Wednesday, August 31, 2011
TAX CREDITS CREATE AFFORDABLE RENTAL HOUSING - 6
TAX CREDITS CREATE AFFORDABLE RENTAL HOUSING
By Steve Wright
The Trust says the legislation would:
• Lessen the rule that lowers tax benefits dollar-for-dollar according to the amount of credit taken when using the historic rehab credit.
• Increase the rehab credit rate to 40 percent for smaller projects in which the qualified rehabilitation expenditures do not exceed $2 million. This would target the incentive to “main street” type developments in which rehab credit costs are currently prohibitive.
• Permit the 10 percent credit to be claimed with respect to residential rental property. It is currently prohibited for projects that include dwellings.
• Change the definition of “older building” from “built before 1936” to any property “fifty years old or older.”
• Ease the rules governing non-profit deals so that more community-oriented projects may move forward.
• Boost by 130 percent the qualified rehabilitation expenditures on which the rehab credit can be claimed for buildings located in certain disinvested neighborhoods, difficult to develop areas and census tracts with high poverty rates.
• Remove the recapture clause -- requiring the payback of tax credits upon conversion of a tax credit property into a condo development -- to broaden the tax credit's use to condominium developments and in so doing, provide new support for the revitalization of urban neighborhoods nationwide.
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
TAX CREDITS CREATE AFFORDABLE RENTAL HOUSING - 5
TAX CREDITS CREATE AFFORDABLE RENTAL HOUSING
By Steve Wright
Using historic tax credits, Denver-based Mercy Housing retained original materials and features wherever possible and added new materials that blend with the area’s character.
The National Trust for Historic Preservation -- working with leading preservation organizations, developers, the financing community and tax credit users – has crafted “the Community Restoration and Revitalization Act.
The legislation, with sponsorship in the U.S. House and Senate, “is a package of amendments that would further the mission of the Historic Rehabilitation Tax Credit by spurring greater investment in smaller commercial projects and Main Street type properties in older neighborhoods – particularly where there is a critical need for housing and neighborhood reinvestment,” according to a briefing released by the Trust.
The idea is to make it easier to combine the rehab credit with the traditional Low-Income Housing Tax Credit to create projects that save historic structures while creating affordable rental units.
Monday, August 29, 2011
TAX CREDITS CREATE AFFORDABLE RENTAL HOUSING - 4
TAX CREDITS CREATE AFFORDABLE RENTAL HOUSING
By Steve Wright
In less than two years, the Friedman and Dublin team worked its magic and a new developer -- Eagle Point, a Maine firm with strong ties to St. Louis -- was in place. The $12 million dollar rehabilitation construction is well under way with completion expected by year end and residents moving back into an exquisitely-restored historic building by early 2008.
Encouraged by the National Trust for Historic Preservation, some areas are using historic tax credits as a way of preserving affordable rental housing.
Mercy Housing in Savannah received the Trust’s prestigious National Preservation Honor Award for creating 70 units of affordable housing in buildings that were historic, but rapidly deteriorating.
According to the trust, Heritage Corner was originally constructed as housing for low-income workers in the early 1900s in what is now known as Savannah’s Cuyler-Brownsville Historic District -- one of the city’s oldest and poorest neighborhoods. Before Mercy Housing’s purchase and restoration, Heritage Corner families struggled with blight and overcrowding.
“Heritage Row, a continuous block of buildings constructed in 1912, was also in need of considerable rehabilitation to make them habitable,” a Trust press release states. “Where apartments once were unheated and raw sewage often ran through courtyards, residents now enjoy comfortable homes with modern conveniences, playgrounds, a community garden – and even a new branch library.”
Sunday, August 28, 2011
TAX CREDITS CREATE AFFORDABLE RENTAL HOUSING - 3
TAX CREDITS CREATE AFFORDABLE RENTAL HOUSING
By Steve Wright
The building had not fulfilled its affordable housing tax credit requirements of 15 years as low income housing before being allowed to charge market rate. If affordable rates had not continued, the owner would have faced procedures to recapture the Low Income Housing Tax Credits he had used to finance the project.
Friedman, who has experience in affordable housing, historic renovation and traditional development, teamed with Dublin Capital to secure: housing assistance credits through a nonprofit corporation, tax exempt bonds, city lien forgiveness plus federal and state LIHTC. The project was structured to also benefit from federal historic tax credits plus state of Missouri historic tax credits.
Friedman and Dublin contracted for a market study and appraisal and assembled a development team including a general contractor, architect and local legal counsel. Friedman and Dublin also assembled a group to provide the debt and equity needed to purchase the property plus additional land for adequate parking.
“Since the Winston Churchill House had Section 8 tenants, the development chose to find alternative housing for the residents during the gut rehab and pay the difference in rent. Friedman Group, working with a local project manager, assisted in relocating the qualified tenants,” explained Friedman, who also maintained a strong community relations campaign with city alderman and mayor’s office, a Congressman’s office, the police department, community religious groups and neighborhood associations.
Saturday, August 27, 2011
TAX CREDITS CREATE AFFORDABLE RENTAL HOUSING - 2
TAX CREDITS CREATE AFFORDABLE RENTAL HOUSING
By Steve Wright
With construction costs and land prices soaring, developers of affordable rental housing are constantly pressed to make the numbers work.
In St. Louis, the Friedman Group, Ltd. and Dublin Capital, lobbied policymakers, layered financing and launched an uphill yet successful battle to clean up and preserve a rapidly deteriorating 115-unit affordable rental building.
Eric Friedman, president of the Friedman Group and the St. Louis Association of Realtor’s Commercial Division Realtor of the Year, created a case study on the salvation of the Winton Churchill Apartments.
“An ongoing problem for the property was crime, which amounted to more than 300 police calls each year. In addition to safety problems, the apartments were only about 40 percent to 50 percent occupied and many of the tenants were not paying rent,” Friedman said. “The owner of the 115-unit building had renovated the property in 1995, but was facing increasing pressure from the City of St. Louis, the police department and community leaders to make further changes.”
The question for the owner was how to proceed in solving the problem? At that point, Friedman Group, Ltd. and Dublin Capital were asked to step in and provide expertise and solutions. The two firms and owner decided to search for a buyer/developer who would be able to rehab the building and continue providing affordable housing.
