skip to main content

Natural Resources Defense Council

Switchboard

Kaid Benfield's Blog

Giving thanks to my fellow smart growth writers and bloggers

Giving thanks to my fellow smart growth writers and bloggers

 

concerned turkey (by: gravityx9, creative commons license)I was going to award another satirical turkey to a deserving entity, as I did last year.  But then I thought better of it:  this is a more optimistic season, and I have decided to go positive and acknowledge some of the great writers and blogs that I read, and turn to for inspiration.  Our format here doesn't allow a sidebar of links for individual posters but, if it did, these are some of the folks who would be on it.

My strongest role models for how I approach writing about this fascinating field of growth, development, and the environment are two newspaper columnists: 

  • First, I have been reading Roger Lewis's "Shaping the City" columns in The Washington Post for over two decades now.  He would probably find the phrase "smart growth" too confining, but he was there way before anyone else I know.  Roger is a bit of a secret, in that his columns appear only biweekly and always on Saturdays, embedded in the middle pages of the Real Estate section.  Readers are unlikely to find them unless they already know about them; so I'm spreading the word.  Roger is always provocative - particularly on regional issues - and is a terrific, amusing illustrator, too.
  • Neal Peirce (by: Citistates)Better known nationally is Neal Peirce, who writes at least weekly and is carried in scores of newspapers across the country.  Neal understands sprawl, urbanism, sustainability and, importantly, politics.  He is with the Citiwire Group, where his columns can be accessed, and lately has begun publishing jointly with other columnists.

Leaving the print media, here are some of my favorite blogs:

  • Rooflines, the blog of the National Housing Institute, which has graciously invited me to post there occasionally.  When I do, I'm in great company, since some of the country's best thinkers on community-building and affordable housing post there.
  • The City Parks Blog, which is co-published by my friends at the Center for City Park Excellence at the Trust for Public Land.  TPL really, really gets the connections between urban places and land, why we need both, and why we need them to be complementary.
  • The amazing Planetizen, sort of a mother lode of high-quality news and commentary about planning.  They just published their list of the year's best planning books, and Neal Peirce is on it.  Last year, I was.  ;)
  • Joe Urban, a self-acknowledged counterpoint to Joe the Plumber.  It is written by the very able Sam Newberg, a frequent writer for the Urban Land Institute and American Planning Association, and he comes up with lots of interesting angles that you might not find on your own.
  • Sprawled Out: The Search for Community in the American Suburb, written by John Michlig.  John explains: "Welcome to Sprawled Out, a blog [that] will accompany my work on a book designed to use my city of Franklin, Wisconsin as an example of the community planning process in modern American cities and towns around the country."  It's a fascinating mixture of the local and the universal.
  • NYC's High Line, as shown by Landscape+Urbanism (by: metropolis, via L&A)Landscape+Urbanism, one of the few blogs that seems just as committed as I am to using images to tell stories.  And their images are frequently spectacular.  The site is beautiful and exceptionally well edited.  As the name implies, it covers trends in landscape architecture and design.  I haven't known this site for long, but I plan to spend much more time with it.
  • Urban Milwaukee, whose Dave Reid has been a frequent commenter here.  (Thanks, Dave.)  The blog gives a great perspective on these issues from the ground up.
  • FourStory, "Fact-based advocacy for affordable housing and accessible transportation."  The blog covers these issues in LA and southern California, yielding another interesting local angle on some of the stories I try to cover from a national perspective.  Tony Chavira of FourStory is an occasional commenter on this blog as well.
  • Two local DC-area blogs, both very good:  Greater Greater Washington, an eclectic take on planning issues in DC, with reference to how developments elsewhere might have an effect on the DC area; and Commuter Page Blog, providing excellent coverage and commentary on transportation issues in the region.
  • I occasionally cruise some green building and sustainable living blogs, too.  Some of the ones I've found and liked, which may be a bit random, include:  Green Building Law, which has occasionally linked to my posts, Dutch EV (via dotcommodity)for which I am grateful; Jetson Green, covering green building products and examples; and dotcommodity, actually more about green technology than green buildings (dotcommodity is another blog with great images).  World Changing is about sustainability writ large, and it is very good.

Finally, I want to salute some of the organizations I am loyal to and whose web sites offer newsy blogs of their own:  These include Smart Growth America, the Congress for the New Urbanism, and Transportation for America.  These guys and women are my everyday professional friends, and they inform my writing in countless ways.

Thanks to all these friends and sources of reflection, commentary, and inspiration.  And Happy Thanksgiving to all.

 

Tags:
blogs, cityparksblog, commuterpageblog, dotcommodity, environment, fourstory, greatergreaterwashington, joeurban, landscape+urbanism, nealpeirce, rogerlewis, rooflines, smartgrowth, sprawledout, sustainabledevelopment, urbanmilwaukee

(bookmark or email this entry)

Comments

Dave ReidNov 26 2008 12:58 PM

Thanks for the mention. Switchboard is one of my favorites reads because it covers the entire gambit of environmental issues, which all too often people forget includes urbanism and smart growth. Thanks Again.

Susan KraemerNov 26 2008 02:16 PM

Thanks so much for this recommendation, Kaid.I'm honored.

