Category: Planning and Design

Crowdsourcing = Data = Better Places

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
You know what the payment is for crowdsourcing? By asking other people to step up and think through solutions to some collective problem, I must commit to making a difference myself. Every time I’ve asked you to share information with me, you have. Then I feel the need to compile it, analyze it, and organize it... Continue Reading
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Healthy, or Unhealthy, by Design

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
A few months ago, we talked about how a great city can be like a great running buddy, calling us to venture outdoors into more active, satisfying lifestyles. The photo-essay accompanying that conversation was on the urbanity of Wilmington, North Carolina. Last week, we were in another North Carolina town, Fuquay-Varina,... Continue Reading
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Choosing to Overlook the Obvious

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
I live in an old house that overlooks a single-track CSX rail line. Between my front gate and the train is a two-lane, neighborhood-edge thoroughfare with a speed limit of 35 mph and an average speed closer to 40. Though it functions as an in-town, city street, it’s classified as a state highway by the Georgia DOT,... Continue Reading
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Walkable Streets II: The Documenting

Geoff Dyer
Geoff Dyer
This time last week, I was considering common issues associated with walkable streets and mentioned that 35-40kph (25mph) moves the most traffic. I didn't even think about it as I wrote it. As something long-embedded in my brain, I just said it. Matter-of-factly. Readers took me to task, wanting to know the source. ... Continue Reading
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Serving the Needs of Seniors: Solutions in practice

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Last month we talked about Connections, Community, and the Science of Loneliness, in which I lamented my parents’ generation lack of active communities geared toward people of all ages. Since then, I’ve looked a little more deeply into some of the newer neighborhoods designed around livability, to see which of them... Continue Reading
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Walkable Streets: Considering common issues

Geoff Dyer
Geoff Dyer
As municipalities throughout North America seek to reform their development patterns (or at least expand their options) from the single-use zoning and automobile oriented regulations of the past century to those that allow for walkable, compact, mixed use places, there is a long list of standards and regulations... Continue Reading
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New Game, New Rules? Guessing at the future of American housing

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
If it did nothing else, the last decade should have disciplined some of our enthusiasm for betting the house, literally, on long-term trends deduced from short-term experiences. Remember that little hiccup in the world economy when pretty much everybody bought into assumptions about ever-rising home values? So where... Continue Reading
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Next Urbanism Lab 05: The Value of Visuals

Howard Blackson
Howard Blackson Twitter Instagram
In simple terms, a plan is an adopted statement of policy, in the form of text, maps, and/or graphics, used to guide public and private actions that affect our future built environment. A plan provides decision makers with the information they need to make informed decisions affecting the long-range social, economic,... Continue Reading
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Ways to Fail at Form-Based Codes 01: Don’t Articulate a Vision

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Last week, we were talking about how the form of a neighborhood either provides gathering places that build social capital and local resilience, or else makes for a lonely, disconnected, nowhere. Some towns and cities are using form-based codes to help reconnect people with each other and the places they call home. At... Continue Reading
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By-Passing Tomorrow for Easy Implementation Today

Howard Blackson
Howard Blackson Twitter Instagram
Chuck Marohn, and his Strong Towns message, is revolutionary in that he is a credible transportation professional who is single-handedly taking on the transportation profession. And winning. Last year, Walt Chambers of Great Streets San Diego, and I brought Chuck to San Diego for one of his now ubiquitous... Continue Reading
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