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Hayley Richardson | Tue, Apr 1st, 2008 | Category: Headlines | City: Headlines | Tags: male model, long island secession, new york city council, 125th st. rezone, philadelphia planning, new york city charter, landmarks preservation commission, human rights lawyer | 0
Over the last few years the growing clout of developers has gradually chipped away at the city’s resolve to protect its architectural legacy. The agency most responsible for defending that legacy, the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission, has sometimes been accused of putting developers’ interests above the well-being of the city’s inhabitants.A proposal before the commission to tear down several buildings in the Greenwich Village Historic District is shaping up as a crucial test of whether those critics are right. A hearing on the issue is scheduled for Tuesday morning, and New Yorkers would do well to follow the proceedings if they care about the city’s future.
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Hayley Richardson | Tue, Mar 25th, 2008 | Category: Reviews | Tags: detroit, university of pennsylvania, bldgblog book, landscape futures, sarejevo, camilo vergara, jg ballard, bldgblog, jean baudrillard, walkable cities, ben franklin parkway, geoff manaugh | 0
Geoff Manaugh, the puppeteer behind the much-loved BLDGBLOG and purveyor of all things speculative, spoke Friday at the University of Pennsylvania’s School of Design. He regaled the crowd with tales from the landscape future, in a lecture that was akin to a mad dash through the head of a child who’s interested in everything, and won’t be deterred by practical constraints.
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Hayley Richardson | Fri, Mar 21st, 2008 | Category: Headlines | City: Headlines | Tags: transportation, building, green, brooklyn, katrina, atlantic, corruption, tolls | 1
Headlines for March 21st 2008.
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Hayley Richardson | Fri, Mar 14th, 2008 | Category: Commentary | Tags: hayley richardson, building, magazine, anthropocentric, anthropology, skyscrapers | 1
“We can be ethical only in relation to something we can see, feel, understand, love, or otherwise have faith in.” –Aldo Leopold, Sand County Almanac.
It’s the time of year when I start fetishizing trees. As a current urbanite who’s spent years traipsing around Colorado and Maine, a three month barrage of concrete winter wreaks havoc upon my soul. In my March imaginings, I’m standing on a wooded hilltop, caressed by a rogue leaf, warmed by the sun. I’m awash in the kind of wonder I…
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Hayley Richardson | Mon, Mar 3rd, 2008 | Category: Headlines | City: Headlines | Tags: hayley richardson, suburbs, headlines, california, crime, seattle, las vegas, nuclear reactor building, mta, historic hot house, synthetic turf, fare, m-hotel | 0
First off, our posts will be a little sparser over the next few days (read: we won’t post anything) while we finish last minute revisions of our new Website (launching quite soon). Stay tuned.
Now, headlines:
“If you thought landmarking a diner that was once a Denny’s is pushing the preservation envelope, how about putting a nuclear reactor building on the National Historic Register? Before you scoff, learn just a bit about a remarkable, little-known modern…
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Hayley Richardson | Wed, Feb 27th, 2008 | Category: Report | Tags: hayley richardson, new york city, economy, crime, tourism, casino, noise complaints, times square, 24 hours, city that never sleeps, market street, lewis mumford | 3
The concept of 24 hours holds a special place in the popular imagination of Americans. It evokes a sense of urgency and a sense of romance: late night diners, watching the sunrise, saving the world. But the phrase is particularly relevant, and particularly overused, when it comes to cities.