Friday, August 26, 2011
TAX CREDITS CREATE AFFORDABLE RENTAL HOUSING
TAX CREDITS CREATE AFFORDABLE RENTAL HOUSING
By Steve Wright
In the never ending search to preserve and create more affordable rental housing, developers and nonprofits are finding ways to use more than the traditional Low-Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC) to get deals done.
Since 1986, the federal LIHTC Credit program has provided financing opportunities for developers to build units for low income renters.
In return for building affordable, investors receive a credit against their federal income tax liability. The program leverages roughly $6 billion in annual investment that produces more than 125,000 affordable apartments each year.
The federal government allocates LIHTC to each state based on population, with the current allocation at approximately $2 per person. Each state’s housing finance agency sets priorities then holds an annual competitive process to award the credits to the projects that best meet the priorities.
Investors use the tax credits to reduce federal tax liability. They often receive additional benefits of meeting local regulatory requirements and community development goals.
Low income tax credits typically cover about half of an affordable rental building’s total financing. The other half usually comes from city and county portions of U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development HOME or Community Development Block Grant money, plus state or local bond money and housing trust funds.
Thursday, August 25, 2011
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 551 THROUGH 600
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 551 THROUGH 600
551. Volcan Poas/Barquero
552. Nicaragua y sus gentes/Molina and Curado
553. Colonial Latin America/Burkholder & Johnson
554. The Faces of Honor: Sex, Shame and Violence in Colonial Latin America/Johnson & Lipsett-Rivera
555. Starck/Taschen (UK-Boisiere)
556. Starck/Taschen (US)
557. Margaret Bourke-White Photographer/Callahan
558. Images of America: Akron/DeMali Francis
559. Cleveland Cemeteries: Stones, Symbols & Stories/Vigil
560. Cleveland Metroparks/Matowitz
561. Rubell Family Collection: Not Afraid/Coetzee
562. Art Basel Catalog 04/Hatje Cantz
563. Basquiat Catalogue from Brooklyn Museum Show
564. What Great Paintings Say: From the Bayeux Tapestry to Diego Rivera/Hagen
565. Dore Treasury/Stevens
566. Dore’s Illustrations for Don Quixote/Dore
567. Dore’s Spain/Dore
568. Marchel Duchamp/Prestel
569. Bosch: The Complete Paintings/Bosing (large Taschen)
570. Bosch: The Complete Paintings/Bosing (small Taschen)
571. Bosch Gallery Guide Prado Museum/Luces
572. Velazquez/Micheletti
573. Velazquez Gallery Guide Prado Museum/Serraller
574. Goya/Abbruzzese
575. Miro/Mink
576. Espange/Hurlimann
577. L’Espagne/Wolgensinger
578. Ronda/Justel (in Spanish)
579. Breve Historia de Carmona/Garcia-Salguero (in Spanish)
580. Seville/Olmedo
581. Seville, Italica and Carmona: Yesterday and Today/Abad
582. Costa del Crime/Clarkson
583. Cadiz
584. Mijas
585. Antequera
586. Marbella-San Pedro de Alcantara
587. Malaga Cathedral
588. The Cathedral in Seville
589. From Arcos to Ronda Around the Gaditans Highlands: The White Towns Route/Perez Regordan
590. New Orleans Cemeteries/Brock
591. New Orleans Cemeteries: Life in the Cities of the Dead/Florence
592. Cemeteries of New Orleans: A Journey through the Cities of the Dead/McElroy-Arrigo
593. Architectural Standards book from Patricia
594. City Walks: Architecture New York/Walker
595. Miami/architectural trading cards
596. New York/architectural trading cards
597. Chicago/architectural trading cards
598. New York Pops Up: 8 Vintage Die-Cut Postcards/Metropolitan Museum of Art
599. Breakfast at Brennan’s: and Dinner, too/Brennan
Books most wanted:
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 501 THROUGH 550
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 501 THROUGH 550
501. Esquinas de Buenos Aires/von Wartenber&Vaca
502. Buenos Aires Los Cafes/Sencilla Historia
503. Buenos Aires:Imagnes de Coleccion
504. Postales de Buenos Aires/Gobierno de Ciudad de Buenos Aires
505. The Authentic Bars, Cafes & Restaurants of Buenos Aires /Kogan
506. Recoleta Cemetery/Buenos Aires
507. El Tigre: Su Casco Su Delta/Ferreira&Mendioroz
508. Montevideo: Capital de Uruguay/Ciudad de Cara al Mar
509. La Colonia del Sacramento/Agrigento Ediciones
510. Cartagena de Indias/Rouilard
511. Cartagena Morena/Diaz
512. Cartagena 100/Hoyos
513. Cartagena de Indias: Ayer y Hoy/Devesa
514. Cartagena/Hormaza
515. Cartagena de Indias: Panoramic Vision from the Air/Hoyos & Villegas
516. Cartagena Forever/Diaz
517. All Cartagena de Indias/Sangiao Le Danmat
518. El Templo de Dan Pedro Claver en Cartagena/Aristizabal
519. La Popa: Resumen Historico/Cardona
520. El Color De Bogota
521. Bogota/Rojas
522. Guia Bogota Centro Historico/Escovar
523. Guia del Cementerio Central De Bogota/Elipse Central
