All Stories

  1. Editorial
  2. What Is Planning?
  3. How Perceived and Measured Environments Affect Mode Choice: Evidence for Motorists, Transit Uses, Pedestrians and Cyclists in a Western Chinese City
  4. Social Technology: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Improving Care for Older Adults
  5. Planning, Aging, and Loneliness: Reviewing Evidence About Built Environment Effects
  6. Attitudes, perceptions, and walking behavior in a Chinese city
  7. Theories and Planning Theories
  8. What is a healthy place? Models for cities and neighbourhoods
  9. Environmental Concerns and New Towns:
  10. Introduction
  11. Lessons from planned resettlement and new town experiences for avoiding climate sprawl
  12. New Towns in a New Era
  13. The Promises and Pitfalls of New Towns
  14. International Content in the Journal of the American Planning Association
  15. The influence of urban form and socio-demographics on active transport: A 40-neighborhoods study in Chengdu, China
  16. Lock, Kathy, and Hugh Ellis. New Towns: The Rise, Fall and Rebirth
  17. Measuring Journal Success
  18. Mapping Communities: Responding to Commentaries on “In Defense of the Generalist Journal”
  19. Speaking to the Future
  20. In Defense of the Generalist Journal
  21. A Point of View in Planning
  22. What is a healthy place? Models for cities and neighbourhoods
  23. Scholarly Publication in an Information Age
  24. Qualitative Methods
  25. The British new towns: lessons for the world from the new-town experiment
  26. Linking Research and Practice in Planning
  27. Improving housing and neighborhoods for the vulnerable: older people, small households, urban design, and planning
  28. Housing and Planning Supporting Healthy Aging
  29. The largest art: A measured manifesto for a plural urbanism
  30. Defining suburbs
  31. Housing, the Built Environment, and the Good Life
  32. The Fifteenth Abercrombie Lecture 2017
  33. Utopias RevisitedWakemanRosemary. 2016. Practicing Utopia: An Intellectual History of the New Town Movement. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. 392 pp. $45.00, ISBN 978022634603LewisMichael J.2016. City of Refuge: Separatists and Utopian Town Pl...
  34. Conclusion
  35. Creating Healthy Neighborhoods
  36. Redesigning China’s superblock neighbourhoods: policies, opportunities and challenges
  37. Exchange between researchers and practitioners in urban planning: achievable objective or a bridge too far?/The use of academic research in planning practice: who, what, where, when and how?/Bridging research and practice through collaboration: lessons...
  38. Ecodesign for cities and suburbs
  39. China's Urban Communities
  40. What is a walkable place? The walkability debate in urban design
  41. Perceived and Police-Reported Neighborhood Crime: Linkages to Adolescent Activity Behaviors and Weight Status
  42. Handbook of Sustainable Development, by Giles Atkinson, Simon Dietz, Eric Neumayer, and Matthew Agarwala (Eds.)
  43. Workplace Neighborhoods, Walking, Physical Activity, Weight Status, and Perceived Health
  44. The Urban Design Handbook: Techniques and Working Methods(2nd ed.), by Urban Design Associates
  45. Cycling, the Built Environment, and Health: Results of a Midwestern Study
  46. Youth dietary intake and weight status: Healthful neighborhood food environments enhance the protective role of supportive family home environments
  47. Connectivity (Street Patterns and Social Networks)
  48. Alternative Forms of the High-Technology District: Corridors, Clumps, Cores, Campuses, Subdivisions, and Sites
  49. Compromised or Savvy? Achievable Norms in Urban Design
  50. Global suburbia and the transition century: Physical suburbs in the long term
  51. The future of the suburbs
  52. The relationship of area-level sociodemographic characteristics, household composition and individual-level socioeconomic status on walking behavior among adults
  53. Chatham Village: Pittsburgh's Garden City
  54. Simple, Inexpensive Approach to Sampling for Pedestrian and Bicycle Surveys
  55. Do adolescents who live or go to school near fast-food restaurants eat more frequently from fast-food restaurants?
  56. Reliability Testing of the Pedestrian and Bicycling Survey (PABS) Method
  57. Defining Suburbs
  58. Patterns of Obesogenic Neighborhood Features and Adolescent Weight
  59. Commentary: Alternative Cultures in Planning Research—From Extending Scientific Frontiers to Exploring Enduring Questions
  60. Adolescent physical activity and the built environment: A latent class analysis approach
  61. Creating a replicable, valid cross-platform buffering technique: The sausage network buffer for measuring food and physical activity built environments
  62. Urban Design: Is there a Distinctive View from the Bicycle?
  63. Accelerometer Test-Retest Reliability by Data Processing Algorithms: Results from the Twin Cities Walking Study
  64. A Review of “Making Americans Healthier: Social and Economic Policy as Health Policy”
  65. Compactness and Connection in Environmental Design: Insights from Ecoburbs and Ecocities for Design with Nature
  66. Testing three health impact assessment tools in planning: A process evaluation
  67. Book Review: Stephen A. Mouzon The Original Green: Unlocking the Mystery of True Sustainability. Miami, FL: Guild Foundation Press, 2010. 280 pp. $29.95 (paperback). ISBN 978-1-931871-11-2
  68. The Street Level Built Environment and Physical Activity and Walking
  69. Effect of street connectivity and density on adult BMI: results from the Twin Cities Walking Study
  70. Promoting Walking and Bicycling: Assessing the Evidence to Assist Planners
  71. Suburban technopoles as places: The international campus-garden-suburb style
  72. Neighbourhood food environments: are they associated with adolescent dietary intake, food purchases and weight status?
