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Liberalizing cities | From the bottom up

“Market Urbanism” refers to the synthesis of classical liberal economics and ethics (market), with an appreciation of the urban way of life and its benefits to society (urbanism). We advocate for the emergence of bottom up solutions to urban issues, as opposed to ones imposed from the top down.
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NYC Officials Take Notice of Astronomical Subway Construction Costs

November 29, 2011 By Stephen Smith

New York City’s subway lines – the engines that keep the city’s real estate market moving – are notoriously expensive to build. Tunneling projects in New York routinely clock in at five to ten times the cost of their Asian and European counterparts, putting the city’s measly 20-30% aboveground union … [Read more...]

Filed Under: by Stephen Smith (Forbes), Economics, Logistics & Transportation, Places & Spaces, Policy Tagged With: energy, real estate, regulation

The Progressive Reaction Against NYC’s First Subway

November 25, 2011 By Stephen Smith

nycsubway.org has an amazing trove of transit history, and I just got done reading “The Impact of the IRT on New York City” by Clifton Hood, on the effects of New York‘s first subway rapid transit line, first opened in 1904. There’s so much in it to recommend, but one of the … [Read more...]

Filed Under: by Stephen Smith (Forbes), Culture & Books, Economics, Law, Logistics & Transportation, Places & Spaces, Policy Tagged With: energy, politics, real estate

Meet Me At The Corner Of Mises & Jane Jacobs!

November 15, 2011 By Stephen Smith

I'On Village, South Carolina About three years ago Adam wrote about the the story of I’On Village, a New Urbanist development build about a decade ago five miles outside of Charleston, and the difficulties that Vince Graham faced trying to build it. For one, the project had to be scaled … [Read more...]

Filed Under: by Stephen Smith (Forbes), Economics, Law, Logistics & Transportation, Places & Spaces, Policy Tagged With: politics, real estate, regulation

New York City Planners: Pack ‘Em In!

November 14, 2011 By Stephen Smith

Do New Yorkers need to cram into cubbyholes to bring prices down? At a recent conference organized by the Citizens Housing and Planning Council (covered by the New York Times, Crain’s, and City Limits), we heard a familiar refrain about New York City’s building stock: regulations have … [Read more...]

Filed Under: by Stephen Smith (Forbes), Economics, Law, Places & Spaces, Policy Tagged With: real estate, regulation

Why DC’s Architecture Is So Boring

November 9, 2011 By Stephen Smith

An Eric Colbert special, everywhere and anywhere in DC I’m a little behind on posting this, but Lydia DePillis at Washington City Paper did a great profile a week or so ago of DC architect Eric Colbert, whose buildings’ unifying features seems to be blandness. There are a lot of people … [Read more...]

Filed Under: by Stephen Smith (Forbes), Economics, Places & Spaces Tagged With: politics, real estate, regulation

Why the FRA is Bad for America, in 10 Seconds

November 7, 2011 By Stephen Smith

A lot of words have been written about how horribly FRA safety regulations cripple US main line passenger railway budgets (and you should read them!), but it’s also important to remember that even as a safety regulator, the FRA fails. You have to see it to believe it: ... … [Read more...]

Filed Under: by Stephen Smith (Forbes), Economics, Logistics & Transportation, Places & Spaces, Policy, Travel, video Tagged With: energy, regulation

The Day the Engineers Turned Against California HSR

November 4, 2011 By Stephen Smith

No, but really – fly California. On Tuesday, the California High-Speed Rail Authority laid down their cards in the form of a new “business plan” for the proposed line, and its cards are not good – the system is now projected to cost $98 billion in year-of-expenditure dollars, which, … [Read more...]

Filed Under: by Stephen Smith (Forbes), Economics, Logistics & Transportation, Places & Spaces, Policy, Travel Tagged With: energy, politics

Hey Bloomberg, Buy Your Own 7 Train to New Jersey!

October 28, 2011 By Stephen Smith

A few days ago, Mayor Bloomberg made a startling announcement: The 7 train extension to New Jersey is still on. The idea was first floated last year as a replacement for the canceled trans-Hudson commuter rail ARC project, but it was a hard sell then, and at $10 billion, it’s still a hard … [Read more...]

Filed Under: by Stephen Smith (Forbes), Logistics & Transportation, Places & Spaces Tagged With: real estate

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