524. Salmona/Mundo
525. Mirando Pa’ Ariba en Mi Viejo San Juan/Ramirez Castellano
526. Old San Juan: El Morro San Cristobal/Graetz & Wilson
527. San Juan: 75 Color Photos/Drenth
528. San Juan Puerto Rico National Historic Site/Parks Service
529. La Ciudad Amurallada: Santo Domingo Colonial/Pena
530. Balcones de la Ciudad Primada: Santo Domingo/Portillo
531. Guia de Monumentos y Lugares Dominicanos/Carias
532. Guatemala: Faces of the Earth/Perkins
533. Guatemala in Pictures/Kusch
534. Antigua Guatemala/Cattelan
535. Antigua Guatemala/Cattelan
536. Atitlan/Cattelan
537. Atitlan-Chichicastenango/Janson
538. The Maximon Deity: Indignous Santeria in Guatemala/Alfaro&Rendon
539. Antigua for you/De Koose
540. Antigua Guatemala: The City and its Heritage/Bell
541. Lent and Holy Week in Antigua/Bell
542. Canonizacion del Hermano Pedro de San Jose Batencur
543. Tras los Pasos del Hermaon Pedro/Garcia de Cuevas
544. El Hermano Pedro un hombre de Dios/Pilon
545. Tikal: An Illustrated History of the Ancient Maya Capital/Montgomery
546. Tikal: A Handbook of the Ancient Maya Ruins/Coe
547. Guatemal: National Park Tikal/Gonzalez
548. The Complete Illustrated History: Aztec & Maya/Phillips
549. Guanajuato Mexico/Stampa
550. Costa Rica/Jadine
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 451 THROUGH 500
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 451 THROUGH 500
451. A Day in Toledo/Vidal
452. Spanish Journey/Blake
453. Art and Architecture of Spain/Altet
454. Traditional Houses of Rural Spain/Laws & Bernosa
455. Iberia Villages: Portugal & Spain/Carver
456. Spain: A Phaidon Cultural Guide in Color/Mehling
457. Spain: Culture and Passion/Bourbon
458. Espana en sus Castillo/Diaz-Plaja
459. The Life and Death of the Fighting Bull/Suarez & Marks
460. Driving Over Lemons: An Optimist in Spain/Stewart
461. Moorish Architecture in Andalucia/Barrucand & Debnorz
462. Moorish Style/Danby
463. Moorish Spain/Fletcher
464. The Alhambra/Irwin
465. Ornament and Design of the Alhambra/Jones
466. Tales of the Alhambra/Irving
467. Spanish Homes/Espinosa de los Monteros
468. Spanish Splendor/Junquera y Matos
469. The Most Beautiful Villages of Spain/Palmer
470. Art & Architecture Andalusia/Konemann
471. Andalusia/Fuare-Sappa
472. The Cave at Nerja
473. Julio Romero de Torres – pintor 1874-1930/Garcia de la Torre
474. Cordoba
475. Cordoba Yesterday and Today
476. The Mosque
477. The Mosque-Cathedral of Cordoba
478. Marruecos y Espana: una historica comun
479. Granada and the Alhambra/Sanchez
480. Granada: a different perspective/Sanchez
481. Albaicin y Sacromonte/Bustos
482. Islamic Tiles/Porter
483. Udeba and Baeza: World Heritage Cities
484. La Alpujarra
485. Las Alpujarras y Sierra Nevada
486. All Sevilla/ Editorial Escudo de Oro
487. All Granada/Editorial Escudo de Oro
488. All Cuenca/Editorial Escudo de Oro
489. Driving Over Lemons: An Optimist in Spain/Stewart
490. Lorca’s Granada – A Pictorial Guide/Gibson
491. Madrid – Una Historia en Comunidad/Aznar
492. Prado Madrid: Great Museums of the World/Mondadori
493. The Prado/Blanch
494. Madrid from End to End/Aldeasa
495. Picasso’s Guernica/Oppler
496. Librerias de Valor Patrimonial de Buenos Aires/Gobierno de Ciudad de Buenos Aires
497. El Teatro Colon/Ediciones Maizal
498. Buenos Aires/Ediciones Maizal
499. Old Buenos Airs Photographs/Viejero
500. Bares de Buenos Aires/Mirre
Monday, August 22, 2011
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 401 THROUGH 450
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 401 THROUGH 450
401. Chicago Yesterday/Gingko Press
402. The Great Chicago Fire of 1871
403. The Chicago World’s Fair of 1893/Applebaum
404. Frank Lloyd Wright/Hart
405. Detroit Disassembled/Moore
406. Yesterday’s Detroit/Angelo
407. Detroit Then and Now/Gay
408. Detroit Across Three Centuries/Bak
409. Art Deco Detroit/Binno
410. Arches & Canyonlands National Parks/Leach
411. Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park/Markward
412. Sedona: Treasures of the Southwest/Bryant
413. Cinema Southwest: An Illustrated Guide to Movies and Their Locations/Murray
414. Vitruvius: The Ten Books On Architecture/Morgan (translation)
415. Le Corbusier/Jenger
416. Paris/Atget
417. Neon World/Sprengnagel
418. Entertainment Destinations/Pegler
419. Pop Architecture/Kanner Architects Los Angeles
420. This Way – Signage Design for Public Spaces/Trulove
421. Streetscapes – Facades, Entrances, Storefronts/Pegler
422. A Guide to the Architecture of London/Jones-Woodward
423. Panoramas of London/Moore and Lloyd
424. Antoni Gaudi/Zerbst
425. Complete Works Gaudi/Kliczkowski
426. Antoni Gaudi/Feierabend
427. Antoni Gaudi/de Sola-Morales
428. Gaudi/Tarrago
429. Guadi/Masini
430. The Last Civil Work of Gaudi: La Pedrera Case Mila/Fundacio Caixa Catalunya
431. Jose Luis Sert: 1901-1983/Roviera
432. Josep Lluis Sert/Joan Miro: Duets/Bonet
433. Jose Lluis Sert (American Architects)/Rockport
