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Cyburbia - urban planning community -
I know that the International Economic Development Council offers one and Penn State offers one online… I’m talking about certificates that are offered on their own, not those offered concurrently with Master’s degrees…
Has anyone here gotten one? Any thoughts on the different programs? How they are viewed in the workforce (as opposed to going for the whole turkey and getting the master’s)? Online v. in person? Worth the money?
Thanks!
Planetizen - Urban Planning, Design and Development Network
A roundtable discussion on the projected growth in the Bay Area of California, and the planning tools being unveiled that will help mitigate the projected increase of an additional 2 million inhabitants to the region by 2035.
Planetizen - Urban Planning, Design and Development Network
American artist Mike Boucher constructed a full-sized replica of a standard American suburban home to float outside the Venice Biennale art exhibition. Instead, the house sank, suggesting new meanings for the artwork.
Cyburbia - urban planning community -
Said use in X zoning district requires a use variance at the time it is reviewed. It is approved. 10 years later the zoning code is amended to permit said use as a special use within X zoning district.
What’s is the zoning status of the use which was granted a use variance 10 years earlier?
Alternately, a use is a special use in X zoning district, but 10 years later is becomes a prohibited use (requires use variance).
What is the zoning status of said use after it becomes a prohibited use?
Let’s hear from the throbbing brain: What do you think or know you would do in these situations?
Cyburbia - urban planning community -
http://www.smartgrowthamerica.org/images/sgalogosmall.jpg Smart Growth Around America
Huge, sprawling “mega-schools” built at the edges of town aren’t required by law in Minnesota.
But minimum acreage recommendations from the Minnesota Department of Education have forced local communities into a one-size-fits-all approach, resulting in new schools that are unwalkable and unconnected to the rest of their communities.
Historic neighborhood schools have been abandoned. Schools and families are burdened with excessive transportation costs of driving or busing kids to school, because it is impossible for kids to walk or bike to the new large schools on the edges of town.
On July 1st, this is going to change in Minnesota.
Due to the hard work of SGA coalition member 1000 Friends of Minnesota and other advocates, the new Minnesota Education Omnibus Law (HF 2), signed by Governor Tim Pawlenty two weeks ago, includes provisions to eliminate minimum acreage requirements for schools, and to remove the bias against renovating, rather than rebuilding, old schools. The law goes into effect at the end of the month.
John Bailey of 1000 Friends of Minnesota refers to the old rules as “arbitrary and outdated state-wide requirements.” These state rules required extraordinarily large lots for schools — 40 acres for a middle school, and 60 for a high school, for instance — no matter what the desire of the local community. And as schools aged, the laws were stacked in favor of constructing new schools on large lots rather than renovating the old ones, even if renovation was a cheaper option preferred by the community.
The acreage “recommendations” resulted in historic neighborhood schools in walkable locations often being shuttered in favor of new mega-campuses on the edge of town, removing the option of children walking and biking to a smaller school in their neighborhood.
The new provisions are part of a larger push to align transportation and land use policies with Minnesota’s green initiatives — something supported by a broad segment of the populace. But a more central issue at hand was the ability of localities to make school siting decisions on their own — without the state treating the issue the same regardless of the size, location or preference of the community.
“We had broad consensus across party lines that this requirement was an unwarranted intrusion on local control,” said Bailey. “Local communities are reasonably intelligent folks; they can figure out where to put a school.”
Does your state still have minimum acreage requirements?
The Council of Educational Facility Planners (CEFPI) revised their “bible” for school builders, “The Guide for Planning Educational Facilities,” in 2004, removing all minimum acreage requirements for schools. The American Planning Association pointed out that because “a one-size-fits-all approach is dated and can work counter to a variety of goals, the new guide encourages communities to analyze their needs in order to make appropriate siting decisions.”
Even though CEFPI has changed course, many states still have these outdated recommendations on the books.
Planetizen - Urban Planning, Design and Development Network
A new growth management law in Florida is both good news and bad news, says Jane Healy of the Orlando Sentinel.
Cyburbia - urban planning community -
Cyburbia - urban planning community -


Look at the people’s sillohouettes particularly in the second image - why are so many folks striking hipster fashion poses? Are they so overwhelmed with the building’s sense of modernity they are unable to control the impulse? Why do I hear Brian Eno’s ambient ‘Music for Airports’ playing in my head when I look at that?
Has anyone else ever got this impression? Or are all the developments in your neighborhoods peopled by young, beautiful, slick, ambitious, soap opera lookalikes? Just curious.
Edit: I’m putting out a bounty - show us the most outrageous examples of architectural rendering whitewash you can find and you can win Big Cash Prizes and Rewards!
Planetizen - Urban Planning, Design and Development Network
The Morris County Planning Board indicates that no new residential subdivisions of 20 or more lots were received in 2008, which signals the end of large-tract developments.
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