The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

New-Market Tax Credits Spur Commercial Growth

Like the low-income tax credit before it, new-market credits are proving essential to the revitalization of American businesses, investing over eight billion dollars to date in low-income areas.

February 1 - The New York Times

'Green Harbor', Urban Ecotopia

The alter-ego of the Inner Harbor's 'hardscape', Baltimore's nearby Middle Branch harbor is set to become a model sustainable neighborhood, complete with hiking trails and alternative energy sources, if developers' visions go according to plan.

February 1 - Baltimore City Paper

Group Looks To Dump Trump Casino Plan

Members of an underfunded Philadelphia neighborhood protest the gaming investment when basic services, such as a hospital, are lacking.

February 1 - Philadelphia City Paper

BLOG POST

Urban Design and Conflict

After Adam's last two thoughtful posts, I thought I should weigh in here being the resident urban design on Tech Talk. In general, I sometimes share others concerns with marquee architecture but usually when its seen as a way of boosting economic development or the status of a city. I think in those cases, there are far better ways to boost the livability and physical appearance of a place. Thinking of what an "icon" for say, Fort Wayne, would be is an uninteresting question as that city faces other underlying issues that a marquee project simply can't address.

January 31 - Scott Page

Lost Property Rights

One man owns a piece of Fort Totten, now a major New York City metro area park; he's just not sure where it is (or who's buried there), complicating matters for the Mayor.

January 31 - New York Press


Regional Parking Tax Faces Business Opposition In Vancouver

TransLink, the Greater Vancouver Transportation Authority, plans to tax businesses per square meter of parking space in order to help pay for a $1.9 billion, three-year improvement plan.

January 31 - The Vancouver Sun

The Economics Of Hurricanes

How vulnerable is the U.S. south to year after year of Katrinas? Should cities like New Orleans be abandoned to return to salt marshes or ocean?

January 31 - William D. Nordhaus, Yale


How A Subway Finds Its Voice

After nearly a decade, the voice of the Washington D.C. Metro is up for grabs.

January 31 - The Christian Science Monitor

War On The Poor

From pawnshops to check cashers and rent-to-own stores, usurious companies are exploiting the nation's poor, creating a lucrative 'fringe economy' in the process.

January 31 - Houston Press

Mississippi Town Prepares For 'New Urbanism'

A small suburban community along the Gulf Coast is learning to embrace New Urbanism and create its first ever town center.

January 31 - The Clarion-Ledger

Reinforcing Southern California's Polycentricity Through New Suburbanism

A re-awakening of interest in walkable urban environments in suburban locations? This trend mostly revolves around the pre-war downtowns of small Southern California cities that grew into suburban bedroom communities in the 1950s and 1960s.

January 31 - The Los Angeles Times

Vancouver Housing Least Affordable In Canada

The Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey finds Vancouver housing to be 'severely unaffordable', and 15th worst worldwide.

January 31 - The Vancouver Sun

Possible To Be 'Carfree' In Exurbia?

John Schindel lives in Stafford County, Virginia, a far-out exurb of Washington, D.C. Because of previous legal problems, he has no driving privileges. How does he get to and from his varied places of employment?

January 31 - The Washington Post

The End Of The Affair

With the U.S. automobile industry falling into what appears to be permanent decline, Paul Harris muses on what it means for America's "love affair with the car" when its cars are built somewhere else.

January 31 - Observer (UK)

With Hurricane Season Just Four Months Away...

Despite early promises to support a swift recovery after Hurricane Katrina, slow Federal cleanup of debris and inadequate provision of suitable housing for evacuees are slowing rebuilding efforts.

January 30 - The Washington Post

Last Great Frontier: The Third California

Joel Kotkin and William Frey observe how the movement of high-skilled and professional jobs to rapidly growing inland California is changing the region where the "California Dream" is still possible.

January 30 - The Los Angeles Times

NASA Climate Scientist Says He's Being Silenced

NASA's leading climate scientist claims that the Bush administration has tried to censor him from speaking out about global warming.

January 30 - The New York Times

A Market Response To Eminent Domain

BB&T, the country's ninth-largest bank, announces that it will not make commercial loans to developers who plan private projects on land seized via eminent domain.

January 30 - Winston-Salem Journal

Why We Need Suburbia

Suburban growth has kept our cities livable while they expand, and attempts to limit suburban growth ignore important historical trends, writes Joel Kotkin.

January 30 - The San Francisco Chronicle

Australia Planning Institute Responds To Housing Study

The Planning Institute of Australia (PIA) disagrees with Demographia's recent study on housing affordability.

January 30 - Australian Broadcasting Corporation

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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.