434. Barcelona: Arquitectura Moderna 1929-1979/Ajuntament de Barcelona
435. Un Passeig pel Cementiri de Poblenou/Ajuntament de Barcelona
436. Barcelona/Bachrach
437. Barcelona: Ciudad y Artuitectura/Montaner
438. Barcelona Art Nouveau/Permanyer&Levick
439. Inside Barcelona/Botey & Aprahamian
440. Barcelona the Great Enchantress/Hughes
441. Barcelona/Hughes
442. Guia de la Barcelona Accesible/Rovira-Beleta & Folch
443. White Paper on Accessibility – Investigative Study 1998-1999/ Rovira-Beleta Cuyas
444. Cadaques/Triangle
445. All Montserrat/ Editorial Escudo de Oro
446. Girona/Editorial Escudo de Oro
447. Jewry Guide of Girona/Alberch Fugueras
448. Tarragona: Human Heritage/Triangle
449. Tarraco: Archaeological Visual Guide/Virtual Reconstruction of the City and Its Surroundings
450. Madrid & Toledo/Chueca Goitia
Sunday, August 21, 2011
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 351 THROUGH 400
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 351 THROUGH 400
351. Raymond Chandler’s Los Angeles/Ward-Silver
352. Daylight Noir: Raymond Chandler's Imagined City/Corman
353. A Photo Tour of Los Angeles/Hudson
354. LA Lost & Found: An Architectural History of Los Angeles/Kaplan
355. Los Angeles Architecture: The Contemporary Condition/Steele
356. 24 Hours in the Life of Los Angeles/Coleman & Spurrier
357. Hollywood Babylon/Anger
358. Architecture and Its Photography/Schulman
359. Photography at Night/Newman
360. American Architecture: A Vintage Postcard Collection /Malderen
361. Las Vegas: Vintage Graphics From Sin City/Heimann
362. Modernist Design 1880-1940/postcard book
363. The Story of Architecture of the 20th Century / Tietz
364. America’s Forgotten Architecture/Wrenn & Mulloy
365. America’s First City-St. Augustine’s Historic Neighborhoods/Harvey
366. Flagler’s St. Augustine Hotels/Graham
367. Flagler’s Magnificent Hotel Ponce De Leon/Graham
368. St. Augustine Impressions/Helfrick
369. Cuban Miami/Levine and Asis
370. Cubantime/Balido/Guerrero
371. Greater Miami: Sprit of Cuban Enterprise
372. Havana USA/Garcia
373. Cuba Style-Graphics from the Golden Age of Design/Levi&Heller
374. Cuba – The Special Period/Friedman
375. Pacheco’s Art of the Cubans in Exile/Pacheco
376. Havana Deco/Alonso, Conteras & Fagiuoli
377. Cuba: 400 Years of Architectural Heritage/Carley & Brizzi
378. Havana – Districts of Light/Telleri
379. La Habana – arquitectura del siglo XX/Rodriguez-Navarro
380. Havana/Miranda
381. La Isla Grande Cien Viajas Postales De Cuba/Hernandez-Orizzonte
382. Cuba The Elusive Island/Giovan
383. Cuba 1902-2002 Un viaje a traves de postales/Cepero
384. Fleeing Castro—Operation Pedro Pan/Triay
385. The Pride of Havana—Cuban Baseball/Gonzalez Echevarria
386. Suburban Nation/Duany Plater-Zyberk
387. The Celebration Chronicles/Ross
388. The New Urbanism: Toward An Architecture of Community/Katz-Scully
389. Seaside/Brooke
390. The Great Reset/Florida
391. Original Green/Mouzon
392. Building Through Time: the Making of a School of Architecture/University of Miami
393. Architecture—The Natural and the Man Made/Scully
394. The Lewis Mumford Reader/Miller
395. The Wealth of Cities/Norquist
396. Home from Nowhere/Kunstler
397. Architecture; Choice or Fate/Leon Krier
398. They All Fall Down: Richard Nickel's Struggle to Save America's Architecture/Cahan
399. AIA Guide to Chicago
400. Lost Chicago/Lowe
Saturday, August 20, 2011
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 301 THROUGH 350
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 301 THROUGH 350
301. Brooklyn’s Green-Wood Cemetery: New York Burial Treasure/Richman
302. Brooklyn Stoefrnts/Lacy
303. Coney Island: The People’s Playground/Immerso
304. Coney Island Lost and Found/Denson
305. Coney Island: Portraits of American – The Museum of the City of New York/Berman
306. Coney Island: 32 Picture Postcards
307. New York: A Photographic Album/Kogan
308. The Beautiful Bronx 1920-1950/Ultan
309. The Bronx: It was Only Yesterday 1935-1965/Ultan
310. The Bronx Then & Now/Samtur & Jackson
311. Intersections: The Grand Concourse at 100/Bessa
312. The Neighborhoods of Queens/Copquin
313. Skyscraper Rivals/Abramson
314. The Skyscraper book/Terranova
315. Weegee’s New York Photographs 1935-1960/Schirmer
316. Las Vegas The Success of Excess/Anderton and Chase
317. Las Vegas Then and Now/Chung
318. Fabulous Las Vegas in the 50s/Basten and Phoenix
319. Learning from Las Vegas/Venturi, Brown and Izenour
320. The Function of Ornament/Louis Sullivan
321. Louis Sullivan/Prophet of Modern Architecture
322. Deco Landmarks: Art Deco Gems of Los Angeles/Schwartzman
323. Architecture Tours L.A. Guidebook: Hollywood/Massino Smith
324. Architecture Tours L.A. Guidebook: Downtown/Massino Smith
325. Wilshire Boulevard: Grand Concourse of Los Angeles/ Roderick & Lynxwiler
326. Lloyd Wright: Architect/ Gebhard & Von Breton
327. Palm Springs Weekend: The Architecture and Design of a Midcentury Oasis/Hess & Danish
328.
