The Daily Source of Urban Planning News

LEED for Healthcare Debuts

U.S. Green Building Council has launched another refinement of its certification system aimed specifically at green building for healthcare.

April 18 - Earth Techling

What is New Urbanism Anyway?

Andres Duany, the most vocal of New Urbanist, says that the critiques of the "ism" he helped create brand it as a "rustic version of starchitect culture" when it is in actuality an "expanding web of ideas, techniques, projects, and people."

April 18 - Metropolis Magazine

Saving Detroit One Playground at a Time

A group calling itself the "Detroit Mower Gang" has gone rogue on the city's poorly maintained playgrounds, attacking them with weed wackers and riding mowers to get them back into shape for the city's kids.

April 18 - The Hub (Detroit Regional News)

More Transit, Please

The Atlanta Regional Commission has delivered a massive wish list of 436 transit and transportation projects to be funded by a new sales tax increase. Ariel Hart reports that the proposal indicates that the region is clamoring for mass transit.

April 17 - The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The Transcendent Urbanism of Japan

Architect Vishaan Chakrabarti writes that Japan's urbanism should serve as a model to the rest of the world for its density and the "urbane society" it creates.

April 17 - Urban Omnibus


The Smart-Growth Governor

Former Maryland Governor Parris Glendening says that in some ways the economic downturn in the U.S. has been a good thing because it gave the state a chance to reevaluate development patterns.

April 17 - South Maryland Newspapers Online

The Federal Role in Supporting Urban Manufacturing

Revitalizing American manufacturing is widely-acknowledged as vital to our country’s economic recovery and long-term prosperity, but it is equally essential to understand the changing of this sector in order to make smart policy decisions.

April 17 - Brookings Institution/Pratt Center for Community Development


Green Doesn't Mean Bird-Friendly

The FBI's Chicago offices are LEED certified, but the 10-story building is also a killer: at least 10 birds a day careen into its windows. A conservation group helped the Feds get bird-friendly.

April 17 - The Chicago Tribune

Breathing Better In NY's Pedestrian Plazas

Manhattan's pedestrian plaza's are associated with increasing vitality, reducing congestion, and now this new study shows, improving air quality be reducing concentrations of nitrogen oxide (NO) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2)

April 16 - Gothamist

D.C. Tops in Green Building

Washington D.C. has built the most "green" buildings within its greater region, according to a new survey.

April 16 - The Washington Post

Pursuing New Development Ideas

As funding falters in the private sector, some privately- or university-driven design centers are still pursuing new ideas is urban design and development. <em>Places</em> profiles one at the University of Arkansas.

April 16 - Places

A Little-Known Benchmark of Planning Law

The case of Buchanan v. Warley, decided in 1916, set an important precedent: it forbade zoning restrictions based on race.

April 16 - PDI Advisor

BLOG POST

The Trouble With Monuments to the Living

Living public figures, whether they be Lockyer, Haggarty, Sarah Palin, or Mummar Gaddafi generate their own fanfare. They do not need a building, an airport, or a trail to speak for them.

April 15 - Josh Stephens

Parks Vs. Density

In Toronto, a developer is balking at the zoning that would force him to build a podium-style building out to the sidewalk, and wants to build a park with a tower instead. Can open space and density coexist?

April 15 - The Trust for Public Land

China Imports Bad American Planning

Urbanist Aurash Khawarzad writes that Chinese cities are unfortunately making America's mistake of bringing their freeways directly into and through their urban centers.

April 15 - Patter Cities

The Potential for Rail Station Overlay Districts

A House bill in Maryland that would have created overlay districts around train stations failed to pass, but N.J. Slabbert writes that the ideas were solid and should find new life in a different form.

April 15 - The Baltimore Sun

It's Spring, and the People Are in Bloom

Kaid Benfield gets philosophical about the turn of the seasons, writing that it's "not just nature that renews itself", but the city floods with people that had been hiding inside through the inclement weather.

April 15 - SustainableCitiesCollective

Soviet Monorail to the Future

The blog of Pavel Popelskii highlights illustrations from a time when Russia was looking towards a bright, space-age future, with nuclear-powered dirigibles and "super mega jet air cushion trains".

April 15 - scienceillustration.mypage.ru

The Pursuit of Form

Jan Gehl talks about the problematic history of architecture, landscape architecture and yes, planning, when it comes to building cities for people rather than celebrating form for its own sake.

April 15 - ASLA's The Dirt blog

A New Downtown for Tuscaloosa

Well-designed cities share a common characteristic: they each have a center. Tuscaloosa, Oklahoma’s center is being reformed after falling victim to the shopping mall like many other cities over the past decades.

April 15 - The Crimson White

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