Thursday, March 27, 2008

Pave the streets green

Found this at a Web site from Canada. Is it doable? There are some towns - early "garden cities" the likes of Radburn, NJ - where housing fronts greenery and driveways are in back. Worth doing?

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

SongScape: "My City Was Gone," by the Pretenders

Welcome to a new, regular feature of Eclectic Pedestrian. While American popular music long has addressed social-justice issues, it less frequently directly addresses such topics as sprawl and development. My goal here is to begin a different type of conversation, one where geographers, planners and others in related fields can let their hair down a bit, perhaps pick up an air guitar instead of a PowerPoint clicker, and talk about meaningful music and how this particular type of music can change our landscape - figuratively or literally.
First up is this classic from the Pretenders. Chrissie Hynde and the lads succinctly express the disdain, even sorrow and lamentation, at returning home, only to find that home has been stripped of all its dignity.
In September 2007, Hynde returned to her hometown of Akron, Ohio, to open a vegetarian restaurant and to talk about her love of the city, saying in the Akron Beacon Journal:
"My blood is Akron. It courses through my veins ..."
"Let's get rid of the malls and bring it all back downtown."

MY CITY WAS GONE, by the Pretenders; written by Chrissie Hynde
I went back to Ohio
But my city was gone
There was no train station
There was no downtown
South Howard had disappeared
All my favorite places
My city had been pulled down
Reduced to parking spaces
A, o, way to go, Ohio
Well I went back to Ohio
But my family was gone
I stood on the back porch
There was nobody home
I was stunned and amazed
My childhood memories
Slowly swirled past
Like the wind through the trees
A, o, oh way to go, Ohio
I went back to Ohio
But my pretty countryside
Had been paved down the middle
By a government that had no pride
The farms of Ohio
Had been replaced by shopping malls
And muzak filled the air
From Seneca to Cuyahoga Falls
Said, a, o, oh way to go, Ohio

Friday, March 07, 2008

Uncle Sam *doesn't* want you ...

The Pentagon has asked - and Google has complied - that the online mapper stop showing some Street View images of military installations, out of fears that national security could be compromised. The story is all over the Web. One from Reuters is as good as any to get a sense of what's going on.
As you probably know, this is not Street View's first step into controversy. Other folks have complained about privacy invasions, as SV has offered some "peeks" into people's windows as the SV crews have happened by, snapping away.

Monday, March 03, 2008

The New Cartographers

Thanks to one of my fave sites, Planetizen, for directing me to this article from "In These Times," which notes how the Internet has made it possible for almost anyone to map almost anything. Just make sure there's enough work out there if I need to change careers, OK?