329. The Architecture of Entertainment: LA in the Twenties/Winter-Vertikoff
330. Los Angeles Architecture & Design/teNeues
331. Los Angles: Improbable City/Halpern
332. Kesling Modern Structures – Popularizing Modern Design in Southern California 1934-1962/Pascal with Shulman & Sadofski
333. Imagining Los Angeles – Photographs of a 20th Century City/LA Times
334. Frank Lloyd Wright/Hollyhock House and Olive Hill/Smith
335. The Watts Towers of Los Angeles/Whiteson
336. Los Angeles/Stahr
337. Los Angeles: The Architecture of Four Ecologies/Banham
338. LA Deco/Breeze
339. LA Courtyard Housing/Polyzoides
340. Art Deco Los Angeles/Pildas
341. An Architectural Guidebook to Los Angeles/Gebhard
342. Los Angeles/Visalli
343. California Crazy & Beyond/Heiman
344. Googie Redux: Ultramodern Roadside Architecture/Hess
345. Googie: Fifties Coffee Shop Architecture
346. Los Angeles Then and Now/Lord
347. Hollywood Then and Now/Lord
348. Hollywood Now and Then/Jezek
349. Deco & Streamline Architecture in LA: A Moderne City Survey/McMillan
350. Los Angeles in the Thirties: 1931-1941/Gebhard-Von Breton
Friday, August 19, 2011
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 251 THROUGH 300
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 251 THROUGH 300
251. New York: An Illustrated History/Burns
252. Gotham Restored: The Preservation of Monumental New York/Rudnick
253. Urban Castles: Tenement Housing and Landlord Activism in New York City 1890-1943, Day
254. Changing New York/Abbott
255. New York in the Thirties/Abbott
256. New York in the Forties/Feininger
257. New York to Hollywood: The Photography of Karl Struss
258. New York’s Architectural Holdouts/Alpern and Durst
259. The Chrysler Building/Stravitz
260. Higher: A Historic Race to the Sky and the Making of a City/Bascomb
261. New York Streetscapes: Tales of Manhattan’s Significant Buildings
and Landmarks/Gray
262. The Art of Rockefeller Center/Roussel
263. New York Landmarks/Burnham
264. Manhattan Lightscapes/Lieberman
265. One Thousand New York Buildings/Brockman & Harris
266. Manhattan: An Island in Focus/Rajs
267. Manhattan/Suares
268. The Destruction of Lower Manhattan/Lyon
269. Life on the Lower East Side/Dans
270. Beaux Arts New York/Lowe
271. The WPA Guide to New York City
272. The Mythic City: Photographs of New York by Samuel H. Gottscho, 1925-1940/Albrecht
273. The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York/Caro
274. The Death and Life of Great American Cities/Jacobs
275. Our Crowd/Birmingham
276. Invisible New York: The Hidden Infrastructure of the City/Greenberg
277. Subway Style/Giovannini
278. Mole People: Life in the Tunnels Beneath New York City/Toth
279. 740 Park: The Story of the World's Richest Apartment
Building/Gross
280. When The Astors Owned New York: Blue Bloods and Grand Hotels in a Gilded Age/Kaplan
281. Triangle: The Fire That Changed America/Von Drehle
282. Art Deco Architecture: Design, Decoration, and Detail from the Twenties and Thirties/Bayer
283. Art Deco/Duncan
284. Art Deco Cut & Use Stencils / Mentzen
285. Movie Palaces: Survivors of an Elegant Era/Pildas
286. Popcorn Palaces/Wilhelm and Kinerk
287. The American Diner/Witzel
288. Car Hops and Curb Service/Heiman
289. Radios: The Golden Age/Collins
290. Route 66/Witzel
291. The Empire State Building Book/Goldman and Velenti
292. New York Deco/Breeze
293. New York Architecture: A history/Berenholtz-Johnson
294. New York 1930/Stern, Dilmarting and Mellins
295. Robert AM Stern/Selected Works
296. Inside New York: Discovering Classic Interiors/Friedman-Berenholtz
297. Lost New York in Old Postcards/Kennedy
298. Manhattan Memories: A Book of Postcards of Old New York
299. Brooklyn: A Journey Through the City of Dreams/Stonehill-Morrone
300. Brooklyn Then and Now/Reiss
Thursday, August 18, 2011
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 201 THROUGH 250
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 201 THROUGH 250
201. American Art Deco/Weber
202. Art Deco: Flights of Artistic Fancy/Sternau
203. Essential Art Deco/Zaczek
204. Art Deco/Young Mi Kim
205. Florida The Sunshine State/Libero
206. Florida’s Vacation Lands/Photo-Memories
207. Up for Grabs-Through Time and Space in the Sunshine State/Rothchild
208. Classic American Railroad Terminals/Holland
209. Florida’s Great Ocean Railway: Building the Key West Extension/Gallagher
210. Flagler/Akin
211. The chosen instrument: Pan Am, Juan Trippe, the rise and fall of an American entrepreneur/Bender
212. The Highwaymen/Monroe
213. Undying Love/Harrison
214. Key West & The Florida Keys/June Keith
215. Kick Ass/Hiaasen
216. Knight/Whited
217. Flagler: Rockefeller Partner and Florida Baron/Akin
218. Money isn't important: The life of Maurice Gusman/Erlich
219. The Corpse had a Familiar Face/Buchanan
220. Sins of South Beach/Daoud
221. Miami’s Criminal Path Uncovered/Bustos&Yanez
222. Mob Over Miami/McPhee
223. Get Me Ellis Rubin/Rubin-Matera
224. Kathy: A Case of Nymphomania/Rubin & Smitten
225. Bay of Pigs -- An Oral History of Brigade 2506/Triay
226. Bay of Pigs: The Untold Story/Wyden
227. Rediscovering Art Deco USA/Capitman, Kinerk, Wilhem and Juster
228. A Journey Through American Art Deco/Zignani, Franci, Mangaroni, Zago
229. The National Trust Guide to Art Deco in America/Gebhard
230. A Guide to Art Deco Style / Van de Lemme
231. Art Deco Style/Hillier-Escritt
232. Art Deco Style/Brunhammer
233. Art Deco: An Illustrated Guide to the Decorative Style 1920-40/Van de Lemme
234. Art Deco Interiors: Decoration and Design Classics of the 1920s
and 1930s / Bayer
235. Art Deco Sourcebook/Bayer
236. The Machine Age In America 1918-1942/Wilson, Pilgrim & Tashjian
237. Terra-Cotta Skyline/Tunick
238. Streamline American Art Deco Graphic Design/Heller and Fili
239. Designing Modernity: 1885-1945/Kaplan
240. What Style Is It – A Guide to American Architecture/Poppeliers&Chambers
241. Architecture Styles Spotter's Guide: Classical Temples to Soaring Skyscrapers/Cunliffe and Loussier
