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Liberalizing cities | From the bottom up

“Market Urbanism” refers to the synthesis of classical liberal economics and ethics (market), with an appreciation of the urban way of life and its benefits to society (urbanism). We advocate for the emergence of bottom up solutions to urban issues, as opposed to ones imposed from the top down.
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“Misbuilding” the Future, Again…

March 2, 2009 By Adam Hengels

From "Highway to hell revisited", a Financial Times article by Christopher Caldwell: The Highway Act probably has more defenders than detractors. But Mr Obama should be among the latter. The act, which budgeted $25bn in federal money to build 41,000 miles of motorway, exacerbated the … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Environment, Transportation Tagged With: Barack Obama, Highway Act, highways, sprawl, stimulus

The Nation’s mass transit hypocrisy

February 6, 2009 By Stephen Smith

by Stephen SmithI was heartened to see an article about the need for mass transit in the pages of The Nation, though I was severely disappointed by the magazine's own hypocrisy and historical blindness. The article is in all ways a standard left-liberal screed against the car and for mass … [Read more...]

Filed Under: history, planning, sprawl, Transportation Tagged With: automobile, density, planning, progressivism, roads, San Francisco, smart growth, Stephen Smith, transit, Transportation, zoning

Uncomfortable truths about the progressive legacy

January 20, 2009 By Stephen Smith

by Stephen SmithYesterday I was listening to the pre-inaugural concert at the Lincoln Memorial on the radio, and one of the speakers said something that struck me as emblematic of the challenges that Barack Obama faces, though I doubt she realized the ironic significance. She was praising … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Transportation Tagged With: Barack Obama, conservation, highways, roads, Stephen Smith, Transportation, Urbanism

IBM Congestion Pricing Commercial

January 18, 2009 By Adam Hengels

Apparently, IBM helped implement a congestion pricing solution in Stockholm, Sweden. Could commercials like this help break down aversion to market-based solutions?[hat tip: The Overhead Wire] … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Transportation, video Tagged With: congestion pricing, ibm, stockholm

Urban[ism] Legend: Positive NPV Infrastructure

January 12, 2009 By Adam Hengels

As Washington debates how many hundreds-of-billions of the nearly trillion-dollar stimulus will go towards infrastructure or to other spending/tax cut schemes, pundits claim that spending billions on "shovel ready" public works projects can effectively create jobs that will lead to recovery. As … [Read more...]

Filed Under: corruption, Economics, Free-market impostors, Transportation, Urban[ism] Legends Tagged With: boondoggles, budgets, construction, government, highways, infrastructure, paul krugman, roads, stimulus, Transportation, tyler cowen

Private Roads Work

January 2, 2009 By Adam Hengels

Bart Frazier wrote a brief article for the Future of Freedom Foundation on private roads. He begins by discussing how most Americans remain strongly opposed to privately owned roads, while at the same time many have warmed to private education, medicine, and social security. This first part of the … [Read more...]

Filed Under: privatization, Transportation Tagged With: Bart Frazier, Dulles Greenway, highways, libertarian, Private Roads, roads

Yes, Virginia, government roads really are government subsidized, and no, they don’t approximate freed-market outcomes

December 22, 2008 By Adam Hengels

Recently, I came accross an article by Charles Johnson, who blogs at Rad Geek.  The article had linked to a Market Urbanism post about how user fees and gas taxes fall well short of funding road use in the US. Charles' article further debunks the Urbanism Legend asserted by free-market imposters … [Read more...]

Filed Under: privatization, Transportation Tagged With: Economics, eminent domain, gasoline, highways, infrastructure, Interstate Highway System, libertarian, privatization

MTA Rider Report Card: an F for Incentive Structure

December 8, 2008 By Adam Hengels

This morning, as I stepped to the stairway that brings me into Brooklyn's 86th street subway station on the R line, I was greeted by two MTA employees who handed me MTA's 'Rider Report Card' to fill out and mail in. As I started down the steps, I noticed something different than the usual routine; … [Read more...]

Filed Under: corruption, Transportation Tagged With: incentives, maintenance, MTA, nyc, subway, transit

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