Post Carbon Cities

Skip to content

OTHER POST CARBON INSTITUTE PROGRAMS:   Global Public Media   Relocalization Network   Local Energy Farms   Oil Depletion Protocol   

Urban Development

Land Use, GHG and Green Development in Massachusetts
January 12, 2009 - Jan 13 2009
Published by Law Seminars International (original article)

More attention is being paid nationwide to reducing GHG emissions at the local level in land use pl anning. This path-breaking conference assembles experts from early adopter jurisdictions around the country, as well as leading Massachusetts land use professionals, to provide insights for attorneys, developers, planners, consultants and local governments on the best ways to respond to climate change concerns regarding development projects.

Call for ideas on living in a warming world
Published 19 December 2008 by San Francisco Chronicle (original article)

San Francisco's Bay Conservation and Development Commission is preparing to launch a $125,000 competition that will invite architects, planners and engineers to bring innovative proposals "to climate-proof the Bay Area," in the words of the competition outline. There is hope that some of the designs produced may be useful to other communities in similar situations.

Portland Planning Bureau and Office of Sustainable Development combined
Published 16 December 2008 by The Oregonian (original article)

Changes in Portland, Ore. bureaus by mayor-elect Sam Adams reflect a commitment to sustainability as a guiding principle in planning decisions, not an add-on. Earlier this week, his office announced that the city's Office of Sustainable Development (created in 2000) would merge with the Bureau of Planning to form the Bureau of Sustainable Planning & Development.

Wind power to pay for affordable housing
Published 7 December 2008 by The Daily World (original article)

A non-profit serving low income people in coastal Washington has received grants and the necessary permits to build a wind farm, and will be selling the energy to the local public utility district. The income will help fund the organization's social service mission. According to the organization's executive director, "this project is the first of its kind in the nation to use alternative energy to benefit low income housing."

Report/Paper: Food, Farmland, & Open Space
Published by Planning Commissioners Journal (original article)

The Planning Commissioners Journal offers this volume of reprinted articles on themes related to the title. Read essays on downtown grocery stores, transfer of development rights, green infrastructure, and food systems.

Gaining Ground: Energy and the Future of Cities
May 7, 2009 - May 8 2009
Published by Center for Urban Innovation (original article)

This unique Gaining Ground conference links the energy future to the key urban topics of land use, economic development, transportation and mobility, and infrastructure. It challenges Calgary and all cities to consider their choices and futures as the requirement for urban sustainability intensifies.

California Governor signs anti-sprawl bill
Published 1 October 2008 by The Sacramento Bee (original article)

Senate Bill 375 will push California communities to consider climate change impacts of development in regional planning, with an emphasis on reducing car travel. The bill requires the California Air Resources Board to set regional targets by September 2010 for reducing greenhouse-gas emissions. The state will use its annual $5 billion pot of transportation money to encourage regions to embrace compact residential development.

Re-Imagining Cities: Urban Design After Oil
November 6, 2008 - Nov 8 2008
Published by University of Pennsylvania (original article)

This ground-breaking symposium has been organized to address the role of urban design in the face of one of the most profound and important challenges facing global society: the need to re-imagine and rethink how cities are designed and organized in a future without the plentiful and abundant oil upon which prosperous urban economies have been built.

Aaron Newton on sustainable land use planning and infill agriculture
Published 29 August 2008 by Post Carbon Cities

In his work as a land planner in North Carolina, Aaron Newton works to create sustainable places. But it's not just his job: awareness of peak oil has led him to promote relocalization close to home, and led to coauthoring a new book that expands the definition of agricultural land.

Energy conversion goes local: implications for planners
Published 1 March 2008 by Journal of the American Planning Association (original article)

As energy technologies evolve, their relationship to their surroundings also changes. Recently, attention has shifted to decentralized supplies and the effects of transportation, land use, and buildings on energy demand. It is time for planners to pay attention to the new spatial structure of energy systems. This article lays out some approaches planners could use to be more effective.



© 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Post Carbon Institute

Post Carbon Cities: Helping local governments understand and respond to the challenges of peak oil and global warming.
Post Carbon Cities is a program of Post Carbon Institute, a 501(c)3 non-profit organization incorporated in the United States.