242. Essential Art Deco/Zaczek
243. Depression Modern: The Thirties Style in America/Greif
244. Art Deco New York/Lowe & Lowe
245. New York Deco/Gerenholtz
246. AIA Guide to New York/White & Willensky with Leadon
247. The Flatiron: The New York Landmark and the Incomparable City that Arose with It/Sparberg Alexiou
248. New York City: A State of Mind/Moyer
249. Colors of New York/Dailey
250. New York: The Growth of the City/Howard
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 151 THROUGH 200
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 151 THROUGH 200
151. Castles in the Sand: the Live and Times of Carl Graham Fisher/Mark Foster
152. Miami A CityLife Pictorial Guide/Biondi-Arruza
153. Old Miami Beach A Case Study/Raley and Polansky
154. Miami Airport/Morton
155. Miami Alive/Blum
156. Coral Gables An American Garden City/Behar and Culot
157. Coral Gables, the City Beautiful Story/Standiford
158. Merrick Memories/City of Coral Gables
159. Coral Gables Charrette Report/City of Coral Gables-UM Architecture Skl
160. The Living Traditions of Coconut Grove/ UM Architecture School
161. Coral Castle: The Mystery of Leedskalnin and His American Stonehenge/McClure and Heffron
162. Vizcaya/Littlefield
163. A Journey Through Time, a South Dade Photographic History/George
164. Little Havana Walking Tour/George
165. Little Havana (Images of America)/George
166. Miami Memories: A Midcentury Journey/Martin, Skinner, Wolfgang-Price
167. Miami: A Backward Glance/Murrell
168. Christo: Surrounded Islands/Sopies-Volz
169. Between Two Towers: The Drawings of the School of Miami/Scully
170. A Guidebook to New Urbanism in Florida/FAU
171. Greyfields into Goldfields/CNU
172. Beyond the Box: Mid-Century Modern Architecture in Miami and New York
173. Hialeah Park-A Racing Legend/John Crittenden
174. Key Biscayne: A History of Miami’s Tropical Island and the Cape Florida Lighthouse/Blank
175. Cedar Key Florida: A History/McCarthy
176. Roadside Paradise -- The Golden Age of Florida Tourist Attractions: 1929-71/Breslauer
177. Weird Florida: Your Travel Guide to Florida’s Local Legends and Best Kept Secrets/Carlson Sceurman Moran
178. Roadside History of Florida/Waitley
179. Vanishing Florida: A Personal Guide to Sights Rarely Seen/Warner
180. Our Florida: Heritage of the Sunshine State in Stores and Photos/Dregni
181. Florida Frenzy/Crews
182. Florida Architecture: A Celebration/Baily, Greer & Howey
183. Miami’s Parrot Jungle and Gardens/Gittner
184. Black Miami in the 20th Century/Dunn
185. Casa Florida : Spanish-Style Houses from Winter Park to Coral Gables/Sully
186. Florida Modern : Residential Architecture 1945 - 1970/Hochstim
187. Key West Houses/Linsley-Aron
188. The Houses of Key West/Caemmerer
189. Over Key West/Feil
190. Key West: History of an Island of Dreams/Ogle
191. Key West Gardens and Their Stories/Frawly-Holler
192. American Urban Typologies: Key West/Valle
193. The Florida Keys: Key Largo to Key West/Howard
194. Classic Cracker: Florida’s Wood-Frame Vernacular Architecture/Haase
195. Guide to Florida Historical Walking Tours/Sandler
196. Art Deco 1910-1939/Benton, Benton and Wood
197. The Decorative Thirties/Battersby
198. The Art Deco House/Tinniswood
199. Pueblo Deco/Breeze
200. American Art Deco: Modernistic Architecture and Regionalism/Breeze
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 100 THROUGH 150
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 100 THROUGH 150
101. The Everglades: River of Grass/Stoneman Douglas
102. Everglades / Caulfield
103. Everglades: The Park Story/Robertson
104. Okeechobee: A Modern Frontier/Janosky
105. Florida: The American Guide Series/Federal Writers Project (WPA)
106. Greater Miami South Florida and The Keys/Travelog Series (1964)
107. To the Golden Cities: Pursuing the American Jewish Dream in Miami and L.A./Dash Moore
108. Jewish Life in Florida/Green&Zerivitz
109. A Sculpture of Love and Anguish : The Holocaust Memorial, Miami Beach, Florida/Treister (ordered from B&N)
110. Gimpses of South Florida Hisotry/McIver
111. The Florida Hurricane & Disaster: 1926/Reardon&1992/Kleinberg
112. Miami: The Way We Were/Kleinberg
113. My Love Affair with Miami Beach/Nagler-Singer
114. Miami Beach: Photographs of an American Dream/Scheinbaum
115. Mimo: Miami Modern Revealed/Nash & Robinson
116. Designing the Good Life: Norman M. Giller and the Development of Miami Modernism/Giller &Giller Nelson
117. The Most of Everything/Mehling
118. Billion Dollar Sandbar/Redford
119. Hub Dir In Budt/Laurence
120. Miami Poppycock/Bodek (Halmark Press)
121. City on the Edge, Miami/Portes
122. Miami Metro: The Road To Urban Unity/Wolff
123. Historic Downtown Miami/Junior League
124. From Wilderness to Metropolis/History of Architecture of Dade County
125. The Miami River and Its Tributaries/Gaby
126. Home on the River: The History of Miami River Residential Development/Broton
127. The Commodore’s Story – The Early Days on Biscayne Bay/Munroe
128. The Forgotten Frontier – Through the Lens of Ralph Middleton Munroe/Parks
129. Miami 1909 with Excerpts from Fannie Clemons’ Diary/Peters
130. Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts/Florida Theme Issue
131. Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts/American Hotels Issue
132. Miami Beach in Vintage Postcards/Kennedy
133. Miami in Vintage Postcards/Kennedy
134. Miami 21 Postcards/Browntrout
135. Wish You Were Here: a tour of America’s Great Hotels During the Golden Age of the Picture Postcard /Zaid
136. Florida Sights and Scenes of Miami/Cummings
137. Art + Architecture = Miami/Dunlop
138. Arquitectonica/Dunlop
139. Miami and South Beach Florida A Photographic Portrait
140. Miami Beach in 1920 – The Making of a Winter Resort/Lavender
141. Miami Beach Deco/Rose
142. Miami: A Sense of Place/Miami CVB
143. The Life and Times of a Deco Dowager: The Edison Hotel/Berson
144. Yesterday’s Miami/Smiley
