The Daily Source of Urban Planning News
Honolulu Picks Light Rail
<p>The city's council chooses to proceed with plans for a new light rail system -- with a possible price tag of over $5 billion dollars.</p>
Florida May Replenish Groundwater With Treated Sewage To Allow Growth
<p>Broward County, Florida, is considering a plan to reduce a growing demand on Everglades water by replenishing groundwater with treated sewage. The plan is generating outcry from environmentalists who worry the sewage won't be treated enough.</p>
Novelist Shares His Thoughts On City Planning
<p>In this interview, Author Steven Johnson discusses his lates book about London's Cholera outbreak, urban planning, and his fascination with the popular computer game, SimCity.</p>
Bringing Major Grocers Downtown
<p>The recent opening of Whole Foods in downtown Seattle highlights the challenges of attracting major grocery stores to the urban core.</p>
Renewing The Great Lakes Region
<p>A new report from the Brookings Institution looks at policy innovations that can help revive the fortunes of the nation's former industrial powerhouse.</p>
Critiquing Philadelphia's Parcel By Parcel Approach To City Planning
<p>Inga Saffron, the Philadelphia Inquirer's architecture critic, loathes the city's 'let's make a deal' approach to urban planning.</p>
Toronto Moving In The Wrong Direction
<p>This opinion piece from the <em>Toronto Star</em> looks at how the organizational operation of Toronto is preventing it from becoming a more urban city.</p>
Oregonians Believe Measure 37 Was A Mistake
<p>In 2004, Oregonians passed Measure 37, which gave zoning waivers to longtime property owners. With voters in several other states facing similar measures, a recently released poll shows that most Oregon voters now oppose Measure 37.</p>
It's Time To Celebrate World Town Planning Day
<p>Ontario, Canada's Region of Peel has announced plans to celebrate World Town Planning Day on November 8.</p>
Homes Rarely Acquired For Redevelopment In SF Bay Area
<p>According to a survey by the <em>San Francisco Chronicle</em>, redevelopment agencies in the Bay Area and throughout the state very rarely use their powers of eminent domain to take private residences for redevelopment purposes.</p>
New Atlanta Regional Transit Board Misfiring On All Cylinders
<p>Created nine months ago as the latest -- and perhaps last -- tool to develop regional transit in Metro Atlanta, the Transit Planning Board now struggles to even make a quorum.</p>
Urban Marathons Adding To Economic Growth
<p>Across the country, an increasing number of marathon runners are adding to the economic growth of small, mid-size, and large cities.</p>
Environmental Groups Sue To Block Highway Construction
<p>Environmental Defense and the Maryland chapter of the Sierra Club say they plan to file a lawsuit to prevent the construction of an 18-mile segment of highway which they claim will violate clean-air standards.</p>
A Call For Child-Friendly Cities
<p>An urban planning professor in Australia has joined a push to make the country's major cities more child-friendly.</p>
Hollywood May Place Green Cap On Freeway
<p>A plan is being pushed to create a 24-acre park in Hollywood by enclosing a half-mile stretch of freeway that runs below the street level.</p>
Is Suburbia Just A Scapegoat For Obesity?
<p>A new study challenges the growing body of research linking suburban living to obesity -- citing that people's eating and exercise habits more likely dictate where they live, not vice versa.</p>
Through The FEMA Looking Glass
<p>Doug Giuliano recounts his adventures in the FEMA wonderland after heading to the Gulf Coast to help with hurricane recovery. What started as noble intentions ended mired in the muck of bureaucracy.</p>
Another Plan For Combating Climate Change
<p>Responding to a report by British economist Nicholas Stern, a recent article in the Guardian outlines a 10 point plan for taking action on climate change without "bringing civilization crashing down."</p>
The Man Who Found Jamestown
<p>Archaeologist Bill Kelso has given America new insight into 17th century Jamestown, Virginia, the first permanent English settlement in the United States, which for many decades had been thought to be washed away by the James River.</p>
Ireland Looks To Recruit American Workers
<p>Faced with low unemployment rates and worker shortages in certain high-skill sectors, Irish companies are increasingly looking to other countries - especially the U.S. - for employees.</p>
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