RECENT ARTICLES – 2016

The LGBT community created a sense of place out of the vast suburban landscape of LA and had a lasting impact on walkability.

Commercial strip arterials in the Nutmeg State are beginning to transform as land-use regulations shift focus from use to the shape and siting of buildings.

What serves the veto seekers and frustrates everybody else is process paralysis. Which is the usual outcome when the goals and strategies of the politically savvy and elite-warry clash with those of politically naïve design pros.

London, like many cities, is aging. That presents a design and policy challenge in housing, transportation, and basic services—issues that relate to changing demographics on both sides of the Atlantic.

CNU is reviving a tradition of intimate discussions with top experts next month in Miami with the Build a Better Burb Sprawl Retrofit Council.

The early 20th Century urban planning giant was right about St. Petersburg—and he inspired the New Urbanism.

One of the nation's most beautiful historic shopping arcades was restored into affordable micro-lofts and small shops in Providence.

If transportation officials embrace a new approach backed by science, safe and effective mobility no longer need conflict with the multidimensional role of streets as public spaces and with people’s varied modes of travel.

The impact of the neighborhood on many sources of climate emissions is clearly visible in this University of California research.