145. Historic Photos of Greater Miami/Bramson
146. From Sandbar to Sophistication: The Story of Sunny Isles Beach/Bramson
147. South Beach: Faces and Facades/Chase
148. Miami in Our Own Words – Celebrating the First Hundred Years: The Voices and Faces of Miami Past, Present And Future/Miami Herald
149. Miami Beach, a History/Kleinberg
150. Fabulous Hoosier: A story of American Achievement/Jane Fisher
Monday, August 15, 2011
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 51 THROUGH 100
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 51 THROUGH 100
51. Morris Lapidus Architect of the American Dream/Duttmann and Schneider
52. Too Much is Never Enough/Lapidus
53. Casas/Trelles Cabarrocas Architects
54. Mizner’s Florida/Curl
55. Marion Manley: Miami's First Woman Architect/Lynn and Penabad
56. Landmark Architecture of Palm Beach/Hoffstot
57. Art Deco of the Palm Beaches/Koskoff
58. Once Upon a Time – The Story of Boca Raton/Johnson & Shapiro
59. The Season: Inside Palm Beach and America’s Richest Society/Kessler
60. Boca Rococo: How Addison Mizner Invented Florida’s Gold Coast/Seebohm
61. Tropical Splendor/Haddon
62. The Architecture of Leisure/Braden
63. Paul Rudolph -- The Florida Houses of /King-Domin
64. The Sarasota School of Architecture/Howey
65. Sarasota Modern/Weaving
66. The Lives of an Architect/Fauve
67. Quintessential Sarasota – 1920s-1950s/Lahurd
68. The Grand Tour – Traveling the World with an Architect/Seidler
69. Architect and Engineer: A Study in Sibbling Rivalry/Saint
70. Neurtra/Lamprecht
71. R.M. Schindler/Steele
72. Modernism Reborn: Mid-Century American Houses/Webb
73. Classic Modern Homes of the Thirties: 64 Designs by Neutra, Gropius, Breuer, Stone and Others (Modern House in America)/Ford
74. Miami USA/Muir
75. South Beach: Art Deco To Contemporary Architectural Photographs/Clemence
76. Discovering South Beach Deco: Walking Tours in the Miami Beach Art Deco District/Beaubien
77. Miami and the Siege of Chicago/Mailer
78. Miami/Didion
79. Over Miami/Gleason
80. Mostly Sunny Days/Miami Herald Salute to South Florida’s Heritage
81. Miami Interiors & Architecture/Florida Design
82. Miami: City of the Future/Allman
83. Life on the Hyphen—The Cuban-American Way/Firmat
84. Cuba Confidential/Bardach
85. This is Cuba—An Outlaw Culture Survives/Corbett
86. Castro’s Cuba, Cuba’s Fidel/Lockwood
87. Going to Miami: Exiles, Tourists, and Refugees in the New America/Rieff
88. Miami Now!: Immigration, Ethnicity, & Social Change/Grenier & Stepick III
89. Woggles and Cheese Holes, The History of Miami Beach's Hotels/ Kleinberg
90. Miami Beach Memories: A Nostalgic Chronicle of Days Gone By/Biondi
91. Highway A1A: Florida at the Edge/Hiller
92. In the Spirit of Miami Beach/Leddick
93. Miami Beach (Scenes of America)/Kennedy
94. Cool Spots: Miami/South Beach/Teneues
95. Icons: Miami /Taschen
96. Tropic of Cracker/Burt
97. Becalmed in the Mullet Latitudes: Al Burt’s Florida/Burt
98. Dreamers, Schemers and Scalawags: The Florida Chronicles
Volume I/McIver
99. Totch: A Life in the Everglades / Brown
100. Tales of Old Florida/Oppel&Meisel
Sunday, August 14, 2011
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 1 THROUGH 50
THE GREATEST ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM BOOK LIST EVER -- 1 THROUGH 50
1. Historical Sketches and Sidelights of Miami, Florida/Cohen
2. The Making of Miami Beach 1933-1941/LeJeune/Shulman
3. Miami/Weisdorf
4. Hollywood Florida/Wilpon
5. Deco Delights Preserving the Beauty and Joy of Miami Beach Architecture/Capitman and Brooke
6. Tropical Deco The Architecture and Design of Old Miami Beach/Rizzoli
7. Miami/Visalli
8. Miami/Howard
9. Miami/Stortini (Whitecap)
10. The Life and Times of Miami Beach/Armbruster
11. South Beach/Wisser
12. South Beach Style/Brooke
13. Building Marvelous Miami/Patricios
14. Saving South Beach/Stofik
15. Miami City-Ciudad plus Façade of Ocean Drive/Between 5-15 streets
16. Miami Ciudad-City 2007
17. Miami Trends and Traditions/Schezen and Dunlop
18. Miami: Mediterranean Splendor and Deco Dreams/Dunlop
19. The New Cities: Modern Cities/Lejeune
20. Miami Tropical: Architecture and Urbanism in Las Americas/Aula 3
21. Miami Hot and Cool/Cerwinske and Brooke
22. Miami, Architecture of the Tropics/Culot, Lejeune
23. Miami’s Historic Neighborhoods/Matkov
24. Miami City of Dreams/Maltz
25. Miami, the Magic City (Urban Tapestry Series)/Veciana-Suarez
26. Miami, the Magic City/Parks
27. Miami, The Magic City: Images of America/Bramson
28. Miami Beach: Images of America/Bramson
29. Boulevard of Dreams: A Pictorial History of Biscayne Park, Miami Shores and North Miami/Bramson
30. Miami Architecture: An AIA Guide Featuring Downtown, the Beaches, and Coconut Grove/Shulman, Robinson & Donnelly
31. Stucco and Pastels: Scenes and Structures along Miami's Allapattah Rail/Mindheim
32. Miami Interiors/Taschen
33. Miami Houses/Reschke
34. Moon Over Miami/Jack Kofoed
35. The Florida Story/Kofoed
36. Miami The American Crossroad/Parks and Bush
37. Miami Memoirs/John Sewell (new pictorial edition by Arva Moore Parks)
38. Memories of Old Miami/Frazure&Smiley
39. Miami: Oasis/Guerrini
40. Romer’s Miami
41. Miami Beach: Blueprint of an Eden: Lives Seen Through the Prism of Family and Place/Doner-Wolfson-Gordon
42. Miami Gateway to the Americas/Gonzalez-Pando
43. South Beach Deco – Step by Step/Chase & Russell
44. A Walking Tour of Lincoln Road, South Beach/Plotner
45. Ocean Drive Guidebook: Ask a Local/Plotner
46. Miami Then and Now/Parks (2003 Version)
47. Miami Then & Now/Parks (1993 Version)
48. Miami in the Spotlight/Greater Miami Convention & Visitors Bureau
49. Miami The Sophisticated Tropics/Beebe
50. Historic Landscapes of Florida/Ceo and Lombard
Saturday, August 13, 2011
MORE FAVORITE URBAN LINKS
DESIGN FOR ALL FOUNDATION
The multiligual Francesc Aragall runs Design for All Foundation from beautiful Barcelona.
The organization is a wealth of knowledge about design for people with disabilities.
