A Placemaking Journal
People Get Ready: Here come the Millennials
Cue up Curtis Mayfield and the Impressions. Last week’s release by the Pew Research Center of its “Millennials in Adulthood” analysis suggests there’s a train a-coming. And its steady progress is likely to force changes in community development over the next couple decades.
Here’s what the Pew report suggests... Continue Reading
Category Demographics
Let Love Rule: Resilience in Mesquite
Crossing Campo Street from downtown Las Cruces into the Mesquite Historic District is like crossing between two urban worlds that are often misunderstood.
To the west is one of the country’s textbook examples of everything that could go wrong with federally subsidized Urban Renewal, including the obligatory seas of... Continue Reading
Tags Las Cruces, New Mexico
Gentrification: We’re both the problem and the solution
Almost twenty years ago, just married, my wife and I bought an old house in a friendly but economically depressed old neighborhood. It was, at the time, a predominantly black neighborhood though, like many historic neighborhoods in and around Atlanta that predate our tumultuous, race-driven urban disinvestment of the 60s... Continue Reading
Tags gentrification, Scott Doyon
Getting Stuff Done: The whole point of planning, no?
High on my list of must-read columnists is James Surowiecki of The New Yorker. His “Twilight of the Brands” piece in the February 17-24 edition provides a good example of how he takes apart outworn axioms of business success, then, from the wreckage, assembles a model better suited for the here and now.
(more…) Continue Reading
Tags Ben Brown, city branding
Connected? Walkable urbanism, active kids, and Olympic gold
Last Friday, our nine-year-old came home from school talking nonstop Olympics. He went on for awhile about 2010 medal counts, with Canada taking home 14 golds in Vancouver, the record for any country at Winter Olympics. The deep polar vortex we’ve been trudging through this winter has to have some silver lining, so perhaps... Continue Reading
Category Planning and Design
Zen & The Art of Traffic Calming
In the view of most urbanists, walkability is a measure of how healthy a city is. It essentially describes how safe and how well-planned a city is for pedestrians, which will in turn determine how often citizens interact with their city.
There are so many factors that go in to making a city walkable. The factor... Continue Reading
Category Transportation
Tags traffic calming
Stayin’ Alive: The life and death prospects of community ties
“We had better get together on this or we’re going to die.”
People talk a lot about community these days. How we’ve lost whatever sense of it we might have once had. How we don’t really know each other much anymore. How we yearn for more intimacy, with connection that transcends the typically weak ties of... Continue Reading
The Road to Prosperity: Real-Time Approaches to Economic Improvement
Across America, too many people believe that “no one will get out of their cars.” The newest data based on the 2012 American Community Survey, shows “it ain’t so,” even for small cities and their surrounding areas. The national trend in the US is a drop of almost 1 percent per year in passenger vehicle-miles-traveled... Continue Reading
Category Economic Development, Transportation
Tags New Mexico, Scott Bernstein
Q&A: Eric Brooks provides the New Urban lowdown on boutique hotels
Today, we borrow a time-tested technique to add another dimension to our community development explorations: the Q&A. Moving forward, we’ll periodically bug an expert we know to shed some light on topics our clients and colleagues care about.
As David Brooks suggested in a recent snarky opinion piece, boutique... Continue Reading
Category Q&A
Tags Ben Brown
Resolved for 2014: Obstacle reduction
New year’s resolutions? Bah. Do what you love. With clarity. Only about 8% of people keep their resolutions for 365 days anyway. So what about if instead, we set out to remove the obstacles to doing the really healthy things we love? Both as individuals and as communities.
This line of thinking started the other morning... Continue Reading
Category Planning and Design