place or node, Madrona edition

Continuing the dialogue, place, or node? Whether focused on pavement, small business, bus or auto, different perspectives emphasize dominant features of our urban landscape. What do you see?

urbanist parking dilemmas, and the dawn of the “node wars”

Just posted in seattlepi.com, a contextual take on recent news:

comparative urbanism, part 13 (decaying infrastructure edition)

In the Museum of Rome, a thought leader responds to decaying infrastructure in the provinces to the northwest.

learning about due diligence and managing redevelopment risk

How to proceed with due diligence for redevelopment during challenging economic times?

Here is a Powerpoint presented on January 7, 2010 in Vail, Colorado at the Law Education Institute/Colorado Bar Association National CLE Conference which outlines basic approaches and issues:

wind power, indigenous culture and another Sound

News from Massachusetts and a proposed wind farm’s impact upon visual access to Nantucket Sound shows the role of the Federal government in balancing energy needs against the rights of two Native American tribes.

The dynamic of “traditional cultural property” consultation under the National Historic Preservation Act is not new, and often occurs with transportation infrastructure (including locally in the context of environmental review for initial light rail link ten years ago).

Nonetheless, Abby Goodnough’s article below summarizes the dilemma in particularly modern terms for the Obama administration: Should Nantucket Sound be listed on the National Register of Historic Places to honor the cultural traditions of “the people of the first light”? If so, what impact would such listing have on an already controversial Cape Wind project?