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Crosscut Seattle - Neighborhood blogs: the mom-and-pop news business
- note the ref to the "instant journalist" blogging software: this could be really useful for setting up a MC blog...??
"Don't be dense" by Zev Yaroslavsky - Los Angeles Times
"The debate about the availability of housing in Los Angeles and the city's development policies has been testy but long overdue." An interesting article by Yaroslavsky that initially makes the reader think that he's advocating a sort of nimby-istic "pulling up the drawbridges" mentality, but if the reader perserveres to read the entire piece, it seems his suggestions are really LA-specific. They're not necessarily in conflict with infill development; development around transit routes & hubs; and creation of density in areas that really need it (in our case, downtown). He does bring in late 80s experiences, however, which make you wonder if things haven't irrevocably moved beyond thel contexts he's referencing.
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The debate about the availability of housing in Los Angeles and the city's development policies has been testy but long overdue.
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Fueling public outrage over growth policies that would significantly increase density are well-grounded fears that, in the clash between overdevelopment and neighborhood preservation, the developers will prevail.
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Cities ramp up kid-friendly hospitality - USATODAY.com
Featuring many comments from CEOs for Cities's Carol Coletta, on the various strategies cities are being encouraged to use to make them more child-friendly.
Urban Mapping Gives Us Free Neighborhoods
The resurfacing (as in coming up, not getting paved over!) of neighbourhoods... Interesting comments thread, too, re. the "free" aspect.
All for the US at this point, Canada seems out of the loop.
Crosscut Seattle - Amazon joins a parade of high tech to the urban core
- article by Margaret Pugh O'Mara, which asks some pretty good questions about how the transfer of "new economy" businesses from the suburbs back to the center city has implications for urbanism, as well as for what type of new economy businesses move to the core.
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The New Economy started in the suburbs, but the new trend is back to urban neighborhoods. Amazon is a good match for South Lake Union, but the danger is that it could be too big, with too few small companies clustering around.
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Add Sticky NoteNew-economy companies are clustering in old manufacturing and warehouse districts in cities from San Francisco to Vancouver to Barcelona. These and many other cities worldwide have redeveloped broad swaths of urban industrial land for new high-tech campuses only minutes from downtown. Drawing on a creative, young workforce who prefer city life, high-tech companies use an urban location as a recruitment and retention tool to show that they are not only innovative, but they are also cool.
- - Vancouver? Really? Downtown Vancouver? - on 2007-12-20
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