CONSULTING PLANNERS OF MASSACHUSETTS

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  • Tuesday, March 28, 2017 4:23 PM | Daphne Politis (Administrator)

    Thanks to this free open-source mapping tool, you can digitally demolish your city’s loathed urban expressways and reveal what lies beneath.

    Imagine there’s no highway, it’s easy if you try—even easier, since now there’s a map for that. With this latest cartographic venture, you can make the concrete superslabs and soul-sucking underpasses that are the scourge of urbanists everywhere disappear with a mere click.

    https://www.citylab.com/design/2017/03/the-magic-of-disappearing-highways-map/520263/?utm_source=SFFB

  • Tuesday, March 28, 2017 4:17 PM | Daphne Politis (Administrator)


    Flâneuse: Women Walk the City in Paris, New York, Tokyo, Venice, and London

    How women writers and artists, from Virginia Woolf to Sophie Calle, found inspiration and freedom by navigating cities on foot.

    From the French verb flâner, the flâneuror ‘one who wanders aimlessly,’ was born in the first half of the nineteenth century, in the glass-and-steel covered passages of Paris. When Haussmann started slicing his bright boulevards through the dark uneven crusts of houses like knives through a city of cindered chèvre, the flâneur wandered those too, taking in the urban spectacle. A figure of masculine privilege and leisure, with time and money and no immediate responsibilities to claim his attention, the flâneur understands the city as few of its inhabitants do, for he has memorised it with his feet. Every corner, alleyway and stairway, has the ability to plunge him into rêverie. What happened here? Who passed by here? What does this place mean? The flâneur, attuned to the chords that vibrate throughout his city, knows without knowing.

    https://longreads.com/2017/03/02/flaneuse-women-walk-the-city-in-paris-new-york-tokyo-venice-and-london/?utm_content=buffer7498b&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer



  • Tuesday, March 21, 2017 4:42 PM | Daphne Politis (Administrator)

    "It is NOT written by a planner, but instead by someone from outside the profession looking inward — Mr. Settis is an archaeologist and an art historian. Secondly, the topic is timely and universal — Venice’s current situation is a microcosm of issues, problems, difficulties, and debates taking place in historical and destination cities around the globe. The advantage of utilizing Venice as the focal point is that nearly everyone has either heard of the city or has a mental image of the city, even if they have never been there...The simple premise Mr. Settis articulates throughout his outstanding book is, “Why not focus on what made Venice great in the first place instead of trying to re-invent it or recreate it?” Don’t kill a city’s soul by turning it into something it was never meant to be. Not every city is meant to be a Las Vegas, an Orlando, or a Macao. This is a point that city leaders worldwide should be reminding themselves of constantly."

    https://panethos.wordpress.com/2017/02/11/the-most-important-urban-planning-book-of-our-time/

  • Tuesday, March 21, 2017 4:10 PM | Daphne Politis (Administrator)
    "Solutions to the affordability crisis lie on a spectrum. At one end, an increase in subsidized housing can help those with lower incomes. At the other end, an increase in housing of all kinds in walkable places can help alleviate the rising prices due to high demand for low supply. However, as I wrote about previously, one potential problem with this latter solution is that most developers and cities are building new housing for city living, but few, if any, are building housing for neighborhood living. Missing Middle Housing provides a critical middle solution: affordable-by-design workforce housing that helps meet the demand for walkable neighborhood living."

    http://www.moderncities.com/article/2017-jan-the-missing-middle-affordable-housing-solution

  • Tuesday, March 21, 2017 3:57 PM | Daphne Politis (Administrator)

    A columnist attributes the success of President-elect Trump's anti-Muslim rhetoric with a rise in potentially illegal land use decisions around the state of Virginia.

    https://www.planetizen.com/node/90602?utm_source=newswire&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=news-01122017


  • Thursday, March 09, 2017 9:52 AM | Daphne Politis (Administrator)

    Female traffic light signals to go up at pedestrian crossings as Committee for Melbourne tackles "unconscious bias."

    Read More: http://mobile.abc.net.au/news/2017-03-07/female-traffic-light-signals-melbourne-pedestrian-crossing/8330560?pfmredir=sm

  • Thursday, March 09, 2017 9:43 AM | Daphne Politis (Administrator)

    "A good time to highlight the significance of women and feminine energy in their communities."

    Read More: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/placemaking-spotlight-feminine-energy-community-yang-luo-branch

  • Thursday, March 09, 2017 9:31 AM | Daphne Politis (Administrator)

    "An incremental approach is being championed by the London, UK-based, Massive Small Collective. The organization is at the centre of an emergent movement of international reach, based on "Massive Small" principles of urban development.  The ethos underpinning the Massive Small approach to urban planning is that "many small interventions collectively have a massive impact."

    Read More:

    http://thinkstr.co/resilient-cities-massive-small-approach/?utm_content=bufferbd782&utm_medium=social&utm_source=linkedin.com&utm_campaign=buffer

  • Monday, March 06, 2017 1:11 PM | Daphne Politis (Administrator)

    http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/editorials/ct-people-plazas-emanuel-aldermen-chicago-edit-0301-jm-20170228-story.html

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