The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

The Second Battle Of Gettysburg

<p>A casino proposal shoots the Civil War battlefield to the top of the list of Pennsylvania's endangered historic places.</p>

November 29 - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The Rebirth Of The Property Rights Movement

<p>Planner and essayist Richard Carson provides insight into the growing property rights movement.</p>

November 29 - Public Management Magazine

Using Transit Oriented Development As A Global Warming Reduction Strategy

<p>A regional planning agency in the Bay Area is including TOD as a strategy to help the Bay Area meet its AB 32 goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions.</p>

November 29 - San Francisco Examiner

Los Angeles Delves Into Urban Forestry

<p>Los Angeles, with one of the smallest arboreal canopies of any major American city, has launched an initiative to plant one million trees over the next few years.</p>

November 29 - The Planning Report

The Last Retailer Standing

<p>Despite the sudden sale and closure of Portland's once vibrant public market, one pizza parlor owner continues to incur large losses but refuses to shut down.</p>

November 29 - Portland Press Herald


Rhode Island Working To Help Seniors Age In Place

<p>Even with variety of housing options for seniors, the state still has a long waiting list for units affordable to low-income people.</p>

November 29 - The New York Times

The Changing Shape of the City

<p>Profound demographic, economic, and cultural forces are reshaping the nation, and have major significance for urbanization in America, says Robert Puentes, a fellow at the Brookings Institution.</p>

November 29 - The Brookings Institution


FEATURE

Rethinking Atlanta's Green Space

By hosting public outreach sessions and design clinics with registered landscape architects, Atlanta-area non-profit Park Pride is giving communities an active role in creating a new vision for their neighborhood greenspaces.

November 29 - Nandita Godbole

VirtualCity Delivers First Person Views Of The Urban Landscape

<p>A new Canadian company has matched GPS-coordinated street-level camcorder shots of Toronto with mapping software to enable a real-life horizontal view of any coordinate, allowing users to preview a destination before visiting.</p>

November 29 - The Globe and Mail

Garden District Could Breathe New Life Into Downtown

<p>A landscape district featuring restored historic gardens is planned for downtown Columbia, South Carolina. The project will serve as a critical "connecting point" for several downtown areas undergoing revitalization.</p>

November 29 - The State

In California, A River Is Restored

<p>Los Angeles water officials are restoring year-round flow to 62 miles of the Lower Owens River, with hope that the waterway will once again support plant and wildlife and become an eco-tourist attraction for ailing Inyo County.</p>

November 28 - The Los Angeles Times

Recording of 1991 'San Antonio By Design' Seminar by Andres Duany

A YouTube video features a nine-part talk given by Andres Duany in 1991 in San Antonio, Texas, after visting downtown and RiverWalk.

November 28 - You Tube

Beijing To Build Biggest Metro System In The World

<p>Plans for the Chinese capital's metro system fall just shy of 350 miles of track over 19 lines, which would surpass London's Underground by 2020.</p>

November 28 - China Daily

Cities Trying To Woo "The Young And The Restless"

<p>Cities are competing for a mobile but vital part of the workforce: the 25- to 34-year olds.</p>

November 28 - The New York Times

Tourism Recovers Slowly In New Orleans

<p>Travel writer Matt Gross reports on the state of tourism in New Orleans.</p>

November 28 - The New York Times

An Urban Agenda For An Urban Age

<p>Bruce Katz, Director of the Metropolitan Policy Program at the Brookings Institute, highlights the need for set of new policies for managing the complexity of 21st century cities.</p>

November 28 - The Brookings Institution

Lifestyles Of The Rich And Poor In Mexico City

<p>As the ranks of Mexico's rich swell, the haves and the have-nots in Mexico City are living increasingly separate lives. Walled cities are being built to separate the upper and lower classes in Mexico's capital, while bullet-proof evening wear is selling briskly.</p>

November 28 - The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Congestion Pricing Debate Continues In New York

<p>A proposal to charge drivers $7 for entering Manhattan below 60th Street, previously rejected by Mayor Bloomberg, is being floated again by a diverse group of a civic and community groups.</p>

November 28 - The New York Times

Vancouver: No Shangri-La After All?

<p>A new report suggests that Vancouver, widely regarded as the world's "most livable" city, is facing a growing population of working poor, inaccessibly expensive housing, and increasing social inequities among minority groups.</p>

November 28 - The Tyee

Will Leaders Heed Grassroots Election Message?

<p>Voters in Michigan and elsewhere are increasingly supportive of public expenditures for transit and open space, but many public officials don't seem to be paying much attention to shifting taxpayer priorities.</p>

November 28 - Michigan Land Use Institute

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