Ever wondered just how a bike lane is installed, pedestrian plazas get built, or a greenway takes shape? I recently rode around the city with two planners in the Mayor’s Office of Transportation and Utilities and lived to write about it. Come along with Eyes on the Street for the first in a series we’re calling Multi-modal with MOTU. [Part 1 of 2]
Planning
Urban planning is relatively new as an official profession, but most settlements and cities were created with varying degrees of consideration for layout and functionality. All cities have been shaped and reshaped, from their street fabric to the details of the sewer lines all elements of the city are brought together into a cohesive whole.
It is not something we’re always conscious of, but our lives are shaped by urban planning – how far we live from our work, what transportation we use to get around, the size of our neighborhood park (if we have one), etc. Literacy in many different disciplines is required in order to shape the built environment, but planning mainly focuses on the integration of land use and transportation needs.
What constitutes good city planning has evolved over the years. For example, the urban renewal movement of the mid 20th century used eminent domain to tear down thousands of blocks of structures because they were considered slums. Many people were displaced without relocation plans from their neighborhoods, many of which would have likely been reborn today considering the trends of many current downtown renewal projects. Further, land that was once agricultural suddenly became ripe for residential development once a large-capacity road was built nearby, which has slowly deflated America’s farming industries.
Sealing vacants | Sink City revisited | Nutter signs open data order | 48 SEPTA workers win Powerball | Hidden City festival
Debate over Registered Community Organizations heats up
On Tuesday the Planning Commission approved new regulations that redefine the role of community groups in the zoning process. The rules are aimed at fostering a more transparent process, but will everyone get on board?
Exploring the Lower Schuylkill’s gritty and green potential
Come along as Eyes on the Street explores the industrial landscape of the Lower Schuylkill to see what on earth is on those 4000 acres and why we should care about the Master Planning effort underway to chart a new course for the area. Public meetings about the plan are this Wednesday and Thursday evening.
Next American City launches Forefront, new site
Next American City, the Philly-based urban policy publication, has gone online only. Today Next American City relaunched its website and introduced Forefront, a weekly longform online publication.
April 16-20: Tom Finkelpearl | Homeowner Workshops | Archaeology in Philly | Urban Heat Islands | Lower Schuylkill Master Plan open houses
High Noon at Norris Square: Dueling over St. Boniface and rezoning
Council Member Maria Quiñones-Sanchez and Norris Square Civic Association are in a pitched fight over the redevelopment of St. Boniface Church on Norris Square and a rezoning proposal that would kill the project.
2.0 University Place breaks ground | mending Roxborough Victorians | Philly’s urban revival and reform roadblocks | Nutter on violence, race, and healing cities
‘Urbanized’ screening at PennDesign Thursday 4/12
Gary Hustwit is screening his urban design documentary ‘Urbanized’ at PennDesign on Thursday (April 12), followed by a panel discussion with James Corner and Ricky Burdett.












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