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Author |
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The Golden-State Touch California bill aims to curb sprawl |
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21 Aug 2008 |
News |
| Posted at 12:10 PM on 21 Aug 2008 Hopes are high that a bill aimed at curbing California sprawl will pass the state legislature and be signed into law by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. The bill, SB 375, would channel transportation funding toward projects that encourage smart growth. Each of California's 17 metropolitan regions would create a "sustainable community strategy" to encourage compact development; projects included in t ... |
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| Topics: California, legislation, news, placemaking, politics, progress, sprawl, state politics, urban planning (all these topics) |
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The (renewable) electron economy, part 5 More ideas for a post-oil society |
Michael Hoexter |
14 Aug 2008 |
Gristmill |
| This is the fifth in a series on how we can build an energy future based on our best science and no longer critically dependent upon exhaustible and polluting fossil fuels. Promoting battery and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles Governments can play a key role in promoting electric vehicles by buying electric vehicles en masse and helping develop battery electric and plug-in hybrid electric fleets and fleet systems. With current technology, battery electric tr ... |
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| Topics: electric vehicles, energy, fossil fuels, placemaking, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Leading indicators
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David Roberts |
11 Aug 2008 |
Gristmill |
| When the conservative Washington Post editorial board is stumping for smart growth and transit-oriented development, you know the tide is turning! |
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| Topics: placemaking, public transportation, trains, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Take a Short Walk, and a Long Peer Major U.S. cities ranked by relative walkability |
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17 Jul 2008 |
News |
| Posted at 12:31 PM on 17 Jul 2008 Software company Front Seat has released a ranking of the most walkable U.S. cities, rating the relative distance to and density of businesses like grocery stores, bars, book stores, and coffee shops to calculate an overall walkability score. San Francisco took top honors, followed by New York City, Boston, Chicago, and Philadelphia; the lowest scoring cities were Jacksonville, F ... |
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| Topics: business, green living, news, placemaking, Smartish Cities, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Dean Quixote Nashville mayor stumps for public transit |
David Roberts |
16 Jul 2008 |
Gristmill |
| Here's Mayor Karl Dean of Nashville, Tenn., on MayorTV talking in almost jarringly common sense terms about the challenges facing cities and the solutions -- public transit, diversity, economic development -- that can overcome them: Good stuff. |
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| Topics: gas prices, placemaking, public transportation, Tennessee, urban planning, video (all these topics) |
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Driven to extinction How transportation wonks can make your city rank |
Eric de Place |
16 Jul 2008 |
Gristmill |
| Here's an interesting ranking. For each major U.S. city, the list-happy editors at Men's Health calculated the negative effects of driving. They aggregated scores on transit ridership, air pollution, fuel consumption, and driving miles. (Presumably, the data are for metropolitan areas, not city limits.) Northwest cities do exceptionally well: Seattle ranks number one, Portland ranks third, and Spokane is eighth. Men's Health doesn't appear to include a methodo ... |
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| Topics: placemaking, Portland, public transportation, Seattle, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Your city council could save the world How local building codes can be adapted to meet the 2030 Challenge right now |
Edward Mazria |
09 Jul 2008 |
Gristmill |
| Compared to cutting-edge technologies -- nanotechnology, coal with carbon capture and sequestration, biomimicry -- building codes seem downright stodgy and, dare I say it?, boring. Yet, much to the surprise of many, building codes are fast becoming the Titans in the battle against climate change. Able to fell with a single blow the giants on the other side of the battlefield -- out-of-control greenhouse-gas emissions, thoughtless energy consumption, and gross energy in ... |
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| Topics: energy, green building, legislation, placemaking, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Sour Town Protesters demonstrate against British eco-towns |
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30 Jun 2008 |
News |
| Posted at 10:18 AM on 30 Jun 2008 Hundreds of protesters gathered outside Britain's Parliament Monday to protest the government's plan to build 15 eco-towns. The government is proposing communities characterized by sustainable construction, public transportation, green space, and walkability. It hopes to have five eco-towns built by 2016, and five more by 2020. Monday marks the last day of the government's first phase of consultation wit ... |
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| Topics: England, grassroots activism, news, placemaking, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Making cities less dumb Select Committee examines the benefits of smarter urban planning |
Kate Sheppard |
20 Jun 2008 |
Gristmill |
| The House Select Committee for Energy Independence and Global Warming held a hearing on Thursday about the opportunities for better urban planning to reduce energy use and greenhouse-gas emissions. 'Planning Communities for a Changing Climate' brought together a panel of experts on 'smart growth,' clean air policy, and transit. Witnesses included Dr. Sultan Al Jaber, who works in smart growth in Abu Dhabi; Steve Hewitt, administrator of Greensburg, Kan., the town ... |