His Flag Cities program has encourage municipalities all over Europe to adopt a code of conduct for improving mobility and livability for disabled people.
http://designforall.org/
Friday, August 12, 2011
MORE FAVORITE URBAN LINKS
US GREEN BUILDING COUNCIL AND LEED
Is there green washing going on? Sure.
Has green building become as fad as popular with celebrities and giving their kids weird names? Yep.
Is there any doubt that we can't keep producing sprawl with throwaway strip malls, housing, etc.? Absolutely.
That's why we need LEED-certification and why everyone should bookmarke the U.S. Green Building Council's website.
http://www.usgbc.org/DisplayPage.aspx?CMSPageID=1988
Thursday, August 11, 2011
MORE FAVORITE URBAN LINKS
Doug Farr is one of our favorite preservationists.
He's also a quote machine for contenct-hungry smart growth journalists.
Farr is one of the leaders in the Green Architecture movement, helping to form what is now the standard measure for sustainability -- LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design)
And just how does he call his website the Farrside without upsetting Gary Larson (even with that extra R)?!
FARR ASSOCIATES -- Architecture Planning Preservation
http://www.farrside.com/Default.aspx
Wednesday, August 10, 2011
MORE FAVORITE URBAN LINKS
DUANY PLATER-ZYBERK AND COMPANY (DPZ)
Andres Duany is a smug SOB.
Arrogant too.
But when you give birth to a movement, we suppose you're allowed to let your ego get in the way of things.
Duany's also a rock star when it comes to entertaining audiences -- both experts and lay persons -- with anecdotes and a comic sense of timing that turns potentially bland planning into a life process seemingly as essential as breathing.
Lizz Plater-Zyberk is the more softly spoken of the pair.
But she's brilliant and somehow manages to lead the University of Miami's School of Architecture as dean for nearly a decade, while also continuing to develop the New Urbanism.
Together, the pair created Miami 21 -- the form based code adopted by our folkloric hometown.
http://www.dpz.com/
Tuesday, August 9, 2011
MORE FAVORITE URBAN LINKS
J A I M E C O R R E A A N D A S S O C I A T E S
Architectural Design • Regulations • Urban Design
Jaime Correa is one of the most down-to-earth, self-depricating brilliant people you will ever find.
Besides holding a professorship at the University of Miami, Correa is active all over the globe in advocating for properly-scaled urban design.
http://correa-associates.com/
Monday, August 8, 2011
SETH HARRY & ASSOCIATES, INC. Architects and Planners
The world needs more Seth Harrys.
He is more than an architect.
He is more than a town planner.
He is an expert at urbanism who also is a gifted artist that pains haunting watercolors of main streets, town centers and other elements of good planning.
Seth also is a gentleman who always has time for writers, students, fellow urbanists, etc.
His undertanding of retail and the changing urban economy is better (and much more eloquently spoken) than the most PHd economists.
http://www.sethharry.com/
Sunday, August 7, 2011
MORE FAVORITE URBAN LINKS
MUSEUM OF DISABILITY
The Museum of disABILITY History is dedicated to advancing the understanding, acceptance and independence of people with disabilities.
The Museum's exhibits, collections, archives and educational programs create awareness and a platform for dialogue and discovery.
The online site is a great reference point.
The Buffalo-based bricks and mortar museum is an unsung hero.
http://www.museumofdisability.org/home.asp
Saturday, August 6, 2011
MORE FAVORITE URBAN LINKS
THE CRESPOGRAM REPORT
He's a probably poco loco.
He admits upfront that he's a former bank robber who has made his share of mistakes.
And he's on the money more often than all of Miami's supposed best print and electronic reporters combined.
Henry Crespo, you might not be Miami's most lovable, but you are its most in-the-know.
You are a must-read by the politicians that loath you, and an essential site bookmarked by the rest of use who wade through you foul language and obsessions to get the best breaking news in town.
http://www.thecrespogramreport.com/
Friday, August 5, 2011
MORE FAVORITE URBAN LINKS
Thursday, August 4, 2011
MORE FAVORITE URBAN LINKS
TERRAIN -- A JOURNAL OF THE BUILT & NATURAL ENVIRONMENTS
Terrain Editor-in-Chief Simmons B. Buntin works tirelessly to produce this "twice yearly online journal searching for that interface—the integration—among the built and natural environments, that might be called the soul of place."
We quote:
"It is not definitely about urban form, nor solely about natural landscapes. It is not precisely about human culture, nor necessarily about ecology. It is, rather, a celebration of the symbiosis between the built and natural environments where it exists, and an examination and discourse where it does not."
"The literary, journalistic, and artistic works contained with Terrain.org are of the highest quality, submitted by a variety of contributors for a diverse audience, including some of the finest material previously appearing in Terra Nova: Nature & Culture. The works may be idealistic, technical, historical, philosophical, and more. Above all, they focus on the environments around us—the built and natural environments—that both affect and are affected by the human species."
http://www.terrain.org/
Wednesday, August 3, 2011
MORE FAVORITE URBAN LINKS
SMART GROWTH AMERICA
Smart growth is about Main Street.
Smart growth is about an easier commute.
Smart growth is about properly budgeting our shrinking federal, state and local revenues to make sure we enhance communities that promote quality of life and transit options -- not sprawl and unstainable lifestyles.
http://www.smartgrowthamerica.org/
Tuesday, August 2, 2011
MORE FAVORITE URBAN LINKS
STREETSBLOG
Above all else, Streetsblog is the defender of the pedestrian.
It carries news stories about truck drivers, motorists and others who selfishly fly through crosswalks and bump over curbs, seneselessly killing pedestrians, bicyclists, wheelchair users and others.
The site also has a lot of information on turning streets into more livable places.
http://www.streetsblog.org/
Monday, August 1, 2011
MORE FAVORITE URBAN LINKS
WALK FRIENDLY COMMUNITIES
We quote:
"Walk Friendly Communities is a national recognition program developed to encourage towns and cities across the U.S. to establish or recommit to a high priority for supporting safer walking environments."
"The WFC program will recognize communities that are working to improve a wide range of conditions related to walking, including safety, mobility, access, and comfort."
http://www.walkfriendly.org/index.cfm
Labels:
WALK FRIENDLY COMMUNITIES
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