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By Dan at 2009/05/13 - 5:00pm
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Check out some of teofilo's recent threads featuring hundreds of photos of small cities and towns in New Mexico, Colorado, and Arizona. Okay, Colorado Springs really isn't a small town, but the rest of them ...
Aztec, New Mexico
Boulder, Colorado
Chimayo, New Mexico
Colorado Springs, Colorado
Cortez, Colorado
Flagstaff, Arizona
Golden, Colorado
Manitou Springs, Colorado
Pie Town, New Mexico
Springerville, Arizona
Trinidad, Colorado
Winslow, Arizona
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By pcjournal at 2009/05/12 - 5:00pm
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I am preparing an article for the Planning Commissioners Journal focusing on the situation described below. I would welcome feedback on ways of improving on the following all-too-common scenario: contentious, non-productive public hearings.
Many planning commissioners, at least occasionally, have had the experience of arriving at a public hearing to find a large crowd of citizens angry about a proposed development in their neighborhood. Often the hearing begins with a lengthy presentation by the applicant's architects, engineers, planners, and (sometimes) lawyers explaining the merits of their project and why it must be approved -- followed by a line of residents coming to the microphone to highlight a lengthy list of problems with the project. And often, the temperature in the meeting room feels like it's rising.
Planning commissioners often feel thrust into the middle of controversial projects. Yes, it is their job to decide (or recommend) on the application, but they may ask themselves why many issues between the developer and neighborhood haven't been resolved in advance. At some public hearings, planning commissioners may wish they could call a time out and get the two sides to sit down and work out some of the issues.
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By Dan at 2009/05/12 - 2:28am
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We've got many of the old Perry Norton and Voices articles moved over to the new server. There's still the old Post of the Day and Site of the Day articles to move over. It's a copy-and-paste operation, and I'm going to try to move ten articles over every day.
There haven't been any problems with the new server, except for a now-fixed glitch where Forums posts that included both the words "select" and "from" would result in an error.
Restoring the old front page theme will take some mad CSS skillz, yo. Free time is at a premium right now, so we've got to deal with this default theme for now. Sorry.
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By Suburb Repairman at 2009/05/11 - 5:00pm
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I have been asked to evaluate whether tattoo/piercing studios should be allowed as a by-right or conditional use in our Central Business District; they are currently prohibited. This is a small city of 50,000+ with a university having 30,000 enrolled. The university is adjacent, and practically a part of downtown.
There are currently two tattoo studios in downtown, which are legal non-conforming uses from years ago.
I'm a bit indifferent about the whole thing, but I've never been in a place with a mega-high concentration of tattoo studios either to see the effects. Any thoughts on what I should consider as I evaluate how to treat these things?
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By jsk1983 at 2009/05/10 - 5:00pm
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Do such things exist beyond the general city wide ordinances? I'm working with a CDC centered in the Chicago Lawn neighborhood on the south side of Chicago and we are hoping to improve the aesthetics of the commercial corridor. One thing we noticed is that many of the signs are hand painted or otherwise unattractive and thus wondered if there was any way to regulate this. Obviously there are plenty of sign regulations out there, but they tend to be for historic districts and affluent suburbs.
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By High Desert Drifter at 2009/05/09 - 5:00pm
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As a rural planner I am frequently frustrated by developer requests for master plan amendments and zone changes to allow for high density development in undeveloped areas of the county. These requests are typically approved without consideration to the long-term costs of development activities or with much consideration to the additional value that the higher density provides to the developer.
There seems to be a mindset that everyone has a 'right to develop' without consideration of the externalities of development that are expected to be paid for later by the public. This strikes me as similar to the practice of not considering the cost of pollution that has led to the cap and trade of pollution credits being proposed by some in government.
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By Arenniks at 2009/05/07 - 5:00pm
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I want to develop a list (say 5 to 10) of large (100 to 1,000 acre) “destination retail” developments that employ the best current design practices, preferably developed in the last 5 years. Best current design practices to include such items as creative placemaking, good traffic and pedestrian management with focus on good walkability. The traffic management component is important due to the large number of people involved, so good circulation of vehicles in and out of the development is important. Transit oriented design is not a primary criteria, although provisions for future addition would be a nice side feature.
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By Dan at 2009/04/22 - 2:13am
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Cyburbia recently moved to a new server. The old content management system was taken offline because it is not compatible with PHP 5.0. Buzz (blog feeds), Site of the Day, Post of the Day, and other features that used to be on the front page of Cyburbia will return shortly, after the content management system is updated.
The Cyburbia Forums are active, with thousands of active users and hundreds of new posts daily.
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By fourthconchord at 2008/06/05 - 4:00pm
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A small bedroom community of 10,000 population does not currently have a true downtown. There is no street level retail, though the town is not completely sprawled out. There is some light density as retail is about 30' off the road, houses are about 20' from the street. The city is in the process of defining a formal downtown centered around public buildings and some of the most active retail. Does anyone here know of any other towns that have done something similar? Does anyone have any experience or tips for a community trying to do this?
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By Whose Yur Planner at 2008/06/04 - 4:00pm
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Got this via Law of the Land Blog. Wonder if they will include any planners?
Under the leadership of Edward J. Sullivan, immediate past chair of the ABA State and Local Government Law Section, and a member of the Portland, Oregon, firm of Garvey Schubert Barer, the State and Local Government Law Section and the Administrative Law Section created a joint task force to focus on developing fair procedures for the enactment and administration of land use regulations. This multi-year effort, with input from Association members and others in the field, has resulted in a proposed model act that will be the subject of discussion in August 2008 as the matter is reviewed by the ABA House of Delegates.
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