Urban Revitalization Continues Amid Recession
These days good news can be hard to come by, which is why Kaid Benfield's most recent post on NRDC Switchboard caught our eye. It's about the Old North neighborhood of St. Louis, and how revitalization efforts there have taken off:
April 16, 2009
America’s Big Fat Road Problem
America has a fat problem. You knew that, right? But it's not just the people who are fat. It's the roads.
April 15, 2009
Reaching Across the Urban-Suburban Divide
As today's post from Seattle Transit Blog acknowledges, criticizing the place where someone lives is one of the surest ways to create division and contention when discussing planning issues:
April 14, 2009
Sen. Mikulski Supports Car Tax Breaks While Transit Languishes
This just in from the Streetsblog Network: Greater Greater Washington takes Maryland Senator Barbara Mikulski to task for supporting car sales tax breaks -- and asks how that money could be better spent:
April 13, 2009
Car-Free in Montana
Some thoughts today from one of the newest members of the Streetsblog Network -- from Missoula, Montana, Imagine No Cars. The blog's author is a University of Montana student who is chronicling his year of living without a motor vehicle. He calls the blog "a journal of my journey to live a car-free lifestyle. An experiment to bike, walk, and bus it through the next year of my life. What will not using a car mean?" (Check out his photostream on Flickr, too. Some nice stuff there.)
April 9, 2009
Safe Places for Senior Citizens to Walk
Today on the Streetsblog Network, we're talking sidewalks. Specifically, Greater Greater Washington is talking about the lack of sidewalks in many parts of DC where there is a concentration of people who are particularly in need of them: senior citizens.
April 8, 2009
Driven to Distraction in America
A couple of weeks ago I left the transit-rich confines of New York City and headed down South to visit family. I made it all the way to Meridian, Mississippi, without getting in a car (I rode the subway to Penn Station and took Amtrak from there), but once I got off the train in Meridian, I did what everyone else in America does: I put my rear end in the driver's seat and started driving. Driving to visit the relatives. Driving to the store to buy allergy medicine for my kid. Driving to buy food for dinner. Driving driving driving. It drove me crazy. And for my seven-year-old, who is not used to doing time in the back seat, it was torture.
April 7, 2009
Should St. Louis Make Mass Transit Free?
Like so many systems around the country, St. Louis's Metro is facing a devastating budget crisis. And yet St. Louis Urban Workshop, one of the newer members of the Streetsblog Network, is adding its voice to a highly counterintuitive chorus of people who are calling not for fare increases to help fund the systems -- but for eliminating the farebox altogether. Some have suggested that free mass transit be seen as a stimulus measure. Even MarketWatch, part of the Wall Street Journal's digital network, has run an editorial in favor of making mass transit free, saying, "This is not as far-fetched as it looks."
April 6, 2009
The Case Against the Cul-de-Sac: Build Streets That Connect
Suburban cul-de-sacs are one of the fundamental units of a development pattern that is coming under increasing strain and scrutiny around the country. In Charlotte, NC, Streetsblog Network member The Naked City argues against spending precious transportation dollars on building roads that encourage the traditional sprawling pattern of four-lane highways and residential dead ends:
April 3, 2009
What Can We Learn from Oregon’s Mileage Tax Experiment?
A few weeks ago, the Obama Administration had a rather embarrassing public difference over the idea of a mileage tax to replace the gas tax. It's certainly one of the most contentious notions out there, but most of the debate is based on hypotheticals. Now, as reported by Streetsblog Network member Worldchanging, the Oregon Department of Transportation has released the results of a 2006 experiment in a pay-at-the-pump mileage-based system, and we have some data to talk about. Adam Stein writes:
April 2, 2009