Category: Planning and Design

Let’s Get Small: Placemaking as Antidote for Shrinking City Budgets

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
It’s that time of year, but it’s no holiday party in most city budget meetings. Cities across the continent are looking for ways to make ends meet. A quick survey turns up some sobering city deficits: New York $4.4 billion, Toronto $225 million, Washington DC $188 million, Houston $120 million, L.A. $87 million, San... Continue Reading
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Dhiru’s Encyclopedia of City-Shaping: Reassurance in Uncertain Times

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
Just about anybody remotely interested in how the world’s most admired places earned their adulation is going to love Dhiru Thadani’s new book: The Language of Towns and Cities. In it, Dhiru subtitles the book “A Visual Dictionary,” but as L.J. Aurbach points out in his blog review, it’s really an encyclopedia. Continue Reading
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Dancing with Urban Agriculture

Howard Blackson
Howard Blackson Twitter Instagram
My lovely wife of eight years enjoys really bad television. For better or worse, last night she tricked me into watching a segment of 'Dancing with the Stars.' Coyly, she asked me to name the movies in which the dancing ‘star’ had ‘starred’. Having no idea and starting my way back upstairs, I heard her mimicking... Continue Reading
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A Municipal Planner’s Call to Arms (and Legs, Hearts and Lungs)

Guest Contributor
Guest Contributor
The obesity epidemic isn’t really “news” anymore (thank you, Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution) yet when I question my friends who work outside the fields of design and planning on why Americans are so fat, they tie everything back to poor food choices. But what about exercise? They reply that if you want to exercise,... Continue Reading
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My Sleuthing Adventure: Where are Western Canada’s Form-Based Codes?

Geoff Dyer
Geoff Dyer
Western Canada’s form-based codes are missing. This is no small problem. Those of us working in the region are continuously grilled by municipalities with the same question, often delivered with a suspicious, cocked eyebrow: “Where are they? Where in Canada have they, or any other alternative zoning regulation,... Continue Reading
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Today’s “Eco-Warriors”: Giving Them Something Worth Fighting For

Howard Blackson
Howard Blackson Twitter Instagram
This week I’d like to share a few thoughts on infill and sustainability that coalesced while preparing this week for another Pecha Kucha presentation on Retrofitting Suburbia. I’ll begin with a little background. My daughter came home from her International Baccalaureate Elementary School with a new sticker in her... Continue Reading
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Retail Redemption: Skivvies Uncovered, then Promptly Covered

Howard Blackson
Howard Blackson Twitter Instagram
A couple months ago I rambled on here about my inability to purchase a particularly critical item of men’s apparel during an extended tour of new urban projects throughout the southeast. Modesty was not my problem. Rather, despite healthy commercial activity most everywhere I went, I could find no walkable stores catering... Continue Reading
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Zoning as Spiritual Practice: From me to we to Thee

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
Get right with God. Fix your zoning. That’s not something you hear regularly from the pulpit, maybe. But it’s gospel nonetheless. Here’s why: If there’s one common thread woven through the world’s most enduring religions, it’s the call to connectivity: Self to others to everything. Not everyone gives... Continue Reading
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Fat-tastic! Can Small Thinking Solve Our Super-Sized Problems?

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
According to a new report from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development -- more commonly known for crunching global budget and employment numbers  -- the United States is on track to be 75% obese by 2020. 3 out of every 4. And if you check with researchers at Johns Hopkins University, they’ll... Continue Reading
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Katrina’s Fifth Anniversary: Getting Real in Mississippi

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
Every year since Hurricane Katrina mauled the Louisiana and Mississippi Gulf coasts, I’ve returned to Mississippi around the storm’s August 29 anniversary to renew friendships and refine my capacity for humility. The friendships have turned out to be the most rewarding outcomes of the 2005 Mississippi Renewal Forum,... Continue Reading
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