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| Topics: green living, Muckraker, news, placemaking, politics, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Screwing the goose that lays the golden eggs Better cities, better growth |
Ryan Avent |
16 Jun 2008 |
Gristmill |
| The Overhead Wire directs us to a Christian Science Monitor write-up of a new Brookings report on how we might want to support metropolitan economies: 'If you're going to get serious about the economy, then you've got to get specific about how you're going to leverage metropolitan economies,' says Bruce Katz, director of the metropolitan policy program at Brookings. Even though America's 100 largest cities generate two-thirds of U.S. jobs and three-quarters of dom ... |
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| Topics: placemaking, politics, public lands, public transportation, urban planning (all these topics) |
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The Daley show Hot plans rile the Chicago waterfront |
Katharine Wroth |
13 Jun 2008 |
Gristmill |
| Two curious things going on along the waterfront in Chicago, which Mayor Richard Daley envisions as the 'greenest city in America': a brouhaha over plans to relocate the children's museum to Grant Park, and a billion-dollar dream of a semicircular Eco-Bridge in the same area. A mock-up of the Eco-Bridge. Photo: Chicago Tribune. The $100 million museum plan was handily passed yesterday by the city council in what sounds like a stereotypical example of ... |
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| Topics: Chicago, local politics, placemaking, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Keeping tabs on Tampa Florida city takes another smart(ish) step |
Katharine Wroth |
13 Jun 2008 |
Gristmill |
| Yesterday, the Tampa city council gave preliminary approval to a plan that offers incentives for green building; they're expected to formally approve it later this month. We mentioned in our rockin' Smart(ish) Cities series that this was in the works -- nice to see it pursued, and heartening to see such places taking green(ish) steps. |
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| Topics: Florida, green building, placemaking, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Bed-Stuy Garden Party Eco-celebrity, design, and social justice coalesce in a new Brooklyn green space |
Emily Gertz |
12 Jun 2008 |
Grist Feature |
| Sun, open space, and celebrity -- the opening of Brooklyn's "Garden of Hope" had them all. On an unseasonably warm and sunny afternoon last month, Bette Midler was in high spirits as she celebrated the transformation of a slice of land between two century-old brownstones from a paved walkway with a few trees into a park-like oasis. "I hope anyone who wa ... |
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| Topics: celebrity, gardening, green living, placemaking, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Richer, greener Focusing population growth in the right places will make us both |
Ryan Avent |
09 Jun 2008 |
Gristmill |
| The New York Times looks at the impact of high gas prices in communities across the nation today and concludes that increases are most painful in rural areas. Part of this analysis involves an examination of money spent on gas as a share of total income. The big middle of the country does badly, and Appalachia and the deep South do very badly. We can explain some of the excessive spending on fuel in these places by noting their dependence on trucks and the lack of ... |
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| Topics: environmental justice, gas prices, placemaking, public transportation, urban planning, Washington DC (all these topics) |
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The Missing Links Public transit ridership is up, but no one's talking about a better system |
Ryan Avent |
06 Jun 2008 |
Grist Feature |
| But how long will they wait for infrastructure improvements? Photo: Sharat Ganapati One year ago, as America prepared for the traditional summer-driving crush, op-ed pages nationwide fretted over a disturbing trend. Only a decade earlier, oil had plumbed depths near $10 per barrel, and dirt-cheap gas had allowed us to roll over the nation's blacktop in vehicles of monster-truck ... |
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| Topics: green living, placemaking, politics, public transportation, sprawl, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Car culture on the skids USA Today: oil prices drive up asphalt costs, derail road maintenance |
Tom Philpott |
06 Jun 2008 |
Gristmill |
| For decades, public cash has gushed into building infrastructure designed to get us around in those little (or not-so-little) privatized pods. Indeed, the mobilization to create and maintain our road and highway network probably counts as our greatest public achievement of the last half-century. Meanwhile, while the highway rode high, our rail-transportation network crashed. Attacked and defunded by politicians and rejected by the public, Amtrak lurches on, barely. It's ... |
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| Topics: gas prices, oil, placemaking, public transportation, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Vertical farms and future cities Sustainability a big theme at the World Science Festival |
Maywa Montenegro |
02 Jun 2008 |
Gristmill |
| What do vertical farms, green roofs, soft cars, breathing walls, and Dongtan, China, have in common? They were all subjects of discussion at Friday's Future Cities event in New York City, part of the four-day 2008 World Science Festival. To a packed house, Columbia University microbiologist Dickson Despommier described his vision for feeding the planet's burgeoning, and increasingly urban, population. The vertical farm takes agriculture and stacks it into the tie ... |
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| Topics: food, innovation, local food, placemaking, tech, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Metro Effectual City residents emit less CO2, study says |
