Category: Uncategorized
Portland Development and City Pride
Wild Animals of All Stripes Are Adapting to the Cityscape and Thriving
Wild Animals of All Stripes Are Adapting to the Cityscape and Thriving
The new science of urban ecology reveals a surprising trend of wildlife adapting to the cityscape
Soil Saves the World
Can a community land bank save Philadelphia from blight?
Sea Change — NYC after Sandy
Monday, September 30th 2013: New York City Conference
The Science behind the latest Climate Change report
The Science behind the latest Climate Change report
A new IPCC “climate change” report is due out soon, but behind the battling headlines, the science is clear: While the impacts of climate change are worrying, on the upside we are currently experiencing perhaps the most rapid acceleration in humanity’s understanding of our planet.
The knowledge gained from the frontiers of basic research—particularly crosscutting, interdisciplinary research—will be essential to creating the decision support systems needed to manage society in the future.
Preserving Landmark Buildings Helps Cities to Thrive
Preserving Landmark Buildings Helps Cities to Thrive
While preserving historic landmarks is not the answer to our city’s affordable housing crisis, it is certainly not the cause of it — no matter what developers may claim.
Paying a Price for Public Space
Paying a Price for Public Space
Cities all over the world are trying to replicate the runaway success of parks such as New York City’s High Line and Chicago’s Millennium Park. These state-of-the-art parks are credited with pumping up real estate values and drawing hordes of tourists.
But unlike the great public parks built in previous eras, the new generation of flagship parks is almost completely dependent upon massive private support for its survival. Design decisions and the responsibility for maintenance and operations budgets have been outsourced to quasi-governmental organizations and “Friends” groups. The problem? It’s unclear whether these kinds of public-private partnerships can be financially self-sustaining without completely selling out.
Adapt, Transform, Re-Use
People have passionate feelings about their environment, sometimes expressed as a love for the buildings or landscapes that currently surround them, other times as a desire for change. Land use policy is one lens through which these often-conflicting desires resolve themselves. Preservation can speak to immediate concerns about the value of places that are special to people today, serving as a guide not just to the past, but also to the future of the city.
Atlas of Urban Expansion
Massive urbanization, accompanied by the rapid expansion of cities and metropolitan regions and the sprawling growth of megacities the world over, is one of the most important transformations of our planet. Much of this explosive growth has been unplanned.
