revised postcards of urban renewal, cottage style and green

Just under a month ago, a myurbanist entry presented further imagery of renewal in Seattle’s Madrona Woods–with continuing reconstruction photos of a “Thoreau-like cottage”, first shown here.

Today, showing more replacement than reconstruction, a more expansive home rises from the original footprint.

In the era of sustainability, this form of site intensification is one way the urban setting will redevelop while preserving neighborhood look and feel.


today’s placemaking dialogue unfolds: “urbanter”?

Last week, the entry “a palette for placemaking” provided an original, myurbanist rendering of contiguous downtown Seattle urban blocks ripe for contemporary placemaking upon sale of the associated property assemblage.

A resulting Facebook exchange, captured below, shows the ensuing discussion, recalling the “urbandwidth” neologism created here on July 19 and noted in Planetizen.

Is another word in order to describe such social media exchanges? “Urbanter”?

urbanist online discoveries, part 2

An weekly inventory of online articles and references can be insightful and of immediate assistance to practitioners in urban redevelopment venues.

Every week, Dallas attorney Bob Voelker (@bobdal on Twitter) assembles helpful compilations of such resources gleaned from recent tweets and other resources.

You can find his entries under the links, New Urbanism News and Multifamily Development News.

Thanks to Bob for the resources and the mentions of myurbanist in the past.

announcing more urban insights at urbanpointofview.com

Today marks the launch of a related site, UrbanPointofView, which provides a compilation and “portfolio” of my interdisciplinary approach to urban land use issues.

For an integrated summary of urban insights, at home and abroad, please see the embedded link below.

a palette for placemaking

From the 23rd floor of Touchstone’s West 8th building in Seattle, a palette for placemaking frames the northerly view towards Elliott Bay. The 12 acre assemblage of parking lots and low rise uses is owned by the Clise family, who attempted to market the properties en masse in 2007 to no avail. The original, poster-like rendering below invites thoughts of the redevelopment potential which could be realized with the effective vision and management of an innovative purchaser.