Lewis Mumford wrote in The Culture of Cities that “through its complex orchestration of time and space, no less than through the social division of labor, life in the city takes on a the…
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Hayley Richardson | Mon, Feb 25th, 2008 | Category: Headlines | City: Headlines | Tags: hayley richardson, new york city, los angeles, downtown, construction, katrina, skyliine, traffic plateau, green cart, obesity, mississippi skyline, traffic growth, st louis, architectural tension, small business | 0
Manhattanville’s Architectural Tension
“Beyond the glass and steel illustrations of Columbia’s planned Manhattanville buildings is a tension between preserving the aesthetic aspects of the neighborhood and convincing local residents to embrace a modern look.Although architecture alone does not create a space, design wields powerful force in helping to sculpt not only the physical characteristics, but also the emotional and psychological mood of a neighborhood. “What the community…
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Hayley Richardson | Fri, Feb 22nd, 2008 | Category: Headlines | City: Headlines | Tags: hayley richardson, new york city, gentrification, baltimore, harlem, eminent domain, pictures, friday, cloverleaf, tree-oriented planning, historic zone, university of vermont, snowfall, skywalk, words, tenant | 0
”The First Real Snowfall of the Season”
Baltimore Votes Against Eminent Domain
The Baltimore City Planning Commission voted against the West Covington Urban Renewal Plan by a 7-to-1 vote Thursday night, sending the redevelopment proposal to City Council with the suggestion of eliminating eminent domain from the plan. The commissioners were in agreement that the plan presented a needed redevelopment opportunity for the city, but they couldn’t approve of the plan because it…
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Hayley Richardson | Wed, Feb 20th, 2008 | Category: Commentary | Tags: hayley richardson, new york city, gentrification, manhattan, sense of place, jane jacobs, the old new york, nostalgia, authenticity, mary cantwell | 2
Maybe it was Nathaniel Rich’s recent lament in the New York Times, or the idle chatter in the NAC office, but it seems that lately, the word on everyone’s lips is that they miss the old New York. I’ve been hearing complaints such as “it’s not real anymore,” “everyone’s been pushed out,” and “it’s like a museum.” Apparently, New York (specifically Manhattan) has become a simulacra of itself.
Sure, I’ve read Mary Cantwell and Jane Jacobs and lament the fact that New York no longer…
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Hayley Richardson | Tue, Feb 19th, 2008 | Category: Reviews | Tags: jeffrey hill, hayley richardson, queens, jackson heights, grameen america, dominican republic, lethargy, joan didion, muhammed yunus, bangladesh | 0
I was recently fortunate enough to see Dr. Muhammed Yunus at the Free Library in Philadelphia. The Bangladeshi founder of the Grameen Bank and recent Nobel Prize winner was there to discuss his new book, “Creating a World Without Poverty: Social Business and the Future of Capitalism.” Before an audience primarily composed of progressive Wharton students, he railed against capitalism in its raw form, arguing that it does little to further social equality. What he need instead is a…
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Hayley Richardson | Mon, Feb 18th, 2008 | Category: Headlines | City: Headlines | Tags: hayley richardson, new york city, transit, minneapolis, dallas, green space, walker art center, semicolon, dulles airport, sodal, urban peripheries, transition towns, kampala, favelas, peak oil | 0
Fixing Southern Dallas (Start by Calling it SoDal)
“Fixing southern Dallas requires interrupting the cycle of failure and creating enough reverse momentum for success to start breeding success. It won’t be easy, and it won’t happen quickly, but here are some ways that might help get it started:”
“The Transition Towns movement, a coalition of community-led response initiatives to peak oil and climate change, has been spreading rapidly. Starting in Ireland, and…
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Hayley Richardson | Fri, Feb 15th, 2008 | Category: Headlines | City: Headlines | Tags: hayley richardson, green space, stand-alone malls, coal mine, ripon college, amsterdam, clean energy, arabian villa, liberal arts, canals | 0
Can Stand Alone Malls Survive?
The stand-alone mall isn’t dead. It’s just dysfunctional. That was one of the sentiments expressed at an Urban Land Institute panel that tackled the question, “Can stand-alone malls survive?” The question was posed Thursday, during ULI’s annual Reinventing Retail conference at the Wilshire Grand Hotel in Downtown Los Angeles.”
Enclosed courtyards with the cool comforts of shady trees and water fountains — the basic…
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Hayley Richardson | Thu, Feb 14th, 2008 | Category: Reviews | Tags: hayley richardson, animation, film review, marjane satrapi, persepolis, julia alvarez, iran, edwidge danticat, chador, war on terror | 1
Persepolis, based on the 2003 graphic novel by Marjane Satrapi, is an autobiographical portrait of resistance in the face of suppression. It’s a poignant coming of age story that begins in pre-revolutionary Iran, where precocious Marjane is schooled in radical ideas by her left-wing, intellectual parents. As a child, she regularly constructs night-time conversations between Marx and God, and peppers her extended family with questions, many of whom were jailed for speaking out against…
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Hayley Richardson | Wed, Feb 13th, 2008 | Category: Commentary | Tags: hayley richardson, new york city, japan, gender, buses, equality, mexico city, mexico, public transit, seoul | 1
Monday, the Times reported that a new “women only” bus line has recently begun running in Mexico City. With enormous pink signs proclaiming “exclusivo damas!” they cater to the thousands of women who’ve been victims of sexual harassment on D.F’s overcrowded public transportation system. The buses run less frequently, but they offer a respite from the probing hands and eyes of fellow male travelers.
