
Urban Review: Census Concerns, Income Inequality and Unspent Hurricane Ike Money
This week, Southern city planning, Census questions, national trends in income inequality and more.
Urban Review: Census Concerns, Income Inequality and Unspent Hurricane Ike Money
This week, Southern city planning, Census questions, national trends in income inequality and more.
Sustainable Cities Need More Than Parks, Cafes and a Riverwalk
The Conversation | Green cities and green gentrification are two different things.
Resiliency expert Harriet Tregoning offers insights for the Houston area and other cities.
Harriet Tregoning, Resiliency and Planning Expert, Offers Insights for Houston
A career in exemplary comprehensive resilience planning can offer guidance to our region in recovery.
Urban Review: Mardi Gras Beads, Transit Gaps and Public Space Programming
This week: recycling beads, mapping transit gaps and rethinking public spaces with a pause on programming.
Q+A: Introducing Houston’s Department of Transformation
No it's not a real city department but the group of community leaders has real neighborhood change as its goal.
Perspective: Hopes, Questions As Community Undergoes Planning Effort
With a draft plan in hand, one of five pilot Complete Communities neighborhoods reflects on the process.
Changes Bigger Than Self-Driving Cars Headed to a City Near You
Governing | Online shopping and the automation of jobs are going to transform cities.
Urban Review: Driverless Cars, Art and Taxes and a Call to Action for the Texas Delegation
A step by step guide to planning for driverless tech, a city that raised taxes to fund art and a call to get moving on Harvey relief.
Welcome to Acres Homes. Acres Home. Acreage Homes?
A community in transition contemplates its future and its name.
Listen: Near Northside Awaits I-45 Project and the History of Houston’s Transportation Struggles
The podcast is back with a visit to one of the neighborhoods in the path of a major highway project and an interview with Kyle Shelton about his history of Houston transportation decisions.
Perspective: From the Notebook of Pedestrian Pete
A lifetime thinking about his hometown and beautiful spaces across the world led him to believe in the power of place.
What Should Houston’s Regional Transit Network Look Like in 2045?
Now’s your chance to weigh in.
Irascible, ornery, unconventional, Pedestrian Pete pushed Houston to be better and embrace walkable urbanism.
Rice University
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6100 Main Street, Suite 305
Houston, TX 77005-1892