RECENT ARTICLES

The Lone Star State is at a unique historical point where rapidly increasing population may lead it down the same path as California. We have an opportunity to shape that growth.

Norman, Oklahoma, has devised one of the most efficient ways to reduce parking requirements and stimulate incremental development.

Reports from Legacy Projects highlight the potential of Norwood, Xenia, Amelia, and Camp Washington, Ohio.

Stoops, dooryards, and porches make more engaging street frontages for apartments than the typical common lawn.

Creative, multipurpose spaces are the answer to dying third places, according to two experts on CNU's On the Park Bench.

Why New Urbanism hasn’t caught on more as a reliable model of development and two potential solutions to this problem.

As a result of long-term trends and COVID impacts, many cities are experiencing the conversion of office structures to alternative uses. Concerns about vacancies are valid, yet cities stand to benefit in many ways.

Lessons from Vancouver.

Redeveloping commercial corridors, using policies like AB 2011 in California, enables new housing at a scale big enough to eliminate the housing shortage in the US without displacement, argues a CNU founder.

While CNU moves on from its stint in Cincinnati, those who attended CNU 32 are inspired to continue their work locally, as they always have.

The semi-annual Dangerous by Design identifies the most dangerous regions and deadly modern thoroughfares, designed so that too many people die in the prime of life.

River City Rising shows how Spokane draws on its streetcar neighborhood origins to address its current housing problems.