The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

Houston Becomes Sixth-Largest U.S. City

<p>The population in Houston has passed that of Miami, making it the sixth-largest city in the United States. Between 2000 and 2006, the city saw a 17.5% growth rate.</p>

April 8 - The Houston Chronicle

Calls For Foreclosure Moratorium In Wake Of Subprime Meltdown

<p>As the subprime mortgage crisis worsens, civil rights organizations and Democratic presidential contenders alike are calling for a moratorium on foreclosures, but the mortgage industry is resisting.</p>

April 8 - The Independent (UK)

Catastrophic Drought 50 Years Away For Southwest

<p>Using sophisticated climate models, scientists are predicting a 15 percent loss of surface moisture by 2050. They suspect, but cannot conclude, that global warming is to blame.</p>

April 8 - Los Angeles Times

Planning And TOD To The Rescue

<p>This column from <em>The San Francisco Examiner</em> describes how "urban planning can save the world", and identifies transit-oriented development as a major solution to global warming.</p>

April 8 - San Francisco Examiner

Incentivizing Green Building

<p>The British Columbia village of Saanich has passed a measure that will make it easier for developers building energy-efficient projects to get approval. Green builders will also receive building permit fee rebates.</p>

April 8 - Victoria Times Colonist


BLOG POST

How Can Planners Use the Web?

<p>In the last few years, a set of interactive, web-based technologies has reinvented the web. Myspace, Meetup, Wikipedia, Youtube have become household words, and millions of people worldwide are surfing social networking websites, writing blogs, and collaborating online in new ways. These so-called &quot;Web 2.0&quot; technologies were the inspiration for TIME&#39;s person of the year: You. What the true impact of these technologies will be, we must conceded it is, as <a href="http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1569514,00.html">TIME says</a>, &quot;a massive social experiment.&quot; </p>

April 7 - Robert Goodspeed

BLOG POST

Hipness a Heavy Hitter in Philly's NoLI

<p>The corner café on North Second Street in the Northern Liberties neighborhood of Philadelphia aspires to Euro-style café culture though it lines a little-trafficked street of row houses showing every year of their century and a half of existence, and faces a vast empty, chain-linked block where a brewery once stood. <br /><img src="/files/u10275/DSC_0054.jpg" alt="" width="320" height="212" />

April 7 - James S. Russell


Is There A Gender Gap In Commuting?

<p>Randall Crane offers a blog post about his research of an exception to the gender gap: the trip linking work and home, which is consistently and persistently shorter for women than men.</p>

April 7 - Urban Planning Research / Randall Crane's Blog

Booming Town Seeks Water From Reluctant Neighbor

<p>An 11-year drought in the Southwest U.S. has a growing small town in Nevada looking to pump water from nearby Beaver Dam, Arizona. Many in the Arizona town are upset over the proposed water-snatch, which they say limits their own ability to develop.</p>

April 7 - NPR

Convert A Condo--Take A Hike

<p>At yesterday's L.A. City Council meeting, landlords and tenants sparred over affordable housing, money, and incentives for the middle class. After the dust settled, councilmembers voted: landlords may have to pay higher fees to relocate tenants.</p>

April 7 - The Los Angeles Times

Out With The Strippers, In With The Homeless

<p>Residents in Cleveland, Ohio, may be putting their tax dollars towards relocating a strip club. The relocation is part of an effort to acquire the club's current location for reuse as a homeless shelter.</p>

April 7 - The Cleveland Plain Dealer

Deer In The Big City

<p>As suburban sprawl spreads in upstate New York, more deer are finding their way into the five boroughs of New York City. Some have called for signs to alert drivers, but others say the movement patterns of the deer aren't consistent enough for signs.</p>

April 7 - Nate Berg

BLOG POST

As a student, how do I get the most out of the APA conference?

<!--StartFragment -->If you are a student planning travel to next week&#39;s national APA conference, you may be thinking about how to get the most out of the experience. Here are some ideas that have worked for others...

April 6 - Bruce Stiftel

Friday Funny: Ambulances Conquer Congestion

<p>This article from <em>Weekly World News</em> looks at efforts in New York to retrofit ambulances with bulldozer blades, helping drivers save more lives by smashing through the city's crowded streets.</p>

April 6 - Weekly World News

Hearing The Public

<p>Utilizing citizen surveys to gauge public concerns and support for projects is an increasing trend in municipalities across the country. Some say this method is much more effective -- and more inclusive -- than traditional public hearings.</p>

April 6 - Governing Magazine

Fiesta On The Sandy Shores Of Mexico City

<p>For those who can't get to the coast, tons of sand have been trucked into a park in Mexico City, where residents flock to spend a day at the "beach". But critics see the effort as a wasteful in a city where many residents still have no running water.</p>

April 6 - The Guardian Unlimited

The Best And Worst Cities For Safe Driving

<p><em>Men's Health Magazine</em> has rated the U.S. cities with the best and worst drivers. The three cities with the safest drivers are Des Moines, Iowa, Jersey City, New Jersey, and New York, New York. Columbia, South Carolina is the least safe.</p>

April 6 - Men's Health Magazine

Water Worries In Australia

<p>Severe water shortages have hit Australia in recent years, and they are showing no signs of subsiding. The government has cracked down on waste, but many scientists say that global warming is the underlying cause of the shortage.</p>

April 6 - The Christian Science Monitor

Adaptive Recycling: From Brick Wall To Public Park

<p>Community activists and designers have made a deal with local officials to reuse construction materials from a demolished fire station to build an amphitheater in a local park.</p>

April 6 - The Missoulian

San Francisco Bay Area Begins To Grow Again

<p>After many years of lagging population growth many attribute to the bust of the dot-com boom, the San Francisco Bay Area has shown a positive population growth rate for recent years.</p>

April 6 - The San Francisco Chronicle

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