I have written about the California OnePlanet Bioregional project (Sonoma Mountain Village) for Matter Network, and am just finishing another piece about it, for CitiesGoGreen.com - a new site and a really great resource for smart growth news.

Kaid @ NRDCNov 26 2008 02:40 PM

Dave and Susan, the pleasure is all mine. As you may know, Sonoma Mountain Village is participating in our LEED for Neighborhood Development pilot program. I hope they score well.

Shari ShapiroNov 26 2008 09:36 PM

Thanks for the shout out and happy thanksgiving from Green Building Law!

Susan KraemerNov 26 2008 11:19 PM

Kaid,

I actually am surprised at how timid the proposed LEED neighborhood rating standards are for energy produced on-site, which can only get 3 out of 100 possible points.

But California has legislated a zero carbon building requirement by 2020, and Obama will by 2030 (per plan on site).

3 points versus mandatory.

Also, Sonoma Mountain Village will meet the more stringent OnePlanet requirements that Bioregional developed (where zero carbon is one of ten requirements: meaning all energy renewable and produced on-site)

They dropped their own test site Bedzed from their certification when it had a technical failure (the woodwaste district heat CHP was the first one in the UK) which led to them only producing 11% (solar) of their energy renewably.

SMV is using a district heating/cooling system that the county will administer using a contractor that's been doing it for 50 years (geothermal ground heat/cooling)(and solar powering the pump) so I don't think it will go south like Bedzed's district heating.

It is so possible, with a little push, to build buildings that can supply their own energy, that I think the LEED neighborhood rating can push architects harder.

Kaid @ NRDCNov 27 2008 10:50 AM

Thanks for the feedback, Susan. We are certainly aware of your position, and that's the reason we have public comment. I think the new draft standards are better than the pilot standards, and I hope the final standards will be better still as a result of public input.

It's worth mentioning, though, that basic building energy efficiency performance would be required under the draft, rather than just eligible for earning points as under the pilot standards. In addition, building and infrastructure energy efficiency as a whole would now be worth up to 14 points under a combination of credits, and reduction of energy use through more efficient transportation patterns would be worth still more. So there is a menu of options for improving the overall energy profile of a development.

And we need to bear in mind that we do not want to penalize small urban infill projects with too many credit points that might be more difficult for them to earn than for larger projects. The balancing act is not an easy one, and we certainly don't always get it right. We will continue to improve. So thanks again for your input.

(Personally, I wish we required public transit and excluded leapfrog development in all cases, so you definitely aren't the only one with some dissatisfaction in a system built of compromises by its nature.)

We will sort this out as we go through the comments, and I can assure you that yours have already been garnering attention within the ND committee. More discussion on the point is probably best suited for a different forum than one in which I mainly wanted to give thanks to you and others for your good work, so I'll leave it at that for now. Have a great holiday weekend!

Susan KraemerNov 27 2008 01:52 PM

You too, Kaid,
have a good holiday.

I hear you, on this point:

"And we need to bear in mind that we do not want to penalize small urban infill projects with too many credit points that might be more difficult for them to earn than for larger projects. The balancing act is not an easy one"

Hadn't thought of it that way.

Susan KraemerNov 27 2008 02:24 PM

Another thing -

I had no idea that the NRDC had input into LEED when I posted my blog. Now I feel like a complete wretched cur, and see the LEED standard a bit differently, as a result.

Especially as I was just over reading Joe Romm's thanksgiving blog today - and was thinking he should have included the NRDC (for stopping all those TXU coal plants, for just one thing!) on his list of all the things we can be thankful for, along with Hansen, Colbert et al.

What an idiot I am.

Tony ChaviraNov 27 2008 03:21 PM

Hey! Thanks for the mention and happy holidays, Mr. Benfield! I've actually been able to recently convince both an employee at the LA planning department and a former longtime employee of the Community Redevelopment Agency - Los Angeles to write for FourStory, so it'll be interesting to get some new insight as 2009 begins.

Also, you (and Susan) may be pleased to know that I've already begun working with two LA City Community Colleges who now require their A&E consultants to program and cost estimate all projects to at least minimum LEED-certification.

Also, thanks for the plethora of links. As if we didn't already have a ton of things to read, I'm passing this blog entry along to all of our writers. Happy Thanksgiving!

Kaid @ NRDCDec 1 2008 09:20 AM

Susan, no problem. And thanks for the kind words re NRDC. LEED-ND has been a challenge, and can improve, but we're proud of it. Keep up your own great work.

Thanks, Tony!

Comments are closed for this post.

We close comments on a blog post when it's clear the conversation has moved on -- click on the tags (above) or on our homepage to see if we've got fresh news and views on this post's topic.

Clean Energy Common Sense

OnEarth: NRDC's award-winning magazine

Citizen journalism from the OnEarth magazine website

Day Five of No Impact Week: Lights Out
by Solvie Karlstrom
The Not-So-Badness of Guides to Green Living
by Emily Gertz
No Impact Week Day Four: Foreign Foods
by Solvie Karlstrom

Read more

Fresh Conversation

Feeds: Stay Plugged In