CNU Salons
Chanukah Songs for Urbanists
Submitted by MLewyn on Sun, 12/01/2013 - 3:13pmBuilding High to Qualify
Submitted by Anonymous on Tue, 11/12/2013 - 5:04pmMontgomery County, Maryland has a plan to encourage more walkable transit-oriented development. So the County Council is considering a new zoning code that encourages residential buildings in commercial corridors (i.e., strip malls). The idea is to build housing near transit and shopping and thus reduce car trips and help people live more efficiently, in accordance with the county’s goals.
Is Los Angeles Too Big?
Submitted by Tim Halbur on Mon, 11/11/2013 - 3:34pmThat's the question Colin Marshall, host of the Notebook on Cities & Culture Podcast, lobbed my way in a live recording this weekend at the New Urbanism Film Festival. At the risk of getting too simplistic, I think the answer is yes.
Financing the Evolution of the Built Environment - Part 2
Submitted by Mary Vogel on Thu, 11/07/2013 - 7:23pmFirst posted on Plangreen.net/blog on Oct. 7, 2013
Two types of architecture: good, and the other kind
Submitted by jmassengale on Wed, 11/06/2013 - 4:00pmTHE ARCHITECTURE CRITIC for New York magazine recently wrote about the work of Robert A.M. Stern in an article entitled Unfashionably Fashionable. I commented:
"There are two kinds of music," Duke Ellington famously said. "Good music, and the other kind."
Great Data on Migration
Submitted by MLewyn on Mon, 11/04/2013 - 8:40amI just found an interesting new website full of migration data (link here). The website contains migration data for almost every county in the US.
One thing I have learned: the migration into cities is still largely driven by twentysomethings. For example, Manhattan and Washington continued to lose older residents to suburbia and to other regions, as they did in prior decades.
Big Boxes Flock Together
Submitted by MLewyn on Wed, 10/30/2013 - 9:39amSome planners seek to discourage big box stores, on the theory that such stores are incipient monopolists that crush all competition. (In particular, Wal-Mart seems to strike fear in the hearts of many).
The Problem With The "Induced Demand" Theory of New Housing
Submitted by MLewyn on Mon, 10/28/2013 - 8:17pmI was arguing with an acquaintance about New York's sky-high rents, and he made an interesting argument: he suggested that new luxury housing actually makes prices higher, by making the city more desirable to the wealthy and thus encouraging them to bid up housing prices. In other words, the law of supply and demand doesn't reduce housing prices: supply just increases demand rather than reducing prices.
More on Which Age Groups are Moving to Cities
Submitted by MLewyn on Sun, 10/20/2013 - 1:11amI've already blogged on which age groups are returning to cites- but I recently read something that made me think about the issue a liittle differently. In past posts, I have noted that city population seems to be increasing among both millenials and 55-64 year olds. Although this is true, it is an after-affect of the nationwide increase in the number of aging baby boomers.
The "Decline of Chinatown" Nonstory
Submitted by MLewyn on Sat, 10/12/2013 - 10:00pmThe headline in "Wired" seems to say it all: "Mapping the Alarming Decline of America's Chinatowns." The Wired story breathlessly proclaims that "gentrification" and "development" are causing Chinatowns to "go extinct"- with the apparent agenda of trying to prevent new urban housing because of concerns about gentrification.