RECENT ARTICLES – 2017
From coast to coast and in middle America, more sensible parking policies are taking hold and may be the quickest path to urban revitalization.
Monday Morning in Savannah
Lean Urbanism seeks to bring common sense back into the planning and development process—because great neighborhoods are built with many hands, often in small increments.
Restoring an original square in Savannah revives a neighborhood.
The 710 Freeway in Pasadena CA has no future, only an ugly past—one of scores of in-city highway struggles that began when many officials thought that traditional cities had no future.
A new book offers an in-depth report on how public officials, citizens, and developers are working together to create walkable and inclusive communities.
Research papers on topics ranging from climate change to transportation are presented at CNU 25, supporting evidence-based practice.
Streets support commerce, social interaction, physical activity, recreation, and multimodal transportation—yet DOT funding criteria are stuck in the past.
A leaner, lighter approach to infrastucture is more cost-effective, sustainable, and livable—an idea worth considering for America in National Infrastructure Week.