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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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Three Lessons Public Transit Can Learn From Uber

June 17, 2016 By Dan Keshet

Three Lessons Public Transit Can Learn From Uber

Every form of transportation has some unique considerations. Car drivers worry a great deal about parking near their destination–a consideration bus riders don’t need to think about. But, as transit consultant Jarrett Walker has written about, some considerations are universal. As Uber and Lyft have … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Logistics & Transportation, Transportation

Houston’s Beautiful (Yet Partial) Embrace of Market Urbanism

June 2, 2016 By Nolan Gray

Houston’s Beautiful (Yet Partial) Embrace of Market Urbanism

A metropolitan economy, if it is working well, is constantly transforming many poor people into middle-class people, many illiterates into skilled people, many greenhorns into competent citizens. … Cities don’t lure the middle class. They create it. – Jane Jacobs, The Death and Life of Great … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Economics, housing, planning, Transportation, zoning Tagged With: Dallas, Houston

Urbanism In A Time Of Terror

April 4, 2016 By Asher Meyers

Brussels, Belgium--I had recently moved from Los Angeles, my home of twenty years, to Brussels. It would be my first time living in a traditional city since becoming interested in urban design. So I was constantly looking for little urban insights and pleasures on the ground. For instance, I … [Read more...]

Filed Under: infrastructure, Logistics & Transportation, planning, Transportation, Travel Tagged With: Belgium, Brussels, Los Angeles, uber

Autonomous Vehicles: Expect the Unexpected

April 3, 2016 By Johnny Sanphilippo

Autonomous Vehicles: Expect the Unexpected

A recent trip to the tax attorney’s office put me in close proximity to a fellow client as we waited. This guy was one of the lead developers of autonomous vehicles so I picked his brain for a while. He said his company is on track to have products on the road in four or five years. Here’s a little … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Logistics & Transportation, planning, Transportation Tagged With: driver-less cars

Rothbard The Urbanist Part 7: Pricing Highways

March 22, 2016 By Adam Hengels

Rothbard The Urbanist Part 7:  Pricing Highways

Surprise!!  I've had the intent to wrap-up the Rothbard The Urbanist series for a long time, and it's been sitting on my todo list for over 6 years.I want to thank Jeffrey Tucker, then at mises.org, and now at FEE.org and liberty.me for enthusiastically granting permission to reprint excerpts … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Economics, Free-market impostors, infrastructure, Rothbard The Urbanist, sprawl, Transportation Tagged With: Capital Beltway, congestion, congestion pricing, privatization, sprawl, tolls, William Vickrey

Protectionism Is Already Harming American Workers And Cities

March 11, 2016 By Matthew Robare

Both Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders and New York reality television personality Donald Trump have based their presidential campaigns in part on the issue of trade. Both of them oppose free trade policies like the North American Free Trade Agreement and the pending Tran Pacific Partnership, arguing … [Read more...]

Filed Under: infrastructure, Logistics & Transportation, Policy, Transportation Tagged With: Alon Levy, Bernie Sanders, Buy America, Donald Trump, NAFTA, public transit

A Smart City in Your Pocket: From top-down command centers to bottom-up app markets

January 10, 2016 By Nolan Gray

A Smart City in Your Pocket: From top-down command centers to bottom-up app markets

 Cities, for most of human history, were dumb. At least, that’s what the “smart cities” movement might lead you to believe. Over the past few years, a chorus of acquisitive multinational tech corporations, trend-savvy politicians, and optimistic developers­­—an odd mixture of former SimCity … [Read more...]

Filed Under: infrastructure, Logistics & Transportation, planning, privatization, Transportation Tagged With: infrastructure, permissionless innovation, sharing economy, smart city, tech

An interview with David Block-Schachter, Chief Scientist of Bridj

January 7, 2016 By Marcos Paulo Schlickmann

An interview with David Block-Schachter, Chief Scientist of Bridj

Public transportation service provision is changing. As I already have mentioned in this post at Caos Planejado, microtransit services are growing in many cities around the world and one of the forefront companies on this field is Bridj, operating in Boston since June 2014 and Washington DC since … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Logistics & Transportation, Transportation Tagged With: Boston, Bridj, David Block-Schachter, interview, private transit, washington dc

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