Category: Planning and Design

Gathering Places: Providers of comfort and joy

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
To wish you the happiest of holidays, I'd like to share some recent thoughts about the importance of gathering places both in the public and private realm, particularly as it relates to children, solace, and song. In celebration of the season, those places -- when well planned and cultivated -- become particularly poignant. Take... Continue Reading
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Homelessness: Testing the boundaries of “health, safety and welfare”

Howard Blackson
Howard Blackson Twitter Instagram
Homelessness is an everyday issue that gets a little additional attention during the holidays. A recent HUD report estimated that, on a single night, 633,782 people are homeless across the United States. What surprised me and others, however, was the fact that, after New York and Los Angeles, it’s San Diego, our 8th... Continue Reading
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Wilmington, NC: Active living and running buddies

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Ever have trouble going out for a run? Know how much easier that gets when your good friend hits the road with you? Partly because you’re talking, partly because you’re just happy to see each other. This week in downtown Wilmington, North Carolina, doing some rezoning work for a community just across the river,... Continue Reading
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Next Urbanism Lab 03: Redevelopment as a tool for urban (re)investment

Howard Blackson
Howard Blackson Twitter Instagram
Yesterday, I had the great fortune of sitting on a panel to discuss the possibilities of Redevelopment 2.0 in California. The other panelists included CNU Board member Scott Polikov, APA President-elect Bill Anderson, affordable housing advocates, planning professionals and professors, as well as my lovely wife (discussing... Continue Reading
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Traditional Cities and Towns: Incubators of incompetent children

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
First off, before I’m assaulted by urban defenders in an all-out flame war, let me clarify that my tongue is planted firmly in cheek here. A little background: I’ve written before on the intersection between traditional / smart growth environments and child-rearing, first at the level of the neighborhood and... Continue Reading
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Next Urbanism Lab 02: Planning trends captivate, but…

Howard Blackson
Howard Blackson Twitter Instagram
In not learning from the past we are destined to repeat it. So, in this lab, I’ll examine some of the trends currently dominating planning and begin examining the quirks and pitfalls that can occur when a solution for one city is transplanted somewhere else. In my last Next Urbanism Lab post, I detailed how my... Continue Reading
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Municipal Placemaking Mistakes 04: No models for emulation

Nathan Norris
Nathan Norris
Emulation is more than just the highest form of flattery. It's also a key factor in effective placemaking. Yes, in the course of a meaningful visioning process, the naming of a specific place as a model for emulation is not absolutely necessary, but its benefits are so great that failing to do so constitutes one of... Continue Reading
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Municipal Placemaking Mistakes 03: The importance of a meaningful vision

Nathan Norris
Nathan Norris
In our last post in this series, we covered the three steps of placemaking. The first of these steps, crafting a meaningful vision, is the most straightforward, yet it is also the most underleveraged. It is underleveraged because communities do not understand its political implications. As a result they do not adequately... Continue Reading
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Urban Happiness Index, Expanded

Scott Bernstein
Scott Bernstein
Hazel Borys’ ideas on the Healthy Places Index yesterday brought to mind some of my own thoughts on the matter -- thoughts in excess of what might reasonably be tolerated in the comments section. Thanks to PlaceMakers for providing me the opportunity to share them here. On Saturday at a used bookstore, I picked up... Continue Reading
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Urban Happiness Index Revisited

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
A couple of weeks ago I floated some ideas on a national Urban Happiness Index. Similar to Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index and Bhutan’s Gross National Happiness index, which is being contemplated by China, an Urban Happiness Index would tie satisfaction and wellbeing to the form of the built environment. Perhaps an... Continue Reading
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