Search Panethos
-
Join 807 other followers
Authors
-
problogic
- Solar energy production in the USA on former surface mines
- Monikers/nicknames for film and movie-making hubs
- Albuquerque – A city at the convergence of unparalleled geophysical landforms
- Strict planning & zoning destroys eclectic, offbeat, and funky
- Madrid, NM – Coal mining ghost town to eclectic art colony
- The many moods of the Sandia Mountains in a single day
- The “unity of drought” must supersede myths and self interest
- Gnarly Native American art on skateboard decks
- North American cities with toll beltways and bypasses
- 25 Largest American core cities without a limited access beltway or bypass
-
Blog Stats
- 1,695,892 hits
Blogroll
- Alliance for Biking and Walking
- American Planning Association
- Canadian Institute of Planners
- City Observatory
- CityLab
- Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat
- Curbed Detroit
- Curbed National
- Dezeen
- FLOW – For Love of Water
- Grist
- League of American Bicyclists
- Modern Cities
- Next City
- Oil & Water Don't Mix
- Planetizen
- Royal Town Planning Institute
- Streetsblog
- Strong Towns
- The Corner Side Yard
- The Dirt
- The Gondola Project
Tag Archives: Brookline
Paying homage at a planning and landscape design shrine
This past Sunday, a few hours prior to the arrival of Hurricane Sandy and my quick departure back to Michigan, I had the profound honor of visiting one of the ultimate shrines of the planning and landscape design professions – the Frederick … Continue reading
Posted in adaptive reuse, architecture, art, cities, civics, civility, culture, education, entrepreneurship, environment, fun, geography, health, historic preservation, history, Housing, infrastructure, land use, landscape architecture, nature, new urbanism, placemaking, planning, psychology, revitalization, spatial design, sustainability, third places, tourism, Travel, urban planning, zoning
Tagged architecture, Brookline, design, environment, Fairstead, Frederick Law Olmstead, land use, land use planning, landscape architecture, Massachusetts, National Historic Sites, National Parks, nature, urban planning
13 Comments