 Stories About: Mississippi River AND placemaking AND urban planning
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Author |
Published |
Section |
Biloxi Clues A post-Katrina homebuilding project gives hope for weathering severe storms |
Emily Gertz |
20 Mar 2008 |
Grist Feature |
| When Hurricane Katrina made landfall in Mississippi on August 29, 2005, the storm's 125-mile-an-hour winds and 25-foot wall of seawater ground homes, boats, and businesses into matchsticks across the state's three coastal counties: Jackson, Hancock, and Harrison. The cities of Waveland and Bay St. Louis, roughly 20 miles east of the Mississippi-Louisiana state line, were practical ... |
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| Topics: Army Corps of Engineers, green building, Mississippi, Mississippi River, placemaking, severe weather, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Tempting Fate Fifteen years after the Great Flood of 1993, floodplain development is booming |
Emily Gertz |
19 Mar 2008 |
Grist Feature |
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| Topics: Army Corps of Engineers Mississippi River placemaking severe weather urban planning (all these topics) |
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Balkin' in Memphis The riverfront in Memphis needs help -- but what kind? |
Katharine Wroth |
20 Dec 2007 |
Grist Feature |
| May God bless Memphis, the noblest city on the face of the earth. -- Mark Twain To visit Memphis, Tenn., is to visit a place that is slowly waking from a decades-long stupor. The things that define this city in the popular imagination -- the glamorous life of Elvis Presley, the shocking assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. -- happened decades ago. Some of the young professionals the city ... |
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| Topics: Mississippi River, placemaking, Tennessee, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Gateway to Heaven St. Louisans turn a working river into a river that works for them |
Sarah van Schagen |
20 Dec 2007 |
Grist Feature |
| "The fifth night we passed St. Louis, and it was like the whole world lit up." -- Mark Twain, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn As the sun rises over the city of St. Louis, an arch-shaped shadow moves eastward over the city's bustling downtown and toward the Mississippi River, where it will leave its invisible mark until early evening. The 630-foot steel structur ... |
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| Topics: Mississippi River, placemaking, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Dubuque's Not Bluffing An Iowa river town develops a real relationship with the Mississippi |
Sarah van Schagen |
20 Dec 2007 |
Grist Feature |
| "The care of rivers is not a question of rivers, but of the human heart." -- Tanaka Shozo Arriving in Dubuque, Iowa, is a bit disorienting. After passing acres and acres of the heartland's flat soybean and cornfields, you suddenly come upon a small city (pop. 60,000) with a surprising landscape. Gazing east to west, you see the muddy Mississippi meandering sou ... |
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| Topics: Iowa, Mississippi River, placemaking, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Mississippi Keen Three river cities reimagine their waterfronts, and themselves |
Katharine Wroth |
20 Dec 2007 |
Grist Feature |
| It was dark when we first crossed the Mississippi, and we caught only a glimpse of its swirling mass beneath us. The next day was gray and windy, and the dark mass had turned into a steely, uninviting barrier. The day after that was cloudless and blue -- and the suddenly friendly river was too. Sarah van Schagen and I had only just begun our weeklong reporting trip, but already we'd ... |
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| Topics: grassroots activism, Mississippi River, placemaking, politics, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Banking On Change Up and down the Mississippi, communities are reinventing their riverfronts |
Sarah van Schagen, Katharine Wroth |
20 Dec 2007 |
Grist Feature |
| By Sarah van Schagen and Katharine Wroth 20 Dec 2007 Gone are the days when the Mississippi River was just a shipping route and flood risk that happened to run through a city's back yard. Increasingly, the legendary waterway is becoming recognized as a prized attraction, worthy of front-yard status. Here's how a few communities are drawing attention to a natural feature they once shunned. View Larger Map ... |
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| Topics: Mississippi River, placemaking, urban planning (all these topics) |
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The Best Defense Is a Good ... Marsh Two years after Katrina, New Orleans is still succumbing to water |
Wayne Curtis |
29 Aug 2007 |
Dispatches |
| is a freelance writer who's written for The New York Times, Atlantic Monthly, American Scholar, Preservation, and American Heritage, and is the author of And a Bottle of Rum: A History of the New World in Ten Cocktails. He recently traded Maine winters for New Orleans summers. Dispatch: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 Wednesday, 29 Aug 2007 NEW ORLEANS, La. Katrina left these boats high and dry -- b ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, Big Oil, Dispatches, Louisiana, Mississippi River, placemaking, severe weather, urban planning, water pollution, wetlands (all these topics) |
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Death Wish Why the Gulf dead zone won't go away any time soon |
Wayne Curtis |
07 Aug 2007 |
Dispatches |
| is a freelance writer who's written for The New York Times, Atlantic Monthly, American Scholar, Preservation, and American Heritage, and is the author of And a Bottle of Rum: A History of the New World in Ten Cocktails. He recently traded Maine winters for New Orleans summers. Dispatch: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 Tuesday, 07 Aug 2007 NEW ORLEANS, La. It's summertime in New Orleans. Time slows. Backyard gardens demand to be weeded near ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, Big Oil, Dispatches, Louisiana, Mississippi River, placemaking, severe weather, urban planning, water pollution, wetlands (all these topics) |
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Drink Me A New Orleans transplant traces the source of his tap water |
Wayne Curtis |
26 Jun 2007 |
Dispatches |
| is a freelance writer who's written for The New York Times, Atlantic Monthly, American Scholar, Preservation, and American Heritage, and is the author of And a Bottle of Rum: A History of the New World in Ten Cocktails. He recently traded Maine winters for New Orleans summers. Dispatch: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 Tuesday, 26 Jun 2007 NEW ORLEANS, La. I was hiding out from New Orleans' early summer heat in a Magazine Street bar ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, Big Oil, Dispatches, Louisiana, Mississippi River, placemaking, severe weather, urban planning, water pollution, wetlands (all these topics) |
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Postcard From the New Atlantis On moving to New Orleans, a city defined by water |
Wayne Curtis |
24 May 2007 |
Dispatches |
| is a freelance writer who's written for The New York Times, Atlantic Monthly, American Scholar, Preservation, and American Heritage, and is the author of And a Bottle of Rum: A History of the New World in Ten Cocktails. He recently traded Maine winters for New Orleans summers. Dispatch: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 Thursday, 24 May 2007 NEW ORLEANS, La Someone once wrote that eating a tomato grown on a fire escape dem ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, Big Oil, Dispatches, Louisiana, Mississippi River, placemaking, severe weather, urban planning, water pollution, wetlands (all these topics) |
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