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Great street design, and coming full-circle with our design heroes

<span style="font-size: x-small">&quot;If we can develop and design streets so that they are wonderful, fulfilling places to be </span><span style="font-size: x-small; font-family: Tahoma"><span style="font-size: x-small; font-family: Tahoma">—</span></span><span style="font-size: x-small"> community-building places, attractive for all people </span><span style="font-size: x-small; font-family: Tahoma"><span style="font-size: x-small; font-family: Tahoma">—</span></span><span style="font-size: x-small"> then we will have successfully designed about one-third of the city.&quot;         A</span><span style="font-size: x-small">llan Jacobs </span><span style="font-size: x-small"> <p> A few weeks ago, I was asked to speak at an event celebrating what might possibly come to be recognized as one of Vancouver&#39;s important civic feats - the redesign and reconstruction of downtown Vancouver&#39;s Granville Street. </p>

April 21 - Brent Toderian

Aging Water Pipes In Need Of Repair And Renewal

Old wooden pipes and failing water mains highlight the infrastructural water challenges facing many communities.

April 21 - The New York Times

A "No Exceptions" Approach to Banning Billboards

An outright, carefully worded ban on new signage is the key to ending Los Angeles' billboard drama, according to this op-ed.

April 21 - Los Angeles Times

Zoning Keeping WalMart From Eager Community

Residents of Charlotte, NC are pushing the State to change a zoning rule to allow a WalMart to go in on Independence Blvd. Land around the boulevard is being held for a possible freeway, but residents claim the area is stagnating from the strictures.

April 21 - The Charlotte Observer

British Columbia a Model for Public-Private Partnerships

U.S. states and officials are looking North to Canada where public-private partnerships have successfully funded infrastructure projects for years in British Columbia.

April 21 - The Christian Science Monitor


The Train in Spain

By the end of the year, Spain is on course to have a more extensive high-speed rail system than both Japan and France. The system is changing hearts and minds across this usually home-bound nation.

April 21 - The Wall St. Journal

Vatican Embraces the Power of the Sun

The Vatican has announced plans to build Europe's largest solar plant to power the state.

April 21 - Bloomberg


Inside L.A.'s High-Tech Traffic Control System

<em>Streetfilms</em> goes behind the scenes at Los Angeles' Automated Traffic Surveillance and Control office, which monitors and actively controls L.A.'s signalized intersections.

April 21 - Streetsblog

The Urban Impact of Bicyclists

As urban cycling increases, cities like Seattle are finding that they need to change the way they think about users of the road.

April 21 - The Seattle Post-Intelligencer

Buildings Going Green, On Top At Least

This piece from <em>National Geographic</em> looks at how green roofs are sweeping across the tops of buildings all over the world.

April 21 - National Geographic

Transportation and Housing Linking Up at Federal Level

The silos are breaking down in the federal government as the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Department of Transportation are embarking on a shared plan to increase interdepartmental collaboration.

April 21 - Citiwire

Nude Dude Ranch Forgets to Get Permits

Lotto winner Tim Clements followed his dream of opening a clothing-optional dude ranch in Brookings, Florida. One problem: he forgot to get any permits.

April 20 - St. Petersburg Times

The New Survivalist Utopians

Locals in Sandpoint, Idaho are banding together to join the Transition movement, which started in the U.K. and is geared towards creating new, ecologically-planned communities to survive peak oil and climate change.

April 20 - The New York Times

Small Airports Becoming No-Fly Zones

Until recently, small regional airports were seen as the wave of the future. But the ailing economy and a variety of other factors are hitting the industry hard, causing closures across the country.

April 20 - Governing Magazine

Amenities Key to Walking, Fitness

People who live within walking distance of amenities like stores, transit stops, and parks are twice as likely to be fit as those who don't, according to a new study conducted by researchers at San Diego State University.

April 20 - Gant Daily

Peak Oil Supply Or Peak Oil Consumption?

'Peak oil' refers to a belief that growing oil demand will outstrip finite oil supplies. Peak U.S. oil consumption is premised on the belief that 2007 marked the peak, population increase notwithstanding, due to efficiency, biofuels and batteries.

April 20 - The Wall Street Journal

Small Casino Town Preparing For Big Leagues

With new rules that are going to push it closer to Las Vegas-style gambling, the small Colorado casino town of Blackhawk is getting ready to handle the new crowds as it becomes more of a draw.

April 20 - The New York Times

New York's Unprecedented Park

Preconceptions and lofty goals surround New York's soon-to-open High Line park. But the unprecedented inner city rail line conversion leaves much up in the air, according to this piece from <em>The Architect's Newspaper</em>.

April 20 - The Architect's Newspaper

A Monorail for the Senate?

No, it's not some stimulus package boondoggle- it turns out there truly was an underground monorail carrying public servants from the Senate Office Building to the Capitol Building. It opened in 1912 and lasted until 1961.

April 20 - Paleo-Future

From Condo to Affordable Housing

Officials in New York are pushing a plan to reuse foreclosed or abandoned condo projects as affordable housing.

April 20 - City Hall News

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