The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Red Light Camera

Red Light Cameras Decline While Pedestrians Killed by Red Light Runners Increase

Despite rising death tolls for pedestrians, cities around the country are getting rid of red light cameras. New York City will be next.

August 2 - Streetsblog USA

Muni Bus Market Street

San Francisco Buses Slower than Any Peer City

Though San Francisco residents are more likely than residents of other cities to ride transit and avoid driving, the buses they ride on are unreliable.

August 2 - Curbed SF

High-Speed Rail

California's $100 Billion High-Speed Gamble

The state has less than one-third the funds necessary to build the 800-mile line connecting Northern and Southern California, depending on the cost estimate. The immediate goal is to build a 119-mile section in the Central Valley.

August 2 - The New York Times

Port of Portland

A Surprising Ally for Highway Tolling in Portland

Environmentalists find an ally in Portland's port for a plan to toll highways coming into the city.

August 2 - Willamette Week

Maryland

Montgomery County, Maryland Updates Inclusionary Housing Requirements

New rules will require more affordable housing in affluent areas, but also allow more exceptions.

August 2 - Bethesda Magazine


New Development

BLOG POST

Affordability Trade-offs

Strategies for increasing affordability often involved trade-offs between various goals and impacts. It is important to consider all of these factors when evaluating potential solutions to unaffordability.

August 2 - Todd Litman

Capitol Hill DC

Construction Versus Conservation: A Local Case Study

In Washington D.C., ZIP code 20003 is split into two distinct areas: fiercely preserved Capitol Hill and the construction-heavy Capitol Riverfront. But where are rents skyrocketing, and what factors go into that equation?

August 2 - Greater Greater Washington


New York City

Green Roofs Tax Incentive Isn't Working Because it's Poorly Targeted

New York City's Green Roof Property Tax Abatement Program has failed to take off, but if it were targeted toward the areas that need stormwater infrastructure and green spaces the most, it could be made too big to ignore.

August 2 - Crain's New York Business

Toronto Planning Director

Jennifer Keesmat, Former Chief Planner of Toronto, Running for Mayor

If Keesmaat wins the election, it would complete one of the highest-profile transitions from planner to politician in recent memory.

August 2 - Toronto Star

Texas

Breaking: Austin Moving on from CodeNEXT

The city of Austin's ambitious process of rewriting its Land Development Code has lost political support.

August 1 - Austin Statesman

Reunion Tower

Editorial: Skip the Hyperloop—Texas Should Stick to the Basics

Texas planners are eager for a six-minute trip between Fort Worth and Dallas. But the Dallas Morning News is wary of the hype.

August 1 - Dallas Morning News

HUD

BLOG POST

HUD Took a Strong Stance Against Local Control and Hardly Anyone Noticed

Earlier this year, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development devoted an entire issue of a quarterly newsletter to land use regulations and the idea that local laws are strangling the nation's supply of affordable housing.

August 1 - James Brasuell

Sea Level Rise

Bay Area Businesses Launch Challenge to Fund Climate Resilience

A regional business association hopes to raise private funds for climate adaptation planning throughout California.

August 1 - The Planning Report

Marina City Chicago

Lyft Will Pay You to Ditch Your Car for 30 Days

The transportation network company Lyft is pushing residents in the city of Chicago to experiment with a carless lifestyle.

August 1 - The Verge

Metro Rail Map

Coming to Los Angeles in 2047: The Busiest Light Rail Route in the U.S.

An extended Crenshaw Line would cut north-south through the middle of the Los Angeles basin, connecting three rail transit lines and some of the busiest buses in the county. Some don't want to wait 30 years for the plan to come to fruition.

August 1 - Los Angeles Times

Green Cross

Detroit Legislation Limits Number of Pot Shops

Detroit has been fighting some of the provisions of a statewide voter initiative while trying to control an expected proliferation of pot shops around the city.

August 1 - Detroit Free Press

Inwood Hudson RIver

Op-Ed: Rezoning Would Mean a New Waterfront for a Manhattan Neighborhood

A rezoning plan for the neighborhood of Inwood could take a critical step forward this week.

August 1 - Crain's New York Business

Bus Stop

It's Time to Pick the 'Sorriest Bus Stop in America'

It's everyone's favorite time of year. Streetsblog USA is searching for the "Sorriest Bus Stop in America."

August 1 - Streetsblog USA

Pasture land

Mapping All the Land Uses in the Lower 48

A massive data visualization project illuminates the land uses that define the United States.

August 1 - Bloomberg

Spin and LimeBike

Seattle Commits to Dockless Bike Share

After the failure of its municipal bike share system Pronto!, Seattle was one of the first to regulate the operation of dockless bke share companies in the city. Now it's one-year pilot program is permanent.

July 31 - Associated Press via the Daily Herald

Post News

Top Books

An annual review of books related to planning.

Top Schools

The definitive ranking of graduate planning programs.

100 Most Influential Urbanists

The who's who of urbanism, according to Planetizen readers.

Urban Planning Creators You Should Know

A short list of voices on social, video, and podcasting platforms.

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.