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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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A Public-Private Shopping Mall

January 15, 2016 By Emily Hamilton

Forest City Enterprises recently received approval from Arlington County to redevelop its Ballston Common Mall. The deal is a public-private partnership in which the county will pay for $10 million in infrastructure improvements around the mall and provide $45 million in tax increment financing for … [Read more...]

Filed Under: planning Tagged With: Public-Private Partnerships, washington dc

A Smart City in Your Pocket: From top-down command centers to bottom-up app markets

January 10, 2016 By Nolan Gray

Woman sitting on a bench in a park using a smartphone

 Cities, for most of human history, were dumb. At least, that’s what the “smart cities” movement might lead you to believe. Over the past few years, a chorus of acquisitive multinational tech corporations, trend-savvy politicians, and optimistic developers­­—an odd mixture of former SimCity … [Read more...]

Filed Under: infrastructure, Logistics & Transportation, planning, privatization, Transportation Tagged With: infrastructure, smart city, tech

The deal-making behind the Silver Line

November 20, 2015 By Emily Hamilton

In political transactions, players cannot make deals using dollars, but nonetheless they engage in trades to pursue their goals. Policymakers may engage in trades both with other policymakers and with private sector actors . While these deals are not denominated in dollars, their gains from trade … [Read more...]

Filed Under: housing, planning, Transportation, Zoning

How land use regulations hurt the poor

November 5, 2015 By Emily Hamilton

Sandy Ikeda and I have published a new Mercatus paper on the regressive effects of land use regulation. We review the empirical literature on how the effects of rules such as maximum density, parking requirements, urban growth boundaries, and historic preservation affect housing prices. Nearly all … [Read more...]

Filed Under: housing, planning

Smart city data and political opportunism

November 2, 2015 By Emily Hamilton

The term "smart cities" encompasses the interaction of the Internet of Things, the urban environment, and city dwellers. While these innovations have facilitated some very successful new services, smart cities have important limitations in the public sphere.Smart city technology includes city … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Economics, planning

Systemic bias against small scale development

October 2, 2015 By Emily Hamilton

In recent years, some of the country's largest mixed-use real estate developments involved disposition of government-owned land directly to developers. For example, Atlantic Yards in Brooklyn and DC's City Center and Marriott Marquis came about when municipal governments … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Economics, housing, planning

Engineering in the dark

August 28, 2015 By Emily Hamilton

The similarities of urban design across American neighborhoods is no coincidence, but neither is it the result of city planners' uniform adherence to best practices. Infrastructure is often built based on shockingly little information about the demands of its users. And while poorly reasoned … [Read more...]

Filed Under: parking, planning, Transportation

Trickle-Down Housing Economics? Laying Reagan’s Ghost to Rest

August 25, 2015 By Jeff Fong

In a recent 48 Hills post, housing activist Peter Cohen aimed a couple rounds of return fire at SPUR's Gabriel Metcalf. The post comes in response to Mr. Metcalf's own article critiquing progressive housing policy. Mr. Cohen bounces around a bit, but he does repeat some frequently used talking … [Read more...]

Filed Under: housing, planning, Policy, Uncategorized Tagged With: Bay Area, California, debate, gentrification, housing crisis, San Francisco

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