The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

The Internet Is No Cure For Suburban Lonliness

Mourning the true camaraderie of neighborhood as a blog echoes into the silence.

February 18 - The Christian Science Monitor

Global Warming's Impact On World's Water

U.S. scientists at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography present "compelling evidence" of global warming.

February 18 - BBC News

Can We Take The Pulse Of The Ecosystem?

A national-level indicator of ecosystem services would allowpolicy makers, scientists, and the public to understand whetherthe US is gaining or losing critical services.

February 18 - Frontiers In Ecology And The Environment

'Vulture Investors' Peck Away At California Condor Habitat

Development of the steep hillsides and valleys of 277,000-acre Tejon Ranch may displace and disrupt the recently reintroduced California condors.

February 18 - LA Weekly

Most Expensive Transit Fare

The Toronto Transit Commission's planned fare increase makes it the most expensive fare in Canada, and more than fares charged in New York, Chicago and Paris.

February 18 - The Globe and Mail


Mapping The City In Three Dimensions

An Israeli-based company offers software that creates 3-D models of cities - down to the last detail.

February 18 - The New York Times

The Largest Revitalization Project In The US?

Paul Allen invests $2 billion to transform Seattle's South Lake Union neighborhood in what may be the largest revitalization project ever in the US.

February 18 - Wall St. Journal


After Kyoto

Proponents of the Kyoto Protocol discussed how to get the U.S. involved.

February 18 - The New York Times

University Planning New Urban College Town

The University of Miami plans include walkable design, 1,200 small homes and a K-12 school.

February 18 - The Miami Herald

BLOG POST

Not all service is created equal

I appreciate Charlie's post on Wifi. Can't we believe that cities are still capable of providing public services? There are a number of problematic examples of private companies taking over public utilities such as water and electricity. The experience from these experiments illustrates a number of useful lessons in who gets left out and how and where the money is spent. <br /> <br /> That said, I also believe that broadband is a fundamentally different kind of service than water and sewer. We no longer live in an age when cities provided all services as well as funding for revitalization activities.

February 17 - Scott Page

Job Sprawl's Spatial Mismatch

A study finds that 'job sprawl' exacerbates certain dimensions of racial inequality in America.

February 17 - The Brookings Institution

The Brownfield Solution: Metal-Eating Plants

Genetic engineering can increase a plant's ability to absorb toxic metals by over 400%.

February 17 - Wired

Montana Mulls Wal-Mart Tax

Montana, which has no sales tax, wants Wal-Mart, Target, and Costco to pay a tax to offset the state's welfare costs related to the big-boxes' poor labor practices.

February 17 - CNN

Developer Wins El Toro Auction

Miami-based Lennar Corp. surpises observers and wins the auction to buy the former El Toro marine base in Irvine, CA.

February 17 - The Los Angeles Times

What To Expect From The Kyoto Protocol

Is the Kyoto Protocol an ineffectual treaty or an international environmental triumph?

February 17 - The Washington Post

Should Cities Convert One-Way Streets To Two Way?

A recent trend in planning is to convert one-way streets to two way to slow traffic and make streets more pedestrian friendly.

February 17 - The Thoreau Institute

London-style Congestion Pricing For San Francisco?

San Francisco Transportation Authority is asked to study implementing congestion charging for downtown San Francisco.

February 17 - San Francisco Examiner

Latino New Urbanism Takes Off

Communities find cultural preferences can aid efforts to limit sprawl.

February 17 - USA Today

Tolls Over Taxes for Transportation Funding

Residents in the D.C. area overwhelmingly favor tolls to fund highway construction and ease congestion.

February 17 - The Washington Post

A Better Way To Build Homes

Tim Peppin's experience as a carpenter on a large housing project convinces him that there is a better way to build homes.

February 17 - The Gateway, University Of Alberta

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.