable distribution of service and affordable housing.</p>
Legislating A Safer Bike Ride In California
<p>The tragic death of a tri-athlete student while bicycling in southern California has sparked a bill to create a three-foot buffer for any vehicle passing a cyclist – but will it create more problems than it attempts to solve?</p>
Planning Infrastructure For Climate Change
<p>Seattle's <em>Daily Journal of Commerce</em> investigates how climate change will affect the region's infrastructure and how the region's infrastructure will affect climate change in this two-part piece.</p>
Honolulu Transit Routes Debated
<p>In Oahu, lawmakers are having trouble agreeing on the best path for a proposed light rail line. The Honolulu mayor wants a different path than that approved by the city council. But it is not even certain if the proposed line will be rail or bus.</p>
High Cost Of Living Blamed For Slowing CA Growth
<p>The population growth rate has decline for the sixth year in a row in California, causing policymakers to voice concern over a future shortage in the state's educated workforce. High costs of living are blamed for the decline.</p>
World's Largest Wind Farm Project Approved
<p>U.K. government approves two offshore wind farm projects in the Thames Estuary.</p>
Brooklyn Stadium Project Controversy Continues
<p>The controversy surrounding a proposed $4 billion sports arena and residential project on 22 acres in Brooklyn provokes questions about the area's future that are national, as well as local.</p>
'Solar Trees' For Google's Parking Lot
<p>Google plans to turn barren parking into a source for clean energy.</p>
Boulder, Colorado's Big TOD Project Nears Approval
<p>Despite disagreements about the planned density, plans for a large-scale transit-oriented development is on the verge of being adopted in the city of Boulder, Colorado. A final approval is expected to come in early 2007.</p>
India's Forest Dwellers Gain Land Rights
<p>The Parliament in India has passed bill granting more than 27 million forest dwellers legal rights to their ancestral lands. Before the bill's passage, the forest dwellers were defenseless as logging and mining interests moved in.</p>
Pagination
Tyler Technologies
New York City School Construction Authority
Village of Glen Ellyn
Transportation Research & Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University
Chaddick Institute at DePaul University
Institute for Housing and Urban Development Studies (IHS)
Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada
Toledo-Lucas County Plan Commissions
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