1. China's high-speed rail scandal. So much for Obama's State of the Union shout-out.2. Boston, Philadelphia, and DC are all moving towards parking reform – both of minimum off-street requirements (unfortunately to be replaced with maximums in most cases) and of underpriced curb parking – but … [Read more...]
Ed Glaeser on New York City, development as preservation, and more
Ed Glaeser has a sprawling feature story in The Atlantic about skyscrapers that's full of urbanist history and themes that I've been meaning to blog about for a few days now. It's a great article, with a lot of New York history in it, but I wanted to highlight a few bits.The part I liked most … [Read more...]
Jamaica, Queens upzoning was great, but don’t forget the parking minimums
In Next American City, Aaron Barker discusses the failure of NYC's massive rezoning in the highly transit-dependent black and immigrant neighborhood of Jamaica, Queens: One of the centerpieces of [NYC's] initiative to house an expected 1 million new arrivals in the coming decades was the Jamaica … [Read more...]
A bleg about vending in stations
Something that's always bothered me about mass train stations in America is that very few take advantage of the commercial advantage in having access to huge numbers of semi-captive customers with nothing to do for a few minutes. As I've mentioned before, one of the key reasons that Japanese rail is … [Read more...]
Virginia land use law: Marc Scribner from CEI responds
After I put up the post this weekend about a Virginia Tea Party group's opposition to a state law forcing counties to upzone enough land for medium-density development, I sent an email to Marc Scribner at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, a libertarian group, asking his opinion on the law. He … [Read more...]
Who believes that smart growth caused the recession?
So, I have a question. This might sound like I'm trying to be snarky, but I'm actually genuinely in search of an answer: Is there any economist out there other than Wendell Cox and Joel Kotkin who actually believes this? This all should give some pause to the relentless hoopla about the country’s … [Read more...]
Bloomberg pokes (again) at hornet’s nest of entitled drivers
The New York Daily News broke the story yesterday that New York lawmakers are once again trying to push congestion pricing through the state legislature, a task at which Mayor Michael Bloomberg failed in 2008 after meeting fierce resistance from outer borough and suburban drivers. Learning from his … [Read more...]
Links
1. Laneway housing, Vancouver vs. Toronto.2. New York state lawmakers want to ban using a phone or listening to headphones while crossing streets. Unfortunately for us pedestrians, there are very few limited access, grade-separated walkways, so in essence this would criminalize listening to an … [Read more...]