Tag: zoning
Zoning as Spiritual Practice: From me to we to Thee
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
Brave New Codes Reach Tipping Point: When, Where, Why?
A year ago, Apple's sales of its iPhone and iPod Touch eclipsed 40 million units, confirming their potential to fundamentally retool our future opportunities and patterns of daily life.
Today, a year later, form-based codes hit a similar milestone, with similar implications, as over 330 cities and towns around the world... Continue Reading
Planning & Zoning: The Musical
When was the last time you heard someone make the case for the “soulfulness” of zoning? Or capture the essence of “third place” theory in a song?
Unless you’ve been listening to singer/songwriter Melanie Hammet, you probably haven’t experienced the connection, at least not quite in this way and certainly... Continue Reading
Zoning: No Longer Just for Nerds
Remember when you could empty a room by trying to work zoning philosophy into a conversation? Okay, you can still do that in most places. But the coolness quotient is on the rise, we swear.
Consider the adoption late last year of a form-based code in Miami, surely one of the most exotic political environments in North... Continue Reading
Innovation on the Road to Oblivion?
Context is everything.
The New York Times reports with unease that the FDA has approved statin drug Crestor’s use in a preventive capacity for those not currently diagnosed with cholesterol problems.
The degree to which this represents innovation in medicine is a topic to be debated elsewhere. What matters to me is... Continue Reading
Category Planning and Design, Public Policy
Development Option Theory
The real option theory of land development was a hot topic in the mid 2000's, as the volatility of the real estate market peaked. Now that we have a break from the U.S. housing bubble and financial crisis, it's worth talking about how we might decrease the volatility of the development market over time.
Urbanism by... Continue Reading
What We’re Reading: A Legal Guide to Urban and Sustainable Development
It probably won’t surprise most folks that the pursuit of more traditional (and sustainable) urban patterns is often thwarted by… lawyers! But here’s a refreshing change: Two of them – Dan Slone and Doris Goldstein, with Andy Gowder – have just released A Legal Guide to Urban and Sustainable Development for... Continue Reading
Category Legal, Planning and Design