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ResourcesHere are some resources we find useful . . . Livable City publicationsThe Path to a Livable City. Our 100-year plan for more livable San Francisco neighborhoods. The Real Costs of San Francisco's Off-Street Residential Parking Requirements. Despite the fact that nearly 30% of all San Francisco households and 40% of renters don't even own cars, and 50% of San Francisco commuters get to work every day without a car, for the past 50 years the City has required that at least one off-street parking space be provided for almost every new housing unit built throughout the City. Since every parking space adds $20,000 to $50,000 dollars to the cost of a housing unit, these parking requirements make housing for cars cheaper and housing for people more expensive! In a city with a ongoing affordable housing crises and a supposed Transit-First Policy, it's time we rethink our outdated parking requirements. Learn more in this TLC report The Real Costs of San Francisco's Off-Street Residential Parking Requirements or read the executive summaries for neighborhood organizations, policymakers, and housing lenders & developers. The Livable City Journal. You can now downoad issues of Livable City's community newsletter The Livable City Journal as PDF files. Find out what TLC is doing to create a more livable neighborhoods and how you can get involved. Other Resources on the WebSan FranciscoSan Francisco Bicycle Coalition is a membership organization dedicated to promoting the bicycle for everyday transportation. Walk San Francisco is a member based pedestrian advocacy organization that is making San Francisco a more livable and walkable city. Housing Action Coalition is a citywide coalition that advocates for the creation of well-designed, well-located housing that meets the needs of present and future residents of San Francisco. Rescue Muni is a transit riders association for San Francisco. San Jose/Guerrero Coalition to Save Our Streets is a coalition dedicated to improving the San Jose/Guerrero Neighborhood. Better Valencia Project is a neighborhood effort dedicated to making San Francisco's Valencia Street a complete street. San Francisco Cityscape is an online journal of bay area urban design. San Francisco Beautiful is dedicated to protecting and enhancing the city´s urban environment. San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association (SPUR) is a public policy think-tank promoting good planning and good government Neighborhood Parks Council advocates for better parks and recreation and greener streets for San Francisco. Nature in the City is dedicated to restoring Franciscan nature and biodiversity by connecting people to nature where they live. Bay AreaGreenbelt Alliance is dedicated to protecting open space and promoting livable communities across the Bay Area. Transportation and Land Use Coalition is a partnership of over 90 groups working for a sustainable and socially just Bay Area. National and internationalThunderhead Alliance is the national coalition of state and local bicycle and pedestrian advocacy organizations. Project for Public Spaces is a nonprofit organization dedicated to creating and sustaining public places that build communities. Reconnecting America/Center for Transit-oriented Development is a new national organization formed to link transportation networks and the communities they serve. TransAct is a collection of information and resources about making communities more livable and helping the environment through innovative transportation projects and initiatives. Centre for Sustainable Transportation is a research institute dedicated to encouraging more sustainable transportation policy. Comprehensive Sustainable Urban Travel bibliographies, with a particular emphasis on cycling and walking, all regularly updated, together with full list of relevant organisations, contact details and web sites. Detour Publications provides information related to urban ecology and transportation planning. The SUSTRAN network promotes and popularises people-centred, equitable and sustainable transport with a focus on Asia and the Pacific. Carfree.com explores carfree cities past, present, and future, and provides practical solutions to the problems of urban automobile use. Center for Livable Communities helps local governments and community leaders be proactive in their land use and transportation planning, and adopt programs and policies that lead to more livable and resource-efficient land use patterns. Congress for New Urbanism is a movement centered on intelligent neighborhood planning, and a return to the type of urban communities built to a human scale, and not to the scale that only benefits the car. ADAPT is an advocacy organization representing the interests of people with disabilities, which sponsors many projects related to mobility and access issues. Children on the Move, a website about children and transport. The Center for Neighborhood Technology operates programs that address transportation, land use and housing issues in urban America. The Community Transportation Association is a coalition of agencies that provide mobility services for non-drivers. The Conservation Law Foundation has programs and materials dealing with transportation equity. Gender and Transport / Social Exclusion & Transport, Dept. of Planning, University of Manchester. Victoria Transport Policy Institute provides resources for planning and evaluating TDM, bicycling and walking programs, including the Online TDM Encyclopedia. The $8 