Category: Architecture

Finally Thinkin’ Small: But can we build on what we’ve learned?

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
As soon as the destructive path of Hurricane Sandy became evident, I got emails and calls from colleagues who, like me, worked in disaster recovery situations on the Gulf Coast. When the clean-up gets underway, could this be an opportunity for the Eastern Seaboard states to apply some of the rebuilding lessons of the Gulf... Continue Reading
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Municipal Placemaking Mistakes 01: Quantity over quality

Nathan Norris
Nathan Norris
Today we begin a PlaceShakers experiment. Through a series of periodic posts, Nathan Norris will explore how cities hinder their own placemaking efforts, wasting time and money by investing in tools, policies and programs that deliver lousy results. In the process, we’ll be looking to you to help flesh out the content... Continue Reading
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The New Incrementalism

Howard Blackson
Howard Blackson Twitter Instagram
The latest design trend appears to be designing a place to be realized in very gradual stages. Not in terms of planning for phases of development pods, built-out in a predetermined sequence, but about individual lots changing -- evolving -- over time. Very rarely now are we designing to build immediately for a project’s... Continue Reading
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“The Joel Salatin of Homebuilding”: Revisiting Clay Chapman’s multi-century, $80/sq. ft. house

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
“You [..] have the distinct privilege of proactively participating in shaping the world your children will inherit.”  -- Joel Salatin, author and renegade farmer Anyone who’s paid even modest attention to what’s been happening on the food scene over the past five or six years has surely heard of Joel Salatin. Continue Reading
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Elevate Your Thinking: Light, air and connectivity beyond the street

Howard Blackson
Howard Blackson Twitter Instagram
As we increasingly urbanize, relearning the craft of creating human-scaled places, I often -- too often -- hear that “if we just get the ground floor right” then all will be fine. While obviously a good start, and one that addresses the most immediate of pedestrian interests, I find that this line of thinking ultimately... Continue Reading
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Fake, or So Real it’s Blowing Your Mind?

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
Okay, so the headline here is a semi-inside joke. Last week, on vacation in Rosemary Beach on the Florida panhandle, I Facebooked a photo of the town’s Main Street, together with this comment: The idea that a traditionally-planned community is somehow "fake" reflects a particular American pathology: the belief that... Continue Reading
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Ottawa: Lessons from great Canadian urbanism

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Ottawa celebrates Canada's cultural mosaic, its urbanism full of delight and engagement. As with most North American cities, its oldest neighbourhoods have positive lessons for urban design today. This is because much of what makes Ottawa character delightful is illegal in the development bylaws that govern its more auto-centric... Continue Reading
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Mont-Tremblant: Cottage living in the Canadian Shield

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
As the second in a three part pictorial series finding inspiration in Canadian urbanism, I’ve been invigorated again by a short stint of cottage living. Which of us hasn’t felt the delightful lightness that comes with downsizing our primary residence? Some of my most carefree years were spent living in an 800 SF cottage... Continue Reading
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Hardiplank: Get into the groove?

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
In 2006 I was in Ocean Springs, Mississippi, for a planning event. On display downtown at the time was the prototype Katrina Cottage and a number of us spent one evening there conducting a spontaneous test of its ability to host a party. At some point, I ended up on the porch with a prominent new urban architect and,... Continue Reading
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Collaborative Placemaking Maps

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
The other day on an urbanism listserv, someone asked for parameters to qualify a new development as a walkable, mixed-used, livable place. While measures like CNT’s H+T Index, Walkscore, and IMI's Walkability Index go a long way toward measuring, there isn’t a single source that awards the title of Livable New... Continue Reading
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