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29 May 2008 |
News |
| Posted at 6:58 AM on 29 May 2008 Residents of the 100 largest metropolitan areas in the United States emit less carbon dioxide pollution per capita than the U.S. average, according to a new study. The Brookings Institution analyzed data on household and transportation energy use and found that the average U.S. resident was responsible for about 2.87 tons of carbon pollution a year, but that residents of the U.S.'s 100 largest metro areas ... |
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| Topics: green living, news, placemaking, United States, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Your Cities, Yourselves Smart-growth advocates offer tips for changing your neck of the woods |
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16 May 2008 |
Grist Feature |
| This week we've profiled several cities that are changing the way their residents live, work, and get around -- all with an eye toward fighting climate change and building a more sustainable future. So what can you do if your community hasn't seen the light? We asked our sources for advice, and here's what they had to say. Kimber Lanning. "Buy local whenever possible. Whether you're hir ... |
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| Topics: advice, grassroots activism, green building, placemaking, Smartish Cities, special series, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Urban Legends Smart(ish) Cities series ends, sustainability efforts march on |
Lisa Selin Davis |
16 May 2008 |
Grist Feature |
| By now, you may have forgotten that Portland was ever crowned the Miss Universe of Sustainability, and have started packing up your bicycles and solar panels for the big move to Syracuse or Tampa. OK, maybe you're not thinking of uprooting yourself and your family. More likely, you're evaluating your own city to figure out what green things it's got going for it, where it lags behind, ... |
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| Topics: environmental justice, green building, placemaking, Smartish Cities, special series, sprawl, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Shinier, Happier People How three Rust Belt cities are changing |
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15 May 2008 |
Grist Feature |
| For more on Rust Belt cities, see our full feature on sustainability initiatives underway in Cleveland. It may not be intuitive to link an area historically associated with steel mills, coal mining, and automobile assembly lines to sustainable development. But green growth is catching on in the Rust Belt, long an economically unendowed area of the country -- and its manufacturing-heavy past is coming in handy in emerging ... |
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| Topics: green building, New York, Pennsylvania, placemaking, Smartish Cities, special series, urban planning, Wisconsin (all these topics) |
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Those About to Rock Can Cleveland bring itself back from the brink? |
Kristine Hansen |
15 May 2008 |
Grist Feature |
| Still known for smokestacks and football, Cleveland is turning its ship around. Photo: Craig Hatfield "Most people know Cleveland by the Browns or The Flats," says Marc Lefkowitz. From the roof of his office building, which is dotted with native wildflowers and grasses, he gestures to the downtown skyline -- marked by the iconic Mittal Steel smokestacks that gave The Flats neighborhood it ... |
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| Topics: green building, Ohio, placemaking, Smartish Cities, special series, urban planning (all these topics) |
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Outer Limits Sprawling Atlanta seeks new routes to the future |
Robert DiGiacomo |
14 May 2008 |
Grist Feature |
| The City in the Forest hopes to get back to its roots. Despite its reputation as a city of wall-to-wall subdivisions, office complexes, and shopping centers, Atlanta's not a complete stranger to matters of green. At the time of its mid-19th century founding, in the woods at the end of a railroad line, it was called the "City in the Forest." And in the early 20th century, the city created the 1 ... |
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| Topics: Georgia, green building, placemaking, Smartish Cities, special series, sprawl, urban planning (all these topics) |
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A Moment in the Sun How three Southeast cities are changing |
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14 May 2008 |
Grist Feature |
| For more on Southeast cities, see our full feature on sustainability initiatives underway in Atlanta. With rapid population growth and increased climate vulnerability, the Southeastern U.S. would seem a prime place for sustainability initiatives. But the area has been slow to cotton on to the greening trend. We chalk it up to the South's shade-shifting toward red in the last fifty years -- aligning with a party that was, unt ... |
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| Topics: climate, Florida, green building, placemaking, Smartish Cities, special series, Tennessee, urban planning, Virginia (all these topics) |
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Dry, Dry Again How three Southwestern cities are changing |
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13 May 2008 |
Grist Feature |
| For more on Southwest cities see our full feature on sustainability initiatives underway in Phoenix. Scan any list of "green U.S. cities" for winners from the Southwest, and you'll find a geographical void. Sure, a liberal-leaning place like Austin or Santa Fe or Boulder might sneak onto the list, but in general, there's a dearth of entries from this sun-drenched region. And that's troubling, as Southwest cities tend ... |
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| Topics: green building, Nevada, New Mexico, placemaking, Smartish Cities, special series, sprawl, Texas, urban planning (all these topics) |
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