Category: Public Policy

Sustainability: What’s in a word?

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
The places we inhabit are rarely if ever arbitrary. They’re the products of intention. Personal. Economic. Environmental. Religious. We choose for ourselves, individually and collectively, the kind of places we want and -- through leadership, policy, investment, advocacy, action and, at times, inaction -- those places... Continue Reading
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Industry, Infrastructure and Intermodalism—Still Mixed Up on Special Districts?

Scott Bernstein
Scott Bernstein
In her September 2011 blog, Special Districts Getting All Mixed Up, Hazel Borys questioned why we treat large format areas with distinctive uses, such as manufacturing or aviation, as “special” to the point of exclusion from our efforts to integrate all urban land uses and activities into a spatially coherent whole,... Continue Reading
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Neighborhood Units Matter

Howard Blackson
Howard Blackson Twitter Instagram
Urban Design is concerned with the practice of designing, repurposing and revitalizing 3-dimensional places. These place types are described in Charter of the New Urbanism principles, as, “The neighborhood, the district, and the corridor are the essential elements of development and redevelopment in the metropolis. They... Continue Reading
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Paris: What People Want

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
As an urbanist, writing about Paris is both delectable and daunting. Tempering that is the fact that we visited in June, when the strain to both infrastructure and pricing makes my memories of past trips look more lovable. Still, the timelessness of the City, as shown so compellingly in this 1914 to 2013 series of comparisons,... Continue Reading
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Here Comes Chaos: David Lynch sketches the landscape

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
If I’d been paying better attention (which is how I start a lot of sentences these days), I could have begun my reeducation in the ways things work in 1986. That’s when film director David Lynch gave us Blue Velvet. Back then, the way Dennis Hopper and Isabella Rossellini embraced Lynch’s sex and violence mash-ups... Continue Reading
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CNU21: Insights and Highlights from Salt Lake City

PlaceMakers
PlaceMakers Twitter Instagram Facebook
Git ‘Er Done | Hazel BorysThis year's CNU was all about doing again, unlike the past few years where we've focused on stop-gap measures to redirect our investment choices to more resilient patterns. Looks like they might be starting to pay off. Still, we have plenty of hard work ahead to remove both legal... Continue Reading
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Identifying the “Sabermetrics” of Urbanism

Guest Contributor
Guest Contributor
"For forty-one million, you built a playoff team. You lost Damon, Giambi, Isringhausen, Peña and you won more games without them than you did with them. You won the exact same number of games that the Yankees won, but the Yankees spent one point four million per win and you paid two hundred and sixty thousand. I know... Continue Reading
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Bryan Jones: Portrait of a Municipal Official Takin’ It to the Street

Howard Blackson
Howard Blackson Twitter Instagram
Since meeting Chuck Marohn, I've advocated for his rational Strong Towns approach to reforming our inefficient auto-oriented infrastructure system. Chuck's message to focus infrastructure decisions on their long-term return on investment is radical because he is a Traffic Engineer. Honestly, the most frustrating and irrational... Continue Reading
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Ways to Fail at Form-Based Codes 02: Make it Mandatory Citywide

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
A while back, we talked about Connections, Community, and the Science of Loneliness, and how our laws have separated not just building uses -- residential, commercial, retail, civic -- but have also separated people. And that separation has led to a spate of ills -- ill health, ill economies, and ill environments. We looked... Continue Reading
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The Future of Municipal Planning: Is John Nolen rolling over in his grave?

Howard Blackson
Howard Blackson Twitter Instagram
This is not the planning profession John Nolen built. A century later, our great recession has sparked a full re-evaluation of what a city’s urban planning department should be ‘doing’ for its citizens. As witnessed in Los Angeles and San Diego, the planning profession is being measured by its eternal conundrum between... Continue Reading
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