Roberta Brandes Gratz, author of some excellent books on cities, has a provocative recent piece over at the Atlantic, called, “What Cities Looking to Shrink can Learn from New Orleans.” This particular topic is in focus because a number of cities, notably Detroit, have been grappling in recent years with how [...]
When I was a kid, I used to sketch out designs for futuristic cities in my notebooks. Complete with domed arenas, skyscrapers and fantastic highway intersections, they looked a lot like, well, a lot like this:
This is current-day downtown Atlanta, as seen from a hotel in Midtown.
Atlanta, like so many [...]
For years, many of us in the planning and real estate world have been talking about the mismatch between supply and demand in housing. That is, we’ve been building a very limited type of housing for decades (single family houses on a medium to large lot) well in excess of what the demand actually is [...]
Rules are made to be broken, but it’s also true they are good to live by. The good ones can keep us from some of our worst impulses. For example, a good rule of thumb is don’t ever ask someone out on a date by text message. If you care enough to do it, the [...]
Today’s quick interlude comes from an info graphic at fastcodesign.com. The info and piece focuses mostly on how much money (as a percentage of income) that Americans spend on food relative to other countries. For me, the more interesting information is a comparison of the average caloric intake of Americans vs other countries. You see, [...]
New Year’s resolutions are an annual tradition of mine. Sometime within about 24 hours of January 1st, I like to make that extensive list of my goals for the year ahead, even if the world will be coming to an end this year. I know someone could say this is a silly or arbitrary measure, [...]
EXT: A NEIGHBORHOOD CORNER STORE
A lively setting: people walking, talking. Store owners chat with customers on the sidewalk.
EXT: A NEIGHBORHOOD CORNER STORE
20 years later, same location. A lonely street: buildings boarded up or turned into low-rent uses. Few people seen walking around. Generally dismal.
It’s a common theme or scene in so [...]
Subscribe to this Blog by Email
Categories
Fellow Travelers
- 12th & Main
- A Daily Dose of Architecture
- Arch Daily
- Archinect
- Architectural Technologies
- ArchNewsNow
- Best Green Blogs
- BldgBlog
- Built Environment Blog
- CEOs for Cities
- City Comforts Blog
- Congress for the New Urbanism Blog
- Cyburbia
- Design Public
- Discovering Urbanism
- How We Drive
- Human Transit
- Infrastructurist
- Inhabitat
- Jetson Green
- Market Urbanism
- Mississippi Valley Traveler
- My Urbanist
- Neighboorhoods
- New Urban Architect
- New Urban News
- New Urbanism in the News
- New York Times: Green Inc.
- Original Green Blog
- Ped Shed
- Pedestrian Observations
- Place Shakers
- Rebuilding Place in the Urban Space
- Streetsblog
- Strong Towns
- Switchboard
- The Civitas Chronicles
- The Urbanophile
- Transportation for America
- Urban Planning Blog
- Urban Review STL
- Veritas et Venustas
- Walkscore.com
- Web Urbanist
- XNU Charter Quiz
Organizations/Resources
- American Planning Association
- ArchiExpo
- B Corporation
- Congress for the New Urbanism
- Institute of Classical Architecture
- INTBAU
- Local Government Commission
- MARC
- National Charrette Institute
- New Urban Guild
- Planetizen
- Project for Public Spaces
- SmartGrowthAmerica
- The Seaside Institute
- Transportation Action Network
- Urban Land Institute
Monthly Archives
- April 2012 (1)
- March 2012 (4)
- February 2012 (1)
- January 2012 (2)
- November 2011 (3)
- October 2011 (3)
- September 2011 (2)
- August 2011 (5)
- June 2011 (1)
- July 2010 (1)
- February 2010 (4)
- January 2010 (2)
- December 2009 (4)
- November 2009 (2)
- October 2009 (10)
- September 2009 (5)
- August 2009 (7)
- July 2009 (5)
- June 2009 (2)
- May 2009 (8)
- April 2009 (10)
- March 2009 (16)
- February 2009 (1)
Cloud
architect Architecture charrette city planning construction design development downtown development eco design eco development federal stimulus package Form-Based Code Form Based Codes infrastructure Kansas City Blogroll Kevin Klinkenberg land use mass transit master plan Missouri New Urbanism new urbanist pedestrian-friendly redevelopment smart growth sprawl street design suburb sustainability Sustainable Design The Pitch traditional neighborhood design traffic transportation urban architecture urban design urban development urbanism urban living urban planner urban planning Urban Society of Kansas City walkable walkable communities walkable neighborhoodsLatest Tweets
- @WalkableDFW @hblackson Don't want to let my anti-techno-fix bias color this. Could be a boon for cities if it means a lot less parking in reply to WalkableDFW 7 hrs ago
- @neil21 @hblackson a lot to figure out - what's the biz model? Is this a niche thing for mid-upper income? how does it co-exist w/ ex. cars? in reply to neil21 7 hrs ago
- Interesting - much to ponder. Should NUists be fans? http://t.co/2w4t9219 12 hrs ago
- More updates...
Posting tweet...

