Tag Archives: urban-planning

National Park Service Grants HBCUs $8.6M To Conserve Historic Sites

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T he National Park Service is continuing to preserve landmarks that are embedded in the fabric of American history. According to Diverse Issues in Higher Education , the agency recently provided 18 historically Black colleges and universities with grants in efforts to conserve historic buildings and statues that live on campuses. National Park Service Awards $8.6M to HBCUs for Preservation Projects https://t.co/1U3qithspS #HBCU #HBCUnews — HBCU Lifestyle (@HBCU_Lifestyle) September 10, 2018 The grants—which total $8.6 million—will be put towards the revitalization of structures as well as projects that are relative to preservation, the news outlet writes. The grant money was provided through the National Park Service’s Historic Preservation Fund. Amongst the HBCUs selected for the grants are Howard University, Clark Atlanta University, Hampton University, Virginia State University, Delaware State University and others. “HBCUs have played an important role in our country’s pursuit of equality, civil rights, and higher education for all Americans,” National Park Service Deputy Director P. Daniel Smith said in a statement, according to the news outlet. “These grants will help restore and enhance landmark buildings that are a source of pride on campuses in nine states.” Howard University plans on using the grant to upgrade their Founders Library. There has been a concerted effort to involve HBCUs in preserving Black sites across the country. In July, a program dubbed “Preservation in Practice” was created by the National Trust for Historic Preservation, the National Park Service and the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation as an avenue to empower students at historically Black colleges and universities to pursue careers in historic preservation. SEE ALSO: Program Aims To Increase Racial Representation In Historic Preservation, Urban Planning Nina Simone To Be Honored By The National Trust for Historic Preservation [ione_media_gallery src=”https://newsone.com” id=”3825344″ overlay=”true”]

National Park Service Grants HBCUs $8.6M To Conserve Historic Sites

What Are Urban Trees Worth? Billions in Stored Carbon Emissions, Thousands to House Prices…

photo: Wonderlane / Creative Commons Lots of effort recently on quantifying the financial value of ecosystem services and here’s one more small piece of that: The US Forest Service has just completed an assessment of the dollar value that trees add to the urban environment and the results are pretty interesting. Surveying Chicago, Sacramento and Portland, here’s what trees are worth:… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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What Are Urban Trees Worth? Billions in Stored Carbon Emissions, Thousands to House Prices…

New York City Gets Serious About Local, Sustainable Food

Image: Teesha Dunn via flickr When New York City Council Speaker Christine Quinn announced the 59-point-plan, “FoodWorks,” yesterday, she unveiled the city’s latest move to reduce its environmental footprint, and boost the local economy and health of its citizens. The plan is designed to address all aspects of food in the city, from agricultural production through post-consumption…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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New York City Gets Serious About Local, Sustainable Food

Newly Freed from Height Limits, Paris Skyline Ready to Rise

Photo: CFuga under a Creative Commons license . One of the striking things about Paris is that, for a major city whose metropolitan area includes nearly 12 million people, there are very few buildings more than five or six stories tall. Since 1977, soon after the construction of the 689 foot tall Tour Montparnasse, a building that sticks out like a sore thumb and is widely disliked by Parisians, there has been a height limit of 121 feet on all new buildings. (The Eiffel Tower, at 1,063 feet, is by far the tallest structure … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Newly Freed from Height Limits, Paris Skyline Ready to Rise

Charming Colonial Streets of San Juan to Go Car Free

Traffic into the Isleta area of San Juan, Puerto Rico, will be streamlined and limited. Image via Inhabitat . I’ve had a soft spot for Puerto Rico since taking a work trip there four or five years ago. I’d heard some negative things about the island, which many people seemed to think of as a third-rate part of the Caribbean

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Charming Colonial Streets of San Juan to Go Car Free

Bikes and Streetcars Under Threat As The Suburban Car Loving Politicians Fight Back

Google the phrase “war on cars” and you will find that across North America, people are using the phrase to defend the happy motorized way of life. As one blog put it : Hiding behind the veil of environmentalism and “sustainability,” a small number of activists are having a big influence on tax policy, urban planning, and government regulation with the hope of shifting our society away from the individualism and freedom afforded by the automobile. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Bikes and Streetcars Under Threat As The Suburban Car Loving Politicians Fight Back

Would A Curvy Crosswalk Reduce Accidents?

We always say that streets are for people, but nobody works very hard to make them comfortable for people rather than cars. After all, cars get curved corners to make it easier to get around but humans, they have to make sharp right angles. Jae Min Lim looks at the problem, and redesigns the crosswalk to reflect how people actually move…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Would A Curvy Crosswalk Reduce Accidents?

Rare Birds Raise Secret Brood in Birmingham

The black-redstart population in Birmingham has four new chicks. Photo via the BBC Like a celebrity couple sneaking off to a remote island to wed or give birth away from the paparazzi and the spotlight, a breeding pair of one of Britain’s rarest birds has “successfully raised four chicks at a secret location in the centre of Birmingham,” reports the BBC, which has a

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Rare Birds Raise Secret Brood in Birmingham

What Is Sustainable Development & Why Is Defining It Key to Our Future?

photo: Jaume Ventura via flickr Even though it’s at the center of environmental thinking, the concept of sustainable development is pretty broad; and considering how often the term gets thrown around and invoked these days, perhaps a quick bit of clarity is in order. There’s a textbook definition of sustainable development (as well as plenty of interpretations of that), but let’s go through the main components and how they all fit together. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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What Is Sustainable Development & Why Is Defining It Key to Our Future?

In Seattle, Green Space Isn’t Always Enough

Image credit: Good.is “The problem,” Theo Schell-Lambert writes in Good , “really comes down to color.” Sure, city parks are great, urban trees amazing, but all too often, these green spaces lack pathways for pollinators. And, he says, forgetting to consider the birds, bees, and butterflies, is a huge mistake…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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In Seattle, Green Space Isn’t Always Enough