Editor's Picks + Features

800px-Habitat67July2010

Montreal’s Best Architecture Psychoanalyzed

Special contributor Justin Boulanger, architecture...

4814694220_7da9ea9331

World Wide Wednesday: Maps, Trains, Trikes and Three Million on the A40

Each week we will be focusing on blogs from around...

1389468625_e47df0f3d7

La construction de la nouvelle Plaza Swatow : une histoire de 2007 à 2010

Septembre 2007 Mai 2008 Mars 2009 Mai 2009 Décembre...

4535824501_36bd0676c6

To renew or not to renew

Je ne sais pas quoi faire. Renouveler ou ne pas renouveler...

4813590841_9f648eb1cb

Photo du jour : Riverview

Riverview Avenue, in Westmount, located just north...

4877446872_8c6c346101

The death of a climbing tree

I came home from a weekend of camping to learn that...

World Wide Wednesday: Hotspots – Tokyo, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, Copenhagen

Each week we will be focusing on blogs from around the world dealing specifically with urban environments. We’ll be on the lookout for websites outside the country that approach themes related to urban experiences and issues.

• If you've been saving up for a trip to Tokyo's Shimokitazawa neighbourhood, be sure to plan your travels before 2013. The bohemian hotspot is due for revamping and some fear that the very characteristics which make this place a favourite (twisting alleyways, discount shops, hole-in-the-wall restaurants, open air urinals) will be lost. The Globe and Mail shares some local gems.

Worldchanging shares a recent study from a team of economists at the University of Munich examining the effects of mandatory parking minimums on development in urban and suburban Los Angeles. The study found that parking minimums "significantly increase" the amount of land devoted to parking, to the detriment of water quality, pedestrian safety and non-automotive modes of transportation. The authors suggest that these mandatory minimums often exceed market demand for parking space.

For the Love of Biking shares some creative bike post designs from Minneapolis's DERO.

• Trust Copenhagen to find an unexpected solution to the problem of illegal bike parking. Copenhangenize reports that the City has started a program to move illegally parked bikes near Metro stations to designated bike racks. The team of "bike butlers" will then oil your chain, pump your tires and leave a little note on your bicycle asking to kindly use the bike racks in the future. The positive reinforcement appears to be working - "when the project started in April they were moving around 150 bicycles a day. Today that number has dropped to between 30 and 50."

Photo by ajari

 

Comments

Neither the author nor Spacing necessarily agree with the comments posted below. Spacing reserves the right to edit or delete comments entirely. See our Comment Policy.

 
Post a comment
World Wide Wednesday: Hotspots – Tokyo, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, Copenhagen
By







Advertise with Spacing
Spacing Store

Where to Buy Spacing Magazine