The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

The Need for 'Blue Urbanism'

In a world heavily composed of and reliant on water, how we treat our oceans should be a major aspect of the way we think about planning and living on this planet, according to Timothy Beatley.

April 22 - Places

The False Debate Between Cities and Suburbs

The debate over urbanism often pits suburbs against urban areas. But the real debate is about walkable areas versus car-dependent ones, according to Christopher Leinberger.

April 21 - The New Republic

London's Skyscraper Boom Trickles Off

A number of large skyscrapers in London, approved and financed before the recession, are being completed. But with no new ones planned, these skyscrapers are looked at as the end of an age of large-scale building.

April 21 - Bloomberg

City Attempts to Find "The Right Price for Parking"

This week the city of San Francisco will launch its SFpark Program in an attempt to appropriately price street parking and reduce traffic due to people cruising for available parking spaces.

April 21 - StreetFilms.org

High-Speed BUS Travels at 150 MPH

Wubbo Ockels, a Dutch physicist and astronaut, has designed and built a prototype high-speed bus as an alternative to high-speed rail. (VIDEO)

April 21 - The Antiplanner


Urban Farming on Brownfield Sites

At a national conference on brownfields, representatives from the EPA outlined how to safely farm an urban garden on top of a contaminated site.

April 21 - Sustainable Cities Collective

The Chinese Alternative to Home Ownership

In this article the author describes the Chinese practice of assigning individuals apartments which are little more than shells. He claims that the act of customizing the shell creates a sense of ownership similar to that of homeowners in the U.S.

April 21 - Metropolis Magazine


International Resolution on the Need For Quality Public Spaces

UN-HABITAT (United Nations Human Settlement Programme) recently adopted its first ever resolution on public space, encouraging equity and the development of quality public spaces.

April 21 - Project for Public Spaces blog

Tel Aviv's Controversial Skyline Plans

Once low-slung, Tel Aviv has seen a number of towers shooting up randomly around the city. A new master plan gives the green light to more towers, but tries to pull them into a more coherent urban form.

April 21 - Sustainable City

Return to Treasure Island

This Thursday, San Francisco's Planning Commission is expected to approve one of the most anticipated developments in the city's history: the reconstruction of the former naval base on Treasure Island into living space for 19,000 residents.

April 21 - The San Francisco Chronicle

Solar Power Mandate Could Endanger Cultural/Ecological Sites

With a major push by the federal government to achieve 80% clean energy by 2035, the California Energy Commission is moving quickly to approve permits. Sensitive Native cultural sites are threatened by the speedy process, say many involved.

April 21 - Mother Jones

Why Public Art?

Does public art make a difference, and how? ASLA's The Dirt blog looks at all the ways public art is effective, from job creation and real estate value to cultural cache and tourism.

April 20 - ASLA's The Dirt blog

Urban Grocery Stores a Hot Market

Grocery stores are having a renaissance, with new, smaller stores being built in urban areas and new ideas in store layout and design to attract pedestrians, not just drivers.

April 20 - Urban Land

Floating Solar Panels Open Up New Potential

In Napa Valley, California, land is at a premium. Startup solar companies saw potential in underused bodies of water and developed floating solar panel arrays to meet the need.

April 20 - The New York Times

Mississauga's "Priority Neighbourhoods" Targets Suburban Poverty

With poverty indicators rising in suburban areas, Mississauga is looking to emulate Toronto's controversial "priority neighbourhoods" strategy to improve access to services.

April 20 - Globe and Mail

Volkswagen Concept E-Scooter Could be Future Bike Share Vehicle

At the Shanghai Motor Show, Volkswagen debuted its concept E-Scooter, which has a range of 25 miles per charge. Of more interest to urbanists is their intention to use the vehicle in a "bike-sharing" system.

April 20 - Autocar

The LEED Silver, Prefab, Quick-to-Build Apartment Building

When one thinks of prefab, its usually a lowslung modernist building sitting by itself on a lot. A group of designers and engineers are debuting a plan for multi-story prefabricated buildings.

April 20 - Fast Company

Rejected Developer Keeps Fighting County to Build

Developer Gerald Friedman is incredulous that county commissioners won't let him rezone his property in the Outer Banks of North Carolina.

April 20 - The Virginian-Pilot

China's Ghost Cities

The Australian documentary series Dateline examines the enormous and unprecedented property bubble building in China [video].

April 20 - Boing Boing

The Complex Game of Public-Private Partnerships

John Calimente reviews a new book that aims to explain the complicated back-and-forth that happens when government teams up with private interests on development projects.

April 20 - re:place Magazine

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.