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Ruth Cuadra

Pop_up Planning: New Methods for Transforming the Public Process - 0 views

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    I live just a few miles from where the Pop-UP MANGo happened. I can tell you that while the community-participation aspect of this kind of "planning" is terrrific, it undermines overall city planning in terms of space use, traffic mitigation, and access. What's the proper balance?
Megan Conn

Around The World, Cities Plan For Extreme Weather : NPR - 1 views

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    A look at how cities are planning for climate change.
Johanna Fassbender

What Urban Planners Can Learn From a Hindu Religious Festival | Travel | Smithsonian Ma... - 0 views

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    What can city planners and those who plan refugee and emergency camps learn from this mega pop-up city?
Paul Spitzzeri

Framework for the Future 2030 - Museums - 2 views

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    Newport News, Virginia's framework for 2030--museums are merely described, but in the context of city planning.
Ruth Cuadra

Will New Museums and Parks Fight Chicago Crime? - 0 views

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    How much should cities balance infrastructure development with spending to lure new cultural institutions to their cities?
Ruth Cuadra

Global Insurance Firms offer Resiliency Tools to Climate Risk Cities | Planetizen: The ... - 0 views

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    A report aims to find a common global method for evaluating and addressing climate risk in response to the increasing frequency of catastrophic storms to use by cities in their redevelopment processes.
Ruth Cuadra

A look at cities that are leading the way in urban sustainability - 0 views

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    Not all of these are the usual suspects to be on such a list: Bogota, Melbourne, Copenhagen, Mexico City, Munich, Rio de Janeiro, New York, San Francisco, Singapore, and Tokyo.
David Bloom

PlaNYC 2030 - The Plan - Parks and Public Space - 0 views

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    PlaNYC 2030 - a cool future plan for NYC. Of note for my interest is the chapter on Parks and Public Space, but others may find other chapters of interest, especially in terms of how they envision the city 15 years into the future.
Ruth Cuadra

Blighted Cities Prefer Razing to Rebuilding - 0 views

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    The continuing struggles of former manufacturing centers have fundamentally altered urban planning, traditionally a discipline based on growth and expansion.
Ruth Cuadra

How Smart Cities Must Plan for Electric Cars - 0 views

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    Every electric vehicle will need to have access to a charging station within its driving range. Charging stations will have to be distributed differently from gas stations.
Ruth Cuadra

What Makes a Great City: A General Theory of Walkability - 1 views

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    The pedestrian is an extremely fragile species, the canary in the coal mine of urban livability. Under the right conditions, this creature thrives and multiplies. But creating those conditions requires attention to a broad range of criteria, some more easily satisfied than others.
Ruth Cuadra

The Problem With Defining 'Downtown' - The Atlantic Cities - 0 views

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    Census Bureau defines "downtown," for lack of a better universal definition, as everything within a 2-mile radius of the local city hall.
Ruth Cuadra

Hidden costs of sprawl will cripple cities - 0 views

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    "Why don't cities count the long-term costs of suburbia?" asks author of report on sprawl.
Ruth Cuadra

Big Data Having Big Impact on City Operations - 0 views

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    a broad trend: how data-driven decision making can lead to the most effective use of a city's limited financial resources
Ruth Cuadra

The Next Big Thing: "Sit-able Cities" - 1 views

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    Sit-able places are key, interdisciplinary focal points where the delight of "placemaking" and cultural traditions of "watching the world go by" merge with the sometimes conflicting domains of law and politics, economic development, public safety, gentrification and the homeless.
David Bloom

Coffee Shops in Brooklyn, New York - 1 views

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    This map shows the location of every independent coffee shop in Brooklyn and the walking-shed community associated with it. Independent coffee shops are positive markers of a living community. They function as social spaces, urban offices, and places to see the world go by. Communities are often formed by having spaces in which people can have casual interactions, and local and walkable coffee shops create those conditions, not only in the coffee shop themselves, but on the sidewalks around them. We use maps to know where these coffee shop communities exist and where, by placing new coffee shops, we can help form them. We applied two steps to generate the data displayed by the map. First, we used the Google Places API to locate all coffee shops in a given city. Second, for each point in the map we queried the walking route and distance to its nearest coffee shop using the Google Distance Matrix API. In the final map the colored areas represent a region which is walkable to a specific coffee shop (within one kilometer or 0.7 miles). The intensity of color at each point indicates its distance from its corresponding coffee shop.
Elizabeth Merritt

How Community Design Advocates Can Be a Force for Design Justice - 0 views

  • Currently, Colloqate is working with community design advocates on Midland Library in Portland and restorative justice space in Dallas.
  • The project in Dallas, which deals with a former jail, allows us to think about restorative justice through the lens of those who have been most harmed by that space. We were able to hire CDAs that were formerly incarcerated and hire others who were part of the broader network of the city and they were working together to ask questions of their own specific communities,
  • Design as Protest (DAP) began as a yearlong organizing effort, involving 250 design professionals and design advocates across the United States and Canada. They examined how injustice can be challenged through the built environment. Issues such as ending the prison industrial complex, defunding and reallocating the police, and advocating against architecture projects that are hostile to communities of color.
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  • The Black Panthers talked about removing capitalist intentions within communities which are the standard tropes around what gentrification is and what it means for capital to come into a neighborhood and wash away cultural institutions. The ethos of design justice is simply that for every injustice in this world there is an architecture, a plan, a design, that’s been built to sustain that injustice, and for so much of our work power is vested in land.”
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    Community Design Associates are not only asked to talk about design, but also about their own experiences and the nuances that get missed in public consultations where the project is set and residents can only ask questions or give opinions.
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