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  • Thursday, September 22, 2022 5:08 PM | Deleted user

    David Lee and his late partner, Stull and Lee founder Don Stull, are 2022 recipients of the Harvard Graduate School of Design (GSD) Alumni Award. The award, which was founded and led by the GSD Alumni Council, recognizes and celebrates "the diversity, leadership, range and impact of GSD alumni within their communities and across their areas of practice."

    David wrote: "Don was a friend and mentor and a truly exceptional leader and pioneer as a Black man in a predominantly White profession, having established our award-winning architecture, urban design, and planning firm in 1966. After starting with the firm while still in grad school in 1969, I became a named partner in 1983. I was pleased to take the helm of Stull and Lee, Inc. as president after Don's retirement in 2013, continuing to grow our portfolio of urban design and architecture projects around the country.

    I am truly grateful for the many personal and professional relationships made during my years as a GSD student and adjunct faculty member. My GSD experiences were priceless and I appreciate the support and encouragement of family and friends through the years!"


  • Wednesday, September 21, 2022 9:42 AM | Daphne Politis (Administrator)

    "The city is eyeing a controversial proposal to end parking requirements at new buildings in an effort to lower development costs and create more housing."

    https://www.bostonglobe.com/2022/09/20/business/will-less-parking-mean-more-housing-cambridge/?et_rid=1767609057&s_campaign=todaysheadlines%3Anewsletter

  • Friday, July 29, 2022 10:10 AM | Daphne Politis (Administrator)

    More likely to trip chain or to transport children and groceries, women around the world stand to benefit from easily accessible cargo bikes.

    With vast gender differences impacting mobility choices, urban planners and researchers have been working to uncover workable solutions for closing the gap and ensuring women have the same transport opportunities as men. Some cities, like Tartu, Estonia, have approached this through a reconsideration of the built environment, reorganizing their city to create 15-minute areas, with facilities for everyday life — supermarkets, schools, doctors — all within a walking distance from the place of living

    https://womenmobilize.org/can-cargo-bikes-close-the-gender-mobility-gap/

  • Sunday, July 24, 2022 6:31 PM | Daphne Politis (Administrator)

    “The planning is based on questions such as: How do we want to live and get around in urban spaces in the future? What qualities are important to us as individuals and as a community? And what functionalities can’t we do without?” explains Constanze Döll, press secretary for the Tegel Projekt, which is developing the area, called the Schumacher Quartier. While the final designs are not yet complete, the project has several guidelines. First: People take priority, not cars."

    https://www.fastcompany.com/90769791/an-abandoned-berlin-airport-is-being-transformed-into-climate-neutral-car-free-neighborhood?fbclid=IwAR1A4A0XFz27_o401ZbFaehpuOFcmNAxDRyjG9KuvuW9IAcbStDI7PyHj-k

  • Friday, June 03, 2022 9:25 AM | Daphne Politis (Administrator)

    "Spatial age segregation occurs when individuals of different ages do not occupy the same space and, thereby, lack mutual interactions. Evidence suggests that bringingdifferent age groups together could have a number of societal benefits that range from the reduction of ageism and the risk of isolation in later life to the promotion of socialization between the young and the old."

    https://reader.elsevier.com/reader/sd/pii/S0198971522000734?token=F554F9B72A067AFDF568AAE50FDCD07A4E96A1903FD9DAF96D6499252B997316C963579AC697F49B7B65EBC97A1A9A70&originRegion=eu-west-1&originCreation=20220603132356

  • Thursday, May 19, 2022 11:34 AM | Daphne Politis (Administrator)

    A plan backed by New York City Mayor Eric Adams would repurpose 25 percent of the city’s street space for multimodal transportation and pedestrian plazas.

    https://www.planetizen.com/news/2022/05/117186-nyc-25x25-plan-would-reclaim-13-central-parks-cars?utm_source=newswire&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=news-05192022&mc_cid=a88b4593bf&mc_eid=b9p0fICGm0

  • Wednesday, May 18, 2022 5:45 PM | Deleted user

    Former long-term CPM president Larry Koff's letter against closing the Hynes Convention Center is a good read. 

    The Boston Globe_Death of the Hynes would cap the neglect of a valuable resource_04 27 22.pdf



  • Thursday, May 12, 2022 1:02 PM | Leonardi Aray (Administrator)

    Carol Todreas, CPM members, reimagines retail for the downtown

    Read Carol's article

  • Monday, April 18, 2022 10:40 AM | Daphne Politis (Administrator)

    The City of Austin says it will give people from gentrifying neighborhoods priority in the application process for more than two dozen homes it's selling to low-income families,” reports Audrey McGlinchy for KUT.

    “This is the first time the city plans to use what it calls a ‘preference policy,’ which was approved by council members in 2018,” according to McGlincy. Planetizen shared news of the new policy in September 2021, when the city identified a development site for the program. The deployment of the law, originally intended for late 2019, was delayed by the pandemic.

    “To benefit from the program, people first need to be making less than Austin's family median income; for a single-person household that amounts to $69,250 a year,” according to McGlinchy. “Additionally, people need to prove they've been affected by gentrification or that they have generational ties to the city. That can mean they live or have lived — as far back as 2000 — in a neighborhood in the process of gentrifying; that's the process in which wealthy people move to a historically middle- or low-income neighborhood and housing costs rise.”

    https://www.planetizen.com/news/2022/04/116839-austin-now-taking-applications-its-right-return-gentrifying-neighborhoods?utm_source=newswire&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=news-04182022&mc_cid=53a1ad4cfc&mc_eid=b9p0fICGm0

  • Tuesday, April 12, 2022 10:27 PM | Daphne Politis (Administrator)

    “Roads and street networks are designed for kids to walk in a safe manner,” Kato said. Among the factors, he said: Drivers in Japan are taught to yield to pedestrians. Speed limits are low. Neighborhoods have small blocks with lots of intersections. That means kids have to cross the street a lot—but also keeps drivers going slow, out of self-interest if nothing else.

    The streets themselves are also different. Many small streets do not have raised sidewalks but depend on pedestrians, cyclists, and drivers to share the road. Curbside parking is rare, which creates better visibility for drivers and pedestrians and helps give the smaller streets of big Japanese cities their distinctive feel. In fact, I first heard about Hajimete no otsukai from Rebecca Clements, a research fellow at the University of Sydney who has written a dissertation on Japan’s approach to parking: Car-buyers must show proof of an off-street parking space to make their purchase. For Clements, the show is evidence of how Japan gives children a “right to the city....

    https://slate.com/business/2022/04/old-enough-netflix-do-japanese-parents-really-send-toddlers-on-errands.html?via=rss_socialflow_facebook&fbclid=IwAR21j4F6QzDVFY7oErQJFDgrZINxSyQXicqbphsW-a8v8V9tLsZ9EG3kVXY

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