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Remembering Jane Jacobs: The Life and Times of a Local Luminary

By ksalay@pps.org on May 5, 2006 | Add Comment

“Jane Jacobs didn’t trust urban planners. She once told me that planners would call her all the time and tell her what great work they were doing in her name. Then she would find out that they were following the same old pattern she was opposed to.”

Urban Planner Thomas G. Lunke reflects on the [...]

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PPS responds to New York Times op-ed on Jane Jacobs

By jay@odemagazine.com on May 2, 2006 | 4 Comments

Jane Jacobs’ ideas about how to create great cities are more popular and important than ever. Her death last week at age 89 has drawn even more attention to her wisdom that basic observation of what a makes neighborhoods work is the best guide to good urban planning, rather than the grandiose but often mistaken [...]

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Opening on Broadway Soon: New York City’s Version of the Spanish Steps

By ksalay@pps.org on May 2, 2006 | Add Comment

The new TKTS Booth in Father Duffy Square will be topped with a glass staircase with room for over 1,000 to sit and watch the spectacle of Times Square.

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PPS responds to New York Times op-ed on Jane Jacobs

By bfried@pps.org on May 2, 2006 | Add Comment

Jane Jacobs’ ideas about how to create great cities are more popular and important than ever. Her death last week at age 89 has drawn even more attention to her wisdom that basic observation of what a makes neighborhoods work is the best guide to good urban planning, rather than the grandiose but often mistaken [...]

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How Bicycling Can Help Save the World

By ksalay@pps.org on May 2, 2006 | 3 Comments

With 50 percent of their daily car trips no longer than three miles, Americans could easily make half of them on foot or on bikes, which would save the nation 24 billion gallons of gas a year, proportionally cut tailpipe emissions, and reduce overweight and obesity rates, especially among kids, said Missoula-based Adventure Cycling director [...]

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Godmother of the American City

By ksalay@pps.org on May 1, 2006 | 3 Comments

In memory of Jane Jacobs, one of urban planning’s most influential critics, Metropolis Magazine reprints James Howard Kunstler’s interview with her, from September 2000.

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How Jane Jacobs Challenged ‘Olympian’ Planners

By ksalay@pps.org on May 1, 2006 | Add Comment

Jane Jacobs had no college degree in architecture or urban planning. How did she defiantly challenge influential figures such as urban-renewal “czar” Robert Moses?

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Elmira Promenade Takes City Spotlight

By ksalay@pps.org on Apr 28, 2006 | 1 Comment

“It takes a community to create a great place,” advised PPS’s Andy Wiley-Schwartz in his keynote presentation at the annual meeting of Elmira Downtown Development in Elmira, NY.

Andy, with Cynthia Nikitin and Nick Grossman, kicked-off the planning process for the Elmira Promenade. Revitalizing the Promenade is part of downtown development plan to create a [...]

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Jane Jacobs, Renowned Urban Activist, Dies at 89

By ksalay@pps.org on Apr 25, 2006 | Add Comment

Jane Jacobs, the writer and thinker who brought penetrating eyes and ingenious insight to the sidewalk ballet of her own Greenwich Village street and came up with a book that challenged and changed the way people view cities, died today in Toronto, where she lived. She was 89.

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The Problem with Most High-rises is How Well they Reach the Street

By ngrossman@pps.org on Apr 25, 2006 | Add Comment

“Tall buildings affect cities in two different ways that have almost nothing to do with each other. One is as sculptural objects framed in the sky, where their impact is artistic or symbolic. The other is where the buildings meet the ground and create either pleasant or oppressive spaces where people walk and congregate. Architects [...]

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Immigration rallies remind importance of public spaces

By stsay@pps.org on Apr 24, 2006 | Add Comment

Blair Kamin looks into the importance of public spaces in light of all the immigration rallies occuring across the country.

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PPS in Flint, MI

By stsay@pps.org on Apr 24, 2006 | 2 Comments

PPS to work on city-wide initiative that includes Riverbank Park and Flint Farmers’ Market.

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