fee to drive a car into Central London has sped up London: car traffic has dropped 20%, buses have to "slow down to stay on schedule" and bicycles speed around safely unimpeded." Click here to read a November 2003 report on the congestion pricing program from London's official transportation agency. The Institute for Local Self Reliance provides technical assistance and information on environmentally sound economic development strategies. The International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives is the "international environmental agency for local governments" which provides tool to help communities become healthier and more environmentally responsible. The Living Room is an advocacy webzine for "exploring the physical and social structures of human society and their relationship to the rest of life." It devotes attention to urban community, land use and transportation issues. The Smart Growth Network includes planners, govt. officials, lenders, community developers, architects, environmentalists and activists. It encourages development that protects the environment and pays for itself without raising property taxes. David Engwicht Communications provides workshops and educational materials for "street reclaiming" by neighborhood residents. City Repair offers photos and notes from a street reclaiming project in Portland, OR. Gehl Architects 'urban quality consultants' based in Copenhagen, led by urbanist Jan Gehl. Livable cities bibliographyUrbanismAlexander, Christopher et. al. A Pattern Language: Towns, Buildings, Construction. Alexander, Christopher et al. A New Theory of Urban Design. Alexander, Christopher. The Phenomenon of Life: The Nature of Order, Book 1. Jacobs, Jane. The Death and Life of Great American Cities. First published in 1961, Jacobs' work remains the classic work on making livable cities. Katz, Peter. The New Urbanism. Kunstler, James Howard. The Geography of Nowhere. Lynch, Kevin. Good City Form. Lynch, Kevin. The Image of the City. Rowe, Colin and Fred Koetter. Collage City. Solomon, Daniel. Global City Blues. Solomon, Daniel. Rebuilding. PlacemakingHiss, Tony. The Experience of Place. Sucher, David. City Comforts: How to Build an Urban Village. Whyte, William. The Social Life of Small Urban Spaces. Project for Public Spaces, Inc. How to Turn a Place Around: A Handbook for Creating Successful Public Spaces. Jan GehlGehl, Jan. Life Between Buildings: Using Public Space. Gehl, Jan and Lars Gemzoe. Public Spaces, Public Life: Copenhagen Gehl, Jan and Lars Gemzoe. New City Spaces Melbourne: Places for People [PDF version] Report to the City of Melbourne by Gehl Architects, 2004 London: Toward a Fine City for People [PDF version] Report to Transport for London by Gehl Architects, 2004 Enrique PeñalosaProject for Public Spaces' placemaker profile of Peñalosa. Progressive Transport and the Poor: Bogotá's Bold Steps Forward by Robert Cervero. A 12-minute film interview of Peñalosa by Clarence Eckerson of the Open Planning Project. Transportation and citiesBradsher, Keith. High and Mighty: The Dangerous Rise of the SUV. Cervero, Robert. The Transit Metropolis: A Global Inquiry. Crawford, J. H. Carfree Cities. Engwicht, David. Reclaiming Our Cities and Towns: Better Living With Less Traffic. Kay, Jane Holtz. Asphalt Nation: How the Automobile Took over America, and How We Can Take It Back. Kenworthy, Jeffrey and Peter Newman. Sustainability and Cities: Overcoming Automobile Dependence. Vuchic, Vukan. Transportation for Livable Cities. Vuchic, Vukan. Urban Transit: Operations, Planning, and Economics. Transportation economicsCobb, Clifford, et al. The Roads Aren't Free: Estimating the Full Social Costs of Driving and the Effects of Accurate Pricing. Redefining Progress, San Francisco. Hammond, M. Jeff, et al. Tax Waste, Not Work: How Changing What We Tax Can Lead to a Stronger Economy and Cleaner Environment. Redefining Progress, San Francisco. Hammond, M. Jeff, Gary Wolff, Clifford Cobb, and Mark Frame. Greening the Golden State: A Tax Reform for California's Future. Redefining Progress, San Francisco. Shoup, Donald. The High Cost of Free Parking. WalkingSolnit, Rebecca. Wanderlust: A History of Walking. Street designAppleyard, Donald. Livable Streets. Engwicht, David. Mental Speed Bumps: The smarter way to tame traffic. Jacobs, Allan. Great Streets. Jacobs, Allan, Elizabeth Macdonald, and Yodan Rof. The Boulevard Book: History, Evolution, Design of Multiway Boulevards. Transit villagesDittmar, Hank, and Gloria Ohland. The New Transit Town: Best Practices in Transit-Oriented Development. Bernick, Michael and Robert Cervero. Transit Villages in the 21st Century. Kelbaugh, Douglas. The Pedestrian Pocket Book: A New Suburban Design Strategy. PlanningDiers, Jim. Neighbor Power: Building Community the Seattle Way. Fulton, Willam. Guide to California Planning. Jacobs, Allan B. Making City Planning Work. San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association (SPUR). Vision of a Place: A Guide to the San Francisco General Plan. Ecological designBenyus, Janine. Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature. Hawken, Paul, Amory Lovins, and Hunter Lovins. Natural Capitalism. Johnson, Steven. Emergence: The Connected Lives of Ants, Brains, Cities, and Software. McDonough, William and Michael Braungart. Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things. McHarg, Ian. Design with Nature. Todd, John and Nancy Jack Todd. From Eco-Cities to Living Machines: Principles of Ecological Design. Van Der Ryn, Sym and Stuart Cowan. Ecological Design. |