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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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Affordable Housing vs. Density: The Unintended Consequences of Zoning Bonuses

October 7, 2011 By Stephen Smith

California Assembly Bill 710 was introduced to earlier this year to tackle the problem of municipalities requiring onerous amounts of parking for new development, widely recognized as one of the main impediments to transit-oriented development and infill growth. The bill would have capped city and … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Economics, parking, Places & Spaces, Policy, Zoning Tagged With: affordable housing, California, New York City, regulation

The Little-Known History of “Light and Air”

April 26, 2011 By Stephen Smith

"Light and air" is a very common excuse that people give for why we must have basic zoning laws, and while nowadays a lot of people mean it simply in an aesthetic sense – another way of saying "I like to be able to look out a window and not see another skyscraper 50 feet away" (though for some … [Read more...]

Filed Under: history, planning, Policy, Zoning Tagged With: density, history, progressivism, skyscrapers, zoning

Japanese transit and what it can teach us

December 22, 2010 By Stephen Smith

For a libertarian urbanist blogger, I've always felt kind of embarrassed by my lack of knowledge about East Asian transit, considering that it's the only place left on earth with a thriving competitive private transportation market (they even have profitable monorails!). I've heard good things about … [Read more...]

Filed Under: infrastructure, Logistics & Transportation, Policy, privatization, Transportation Tagged With: density, japan, transit

Hard Truths About Why Conservatives and Libertarians Hate Urbanism

November 20, 2010 By Stephen Smith

It's no secret that conservatives and libertarians don't have very warm feelings towards urbanism. But with their emphasis on upzoning and reducing parking minimums, shouldn't new urbanism and smart growth have at least some libertarian constituency? And given that local roads are paid for almost … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Free-market impostors, Policy, sprawl Tagged With: conservatism, libertarianism, progressivism

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