City planning

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City planning

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City planning

  • Employé pour Cities and towns--Planning
  • Employé pour City planning--Government policy
  • Employé pour Civic planning
  • Employé pour Land use, Urban--Management
  • Employé pour Land use, Urban--Planning
  • Employé pour Model cities
  • Employé pour Redevelopment, Urban
  • Employé pour Slum clearance
  • Employé pour Town planning
  • Employé pour Urban design
  • Employé pour Urban development
  • Employé pour Urban planning

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City planning

32 Description archivistique résultats pour City planning

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Urban Environment League records

  • ASM0388
  • Collection
  • 1985-2012

The Urban Environment League is a non-profit organization originally created in 1996 under the leadership and guidance of Gregory Bush, a professor at the University of Miami's History department and the Institute for Public History. The organization is dedicated to promoting safe and responsible practices in urban development in Miami-Dade through education and by advocating for environmental reform and legal protections for historical landmarks. Their records contain several issues of their internal newsletter, the Urban Forum; membership lists; minutes; correspondence; pamphlets; flyers; brochures; periodicals; research files on historical landmarks in Greater Miami, and urban planning; financial records; administrative files; ephemera; audio-visual materials (floppy disks and negatives); and legal files.

Sans titre

Codifying New Urbanism : How to Reform Municipal Land Development Regulations

Content: New urbanism and codes / Jonathan Barnett -- New urbanist essentials / Joel Russell -- Putting new urbanism to work in your community / Joel Russell -- From building to region: new urbanist regulations in place / Ellen Greenberg -- Creating a local government system that promotes new urbanism / Paul Crawford -- Appendix A: summary table of new urbanist land development regulations -- Appendix B: Charter of the new urbanism.

Sans titre

Archive of the New Urbanism

  • ARC1000
  • Collection
  • 2004

The New Urbanism is the only distinctly American architectural movement of the 20th Century that systemically critiqued the conventional urban planning patterns of the post-war period. The University of Miami Libraries Architecture Research Center Archives is the sole repository for collecting and housing materials documenting this movement that impacted the discourse on urbanization theories and town planning. The principles of the movement were articulated in 1994 in the Charter of the Congress for The New Urbanism. The Congress for the New Urbanism, an organization that promotes walkable, mixed-use neighborhood development and sustainable communities was recognized by the New York Times as "…the most important phenomenon to emerge in American Architecture in the post-Cold-War era."
The New Urbanism movement, which signaled a turning point from the segregated planning and architecture of post-war America to a return to historic principles of traditional town planning, became the focus of a series of contested dialogues not just among architects, planners and developers, but among historians, environmentalists and policy makers as well. The movement continues to influence the principles of town planning and design, and spark debate among its advocates and critics as evidenced in the public fora thirty years following its inception.
This collection includes drawings, project folios, books and manuscripts, periodicals, article clippings, correspondence, videos, CDs, DVDs, audio cassettes and other materials related to New Urbanism theory, writing, and design.

ARC 510 Map Projects

Original drawn, sketched, or drafted maps and plans for a project for the course ARC 510 Spring 1994. Topics were planning for the Miami Intermodal Center and the East/West Corridor Study. Various maps of Metropolitan Miami-Dade were created for reference on tourism, rail lines, freight transportation, transit, political districts, community boundaries, water and green spaces, public building locations, "events and destinations corridor," and general land-use maps.
Some data credited to Florida Power & Light. "Prof. Kaul" and "Prof. Valle" are mentioned. Student names include Markus A. Ketnath, Zaidi Mohd Daud, and Kristi Kenney.

Sans titre

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