The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
Salt Lake City To Require LEED For New Buildings
<p>An ordinance has been passed in Salt Lake City, Utah, requiring builders of any commercial, condo or apartment buildings to adhere to LEED green building standards if they are funded or financed by the city.</p>
Urban Improvement Through Child's Play
<p>This article from <em>Metropolis Magazine</em> looks at a new trend that is revisioning the playground by expanding its scope and encouraging kids to get out of the backyard.</p>
Housing Complexes Look To Redevelop In Mumbai
<p>Residents in some of Mumbai's state-built housing complexes have agreed to solicit bids for redevelopment of the nearly half-century old housing, called Middle Income Group residential colonies. Residents and the building community alike are excited about the redevelopment.</p>
Tokyo Suburb Popular With Expatriates
<p>The Tokyo suburb of Kakamura has shown great appeal to expatriates because of its availability of space and proximity to scenic natural resources -- attributes that sharply contrast the dense and bustling big city one hour away.</p>
Eminent Domain Limitations May Stand In Arizona
<p>As voters in Arizona overwhelmingly approved a ballot initiative to restrict the government's use of eminent domain, the state's Supreme Court unanimously overturned another court's ruling that the initiative was invalid.</p>
The Debate To Rezone A Trailer Park To Commercial
<p>A community in central Pennsylvania is considering rezoning land currently occupied by a mobile home park into what city leaders say is much needed commercial space.</p>
Building Homes For The Middle
<p>With cities increasingly only building luxury homes for the rich or affordable housing for the poor, a prefab housing development in East New York provides a model building middle-income homes.</p>
Oregon Struggles With Planning Reform
<p>Much has changed in the decades since the state created its widely lauded planning policies and programs. Now Oregon planners are trying to re-energize the state's residents around planning issues, in order to make needed reforms.</p>
Is Now The Best Time To Buy A House?
<p>After years of prices spiraling out of control, the National Association of Realtors is suggesting that the housing market is ripe for home buyers looking to get a good deal.</p>
Court Ruling Stalls San Francisco Bike Plan
<p>Running afoul of the state's 1970 landmark environmental law, the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), San Francisco's bike plan must undergo a full environmental review, ruled a superior court judge on Nov. 7.</p>
Modernist Skin Will Replace Historic Facade In New York
New York City's Landmarks Preservation Commission refused to designate the 19th century Colonial Club as historic. Instead, the building will be stripped of its cornice, pediments, and pilasters and be reborn with a new facade of aluminum and glass.
Softening Market Hits Production Home Builders
<p>Responding to increasing cancellations and growing inventory, national home builders are being forced to slow production and lay off workers.</p>
Diversification and Reinvention Keeps Chicago Going Strong
<p>Despite declining manufacturing employment, Chicago has continuously reinvented itself -- resulting in a thriving, diverse economy that leverages the throngs of young professionals continually attracted to the city.</p>
Voters Clamp Down On Eminent Domain
<p>Eight states approved new measures to restrict the use of eminent domain on November 7th -- widely seen as a reaction to the U.S. Supreme Court decision in the case of Kelo vs. New London.</p>
Matching Affordable Housing Availability To Need
<p>In Baltimore, a recent report has called for increasing housing density and decreasing building restrictions to reduce the gap between the need for and the availability of affordable housing.</p>
Kansas City Approves One Man's Light Rail Plan
<p>Kansas City voters approved a light rail plan that was opposed by the regional transit agency -- who called it a fantasy and ungrounded in reality.</p>
Book Review: A Painstakingly Detailed History Of NYC
<p>In the latest volume of his encyclopedic history of the development, architecture and planning of New York City, author Robert A. M. Stern has written the most complete history of any city.</p>
Phoenix's Housing Glut
<p>The housing market decline has left many new suburban tract homes in the Phoenix metro area without buyers.</p>
Downtown Calgary's Mean Streets
<p>Despite its booming growth and the recent announcement of a world-class office tower, downtown Calgary is suffering from a lack of human-scale planning, writes Lisa Rochon.</p>
Creating A New National Park From Private Land
<p>The founder of Burt's Bees is buying land in hopes of creating a new national park in Maine, but locals disagree with the plan to ban snowmobiling, hunting and all-terrain vehicles on 50,000 of her acres.</p>
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