The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
Miami's Housing Crisis Spawns Shantytown
<p>A shantytown set up to protest Miami's housing crisis is winning over neighbors and has become a "warm community."</p>
Alberta Communities Not Benefitting From Oil Sands Revenues
<p>Alberta's inability to provide the necessary municipal and social infrastructure to keep pace with oil sand developments is beginning to make life in the north "intolerable."</p>
Kansas City May Foot Bill To Attract Pro Team
Despite a long-held promise of not spending any city money to attract a tenant to Kansas City's now-vacant sports arena, the city may be willing to pay millions to build a practice facility in an effort to woo a pro hockey or basketball team.
A New Plaza For Downtown Raleigh
<p>The central location and the expanse of space to facilitate a variety of different uses are getting people excited about the newly proposed City Plaza in downtown Raleigh, North Carolina, despite the fact that it will cut through a well-used street.</p>
A Very Early Start For A Career In Planning
<p>A innovative program for gifted children in Australia is giving students a chance to learn the basics of town planning.</p>
Andrès Duany Responds To Critics In Vancouver
<p>The father of New Urbanism takes on avant-garde architects and environmentalists as he talks about his latest project in Vancouver, Canada.</p>
Home Is Where Your Job Is
<p>Tesco, a UK-based supermarket chain, has plans to provide housing for staff members in new mixed-use developments featuring its stores.</p>
On Farmers' Markets And Public Space
<p>In many urban areas, farmers' markets provide both a connection to nature and a sense of community.</p>
Austin Grapples With Downtown Height Limits
<p>Developers in the city's booming downtown are pushing to change the rules originally enacted to preserve view corridors to the Texas State Capitol Dome.</p>
New Vision For D.C. Avenue Down On Its Luck
<p>A wave of new development has finally come to gritty Georgia Avenue, and though many are pleased with the sorely needed investment, gentrification worries abound.</p>
Urban Dwellers Face Onslaught Of Ads
<p>Ever in search of more consumers, advertisers seem intent on covering more places and spaces with marketing messages.</p>
A New Place For Dinner, Shopping And A Movie
<p>French architect Jean Pierre Heim has proposed creating a semi-outdoor multimedia entertainment center in Shanghai -- a cinema, shopping center and restaurant all-in-one.</p>
New York's Queen Of Urban Planning
<p>With her patrician manner and focused attention to the quality of buildings and public space, New York City Planning Commissioner Amanda Burden has become a controversial figure in the city's planning and development circles.</p>
Urban Village To Rise On Stadium Grounds
<p>Forest City Enterprises has put forth a proposal to bring a major mixed-use urban infill community to Dallas-Ft. Worth on the grounds of Texas Stadium.</p>
New Street Furniture Debuts In New York
<p>A new wave of public street furniture has rolled out in New York City, including bus shelters, newsstands, and automatic public toilets. Some are unsure whether the new designs will be accepted by a city already overwhelmed with visual individualism.</p>
Waterfront Art Park To Open In Seattle
<p>A public park and art space is set to open next week along Seattle's waterfront, replacing a former brownfield site. The new Olympic Sculpture Park was created by the Seattle Art Museum, an expansion of which is set to open in May.</p>
The Evolution Of The Katrina Cottage
<p>The cost effective Katrina Cottage continues its evolution in the form of a schoolhouse.</p>
New San Francisco Light Rail Line Opens
<p>San Francisco's new light rail line, the 5-mile T-Third, opened for free, weekend service Jan 13. The service is intended to revitalize the sagging south-east neighborhoods, but some bus riders question the new line. Daily service begins April 7.</p>
Rent Control: Tenant's Dream, Landlord's Nightmare?
<p>At almost 30 years of age, L.A.'s rent control ordinance is a double-edged sword -- reviled by some and relied upon by others.</p>
Historic City Tangoes With Development
<p>The historic city of Isfahan, Iran, has destroyed scores of 400-year old buildings to make way for new roads and shopping centers.</p>
Pagination
Gallatin County Department of Planning & Community Development
Heyer Gruel & Associates PA
JM Goldson LLC
City of Camden Redevelopment Agency
City of Astoria
Transportation Research & Education Center (TREC) at Portland State University
Jefferson Parish Government
Camden Redevelopment Agency
City of Claremont
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