• A 15-minute city for southeast London

    Thamesmead Expansion is a series of proposals for a large, transit-oriented site in London. Students at UC Berkeley College of Environmental Design won a Student Merit Award in the Neighborhood, District, and Corridor category of the 2023 Charter Awards.
    Like the US, Britain is experiencing a widespread housing affordability shortage, especially around London in the southeast of the UK. Opportunity areas for new housing in that region are critical—including a flat, 300-acre former military site on the Thames estuary where 12,000 to 15,000 living...Read more
  • How urbanism, density, and spatial enclosure are related

    Dhiru Thadani and Matt Bell, along with the CNU-DC Chapter board, orchestrated the recent Council on “ Density Without Urbanism/Urbanism Without Density. ” They see the event as the beginning of a series of CNU discussions on density and urbanism. “We wanted to understand what others were thinking...Read more
  • When is density good, and when is it harmful to cities?

    Providing density that supports a high quality of life requires a love for cities, putting ‘urbanism’ front and center, according to noted urban designers.
    Seventy-one New Urbanists, including many of the movement’s leading lights, gathered in Washington recently to address a set of increasingly urgent questions: If density is good for a city, how much of it should there be? How tall should the buildings rise? What forms should they take? Everyone...Read more
  • Washington beach town based on Northwest vernacular

    Seabrook, Washington, is the first full-scale beach town built according to the principles of New Urbanism on the West Coast. Founded in 2004, Seabrook is sited on a bluff that offers tremendous ocean views and protects against sea level rise. Seabrook was planned by Laurence Qamar on 88 acres, and...Read more