  73. Peter Marris (1927–2007): Planning in an International Context
  74. Finding food: Issues and challenges in using Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to measure food access
  75. Higher Density and Affordable Housing: Lessons from the Corridor Housing Initiative
  76. Health Impact Assessment (HIA) for Planners: What Tools Are Useful?
  77. Six Assessments of the Same Places: Comparing Views of Urban Design
  78. Health impact assessment in planning: Development of the design for health HIA tools
  79. When American Became Suburban by Robert A. Beauregard
  80. Does the built environment relate to the metabolic syndrome in adolescents?
  81. New Visions for Suburbia: Reassessing Aesthetics and Place-making in Modernism, Imageability and New Urbanism
  82. Alcohol outlets and youth alcohol use: Exposure in suburban areas
  83. Review: Green Urbanism Down Under: Learning from Sustainable Communities in Australia, by Timothy Beatley with Peter Newman. Washington, DC: Island Press. 2009. 264 pages. $35.00 (paperback), $70.00 (hardcover)
  84. Hot, congested, crowded and diverse: Emerging research agendas in planning
  85. Measuring the Built Environment for Physical Activity
  86. Explaining Changes in Walking and Bicycling Behavior: Challenges for Transportation Research
  87. The built environment, walking, and physical activity: Is the environment more important to some people than others?
  88. Test–Retest Reliability of the Twin Cities Walking Survey
  89. Recruiting Participants for Neighborhood Effects Research
  90. Seven American TODs: Good Practices for Urban Design in Transit-Oriented Development Projects
  91. Assessing Planning School Performance
  92. Relation of modifiable neighborhood attributes to walking
  93. Design and Destinations: Factors Influencing Walking and Total Physical Activity
  94. Cities Afoot—Pedestrians, Walkability and Urban Design
  95. Innovation in Urban Design: Does Research Help?
  96. Does Residential Density Increase Walking and Other Physical Activity?
  97. Book Review: Street Science: Community Knowledge and Environmental Health Justice
  98. The effects of neighborhood density and street connectivity on walking behavior: the Twin Cities walking study
  99. In Praise of Zaha
  100. Review Essay: Directions For Suburbia
  101. Standards for Environmental Measurement Using GIS: Toward a Protocol for Protocols
  102. Urban Centres in Universities: Institutional Alternatives for Urban Design
  103. The Irvine–Minnesota Inventory to Measure Built Environments
  104. The Irvine–Minnesota Inventory to Measure Built Environments
  105. Irvine-Minnesota Inventory
  106. Constructing Suburbs
  107. Reforming Suburbia
  108. Responses to the Graduate Planning School Study
  109. Twentieth-Century Planning History
  110. Planning Lessons from Three U.S. New Towns of the 1960s and 1970s:Irvine, Columbia, and The Woodlands
  111. Who Built Irvine? Private Planning and the Federal Government
  112. Trajectories of Planning Theory: The 2001 ACSP Anniversary Round Table
  113. Men in the valley: gay male life on the suburban-rural fringe
  114. Nonconformist Populations and Planning Sexuality and Space: Nonconformist Populations and Planning Practice
  115. Plazas, Streets, and Markets: What Puerto Ricans Bring to Urban Spaces in Northern Climates
  116. ANALYZING PUBLIC SPACE AT A METROPOLITAN SCALE: NOTES ON THE POTENTIAL FOR USING GIS
  117. The Information Age: Economy, Society and Culture
  118. On Writing and Tenure
  119. Administrative Discretion and Urban and Regional Planners’ Values
  120. Inside the Service Learning Studio in Urban Design
  121. Reviews
  122. Transatlantic Lessons: Developing Planning Degree Programs in Provincial Russia
  123. NOHO: UPSCALING MAIN STREET ON THE METROPOLITAN EDGE
  124. Variations on a main street: When a mall is an arcade
  125. Five Images of a Suburb: Perspectives on a New Urban Development
  126. 'Out' in The Valley
  127. Privatization: Infrastructure on the Urban Edge
  128. HOUSING FOR OLDER AUSTRALIANS
  129. A Gender Agenda: New Directions for Planning Theory
  130. RESIDENTIAL “SOCIAL MIX”
  131. Planned Communities and New Towns
  132. EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICE
  133. Principle 1: Importance
  134. Principle 3: Vulnerability
  135. Principle 4: Layout
  136. Principle 6: Connection
  137. Principle 7: Protection