As this video demonstrates, most women applaud the arrival of the buses, and see this as…
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Hayley Richardson | Fri, Feb 8th, 2008 | Category: Commentary | City: Headlines | Tags: commentary, hayley richardson, los angeles, california, harlem, ethanol, cebu city, world bank, maglev, frederick douglass, net zero energy, transit oriented development | 0
“Cities are now home to half of the world’s 6.6 billion humans. By 2030, nearly 5 billion people will live in cities. This special issue explores the enormous implications of the mass embrace of city life. News articles offer a look at how cities are tackling specific problems, a set of Reviews and Perspectives examines trends and demographics arising from the urban transformation.”
Disagreements over Harlem’s Redevelopment
“The Department of Housing,…
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Hayley Richardson | Mon, Feb 4th, 2008 | Category: Commentary | City: Headlines | Tags: commentary, hayley richardson, lacma, cebu city, congestion pricing, dream cities, design 21, hotdog towers, reno, nathan's | 0
The Dream City In the Phillipines
So they were listening, after all. A coalition of businessmen on Sunday urged the Cebu City government to implement the plans laid out during the sessions for the Dream Cities program of the Institute Solidarity in Asia (ISA) in 2005. The Cebu City government presented the “vision” of becoming most livable city in Asia by 2015 to the conference in August 2005.
So This Is Why LA Doesn’t Work
Last April, the Los Angeles Planning Commission endorsed…
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Hayley Richardson | Fri, Feb 1st, 2008 | Category: Commentary | City: Headlines | Tags: commentary, hayley richardson, minneapolis, raleigh 49th largest city, peachtree streetcar project, starbucks closing, prince charles, shanghai urban planning exhibition | 0
“To put the city’s dizzying growth in perspective, a visit to the Shanghai Urban Planning Exhibition is far more interesting than its dry name suggests, even if it doesn’t address the stickier issues like, what will this frenzy of development mean for the the people who live within the Shanghai city limits now?”
Look:
Ranting Against Skyscrapers, British-Style
“Britain’s Prince Charles has warned skyscrapers are “disfiguring” London’s skyline and…
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Hayley Richardson | Mon, Jan 28th, 2008 | Category: Commentary | Tags: commentary, hayley richardson, new orleans, oakland, housing surplus, cement, green supportive housing, historic preservation philadelphia | 0
Housing Surplus in New Orleans
“Thousands of people are looking for a place to live in this city. Many thousands of houses are vacant or for sale, and acres of land sit empty. But turning potential housing into inhabited homes is proving to be a major challenge, even for a city that survived the fury of Hurricane Katrina and the failure of the levees. For those who need shelter the most, these houses are out of reach.”
Chicago Seniors Psyched About Public Transport
“State…
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Hayley Richardson | Fri, Jan 25th, 2008 | Category: Commentary | City: Headlines | Tags: commentary, hayley richardson, harlem, disappearing cities, ivory coast, historic zone, 125th st., kwame kilpatrick scandal, benin, drive-thru bans, detroit revitalization | 1
“Huge breakers constantly battering Benin’s coast—and the rest of the shoreline on the Gulf of Guinea—are starting to take their toll. Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo and Nigeria are also fighting to stop the sea from gulping up chunks of land. Hardest hit would be the section of Cotonou known as Les Ambassadeurs. In tiny Benin, the erosion on its narrow stretch of coastline was first recorded a century ago. “
Canada’s Drive-Thru Ban
“Some green-minded civic politicians…
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Hayley Richardson | Tue, Jan 22nd, 2008 | Category: Commentary | Tags: hayley richardson, barack obama, facebook, richard florida, messiah, philly fellows, note to cities, youth involvement | 4
My recent trip to New Hampshire, and a virtual argument between our own Dave Steele and the “untouchable” Richard Florida have unexpectedly and cogently intertwined.
Both raise the question of citizen participation, and force us to examine the decidedly un-sexy ingredients to building a sustainable city.
Campaigning for Obama in rural New Hampshire, I met countless people who have been involved in every primary season since they were old enough to vote. Granted, New Hampshire is…
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