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Civic

Meaning:

The

Role

of

Place,

Typology

and

Design

Values

in

Urbanism

By

Linda

Groat

David

Godschalk

Examines

Coastal Planning

in

North

Carolina

Update

on

Recovery

Efforts

Following

Hurricane

Floyd

Greening

of

Industry:

Sustainability

and

Local

Economic

Development

Urban

Boundaries

and

Mass

Transit:

A

Lesson

for

Atlanta?

WINTER

2

&3

U-p

I

a

n

n

i

n

g

(2)

Digitized

by

the

Internet

Archive

in

2011

with

funding

from

University

of

North Carolina

at

Chapel

Hill

(3)

Editors

ElizabethFederico

From

the Editors:

Philip Hervcy

Laurence Lewis

Robin Zimbler

The

broad rangeof eoncepts addressed in this

issue ofCarolinaPlanningdemonstratesthe

interdisciplinary natureofthe fieldofcity

plan-CarolinaPlanning ispublished twice ayear

with generousfinancial support from:

ning

topicsdiscussed includecoastal zone

management,

urbandesign, sustainability,

eco-•

The

JohnA. ParkerTrust Fund

nomic

development, andtransportation.

The

articlestackle conceptsthat bothpracticing

The

Departmentof Cityand Regional

planners and academics have haddifficulty Planning

transitioningfrom therealm oftheoreticalconsid- •

The

NorthCarolina Chapterofthe

eration topractical application. In Civic

Mean-

American

Planning Association

ing: The Role ofPlace, Typology

and

Design •

The

Departmentof Cityand Regional

Valuesin Urbanism, LindaN. Groat proposes Planning

Alumni

Association

how

urban designersand planners mightbetter

manifestthe elusive conceptofsenseofplacein Subscriptions: Tl

31

o

-1

x the builtenvironment, therebycultivating a civic Annual subscription ratesare

meaning

inoururban spaces. InSustainability Individuals$12; Institutions $20;

and

Local

Economic

Development:

Can

Regions Studentsand

APA

members

$10.

m

m

'Learn'

to

Become

Sustainable?, Saeed Parto

Back

issues, including postage $8.

O

i

discusses bridging thegap betweenthe seemingly

o

u

disparateaims of

economic

development prac- CarolinaPlanning

welcomes

comments.

w

ticesandsustainability. suggestions and submissions. Mailto:

Inadditiontothe featurearticles, this issueof Carolina Planning

UNC-Chapel

Hill

CB#3140,

CarolinaPlanningincludes a

book

review by Chapel Hill,

NC

27599-3140

Deborah

M. Mark

ley on UnderstandingLocal

Phone:(919)962-4783

Economic Development

by

Edward

J. Feserand E-mail: carplanfaunc.edu

Emil E. Malizia, professors of Cityand Regional

Planningatthe UniversityofNorth Carolinaat

The

editorswishtothank David Godschalk and

Chapel Hill. Moreover, asa partofthe Planner's Lila Berry.

Digestsection

we

haveincludedan update on

recovery effortsin theaftermath ofHurricane

Cover

Image:

Floyd. Coupledwith DavidR. Godschalk's

A

street in Kentlands,

Md.

(top),and a

articleProgressReport on 'Chartinga Coursefor suburbandevelopment.

Our

Coast': NotAll

Smooth

Sailing,thebrief Photosby Joong

Sub

Kim

updateon hurricane recovery servesas a

precur-sortoour

upcoming

Summer

2000

issuethat, in

©

2000, theDepartment ofCityandRegional

responseto

many

requests, will focus exclusively Planning

on coastal zone

management

andhazard

mitiga-tion.

We

are currentlysoliciting articles for this Printedby

UNC

Printing Servicesonrecycled

upcoming

issue,as well asarticles,opinion pieces paper

(4)

Call

for

Papers

Articles•

Opinion

Pieces •

Case

Studies •

Book

Reviews

Art

Work

• ProjectDescriptions

Carolina

Planning

isaccepting articles forthe

Summer

2000

and Winter 2001

issues.

Our

journal focuses

on

topics relevanttopracticing planners inthe Southeast.

We

are particularly

interested in articles

on

Transportation

and

HistoricPreservation for the

upcoming

issue.

Submission

Guidelines:

Manuscripts

should be

up

to25 typed,

double-spaced

pages

(approximately 7.500 words). Please

submit two

paper

copies

and one

copy

on

3.5"diskette in

WordPerfect. Microsoft

Word,

or

ASCII

text. Citations

should follow the author-date

system

in the

Chicago

Manual

ofStyle, with endnotes

used

forexplanatory

text. Legal articles

may

use

Bluebook

format. Tables

and

graphics should be

camera

ready. Please include

the author's

name,

address, telephone

number, and

email address, along with a 2-3 sentence biographical

sketch. Carolina Planning reserves the right to edit

articles accepted for publication, subject to author's

approval.

Submission

Calendar:

April 1

Dec.

1 for

Winter

issue

submissions

Dec.

1

April 1 for

Summer

issue

submissions

We

accept

submissions

on

ayear-roundbasis.

These

dates are flexible. If

you

have any

questionsabout

when

you

should submit an article, please contact us via

phone

oremail.

Land

Use

Housing

Economic Development

Environmental

Planning

Community Development

Historic

Preservation

Coastal Zone Planning

Hazard

Mitigation

Participatory

Planning

Transportation

Planning

Law

Contact

Information

Carolina Planning

Department

of City

and Regional

Planning

CB#3

140 University of

North

Carolina

Chapel

Hill.

NC

27599

(919)962-4783

(5)

Carolina

Planning

The

Planning Journal of

theSoutheast

Winter

2000

Vol. 25,

No.

1

FROM

THE

EDITORS

TABLE

OF

CONTENTS

PLANNER'S

DIGEST

Recovery

Efforts in the

Wake

of

Hurricane

Floyd

Robin Zimbler

ARTICLES

Progress

Report

on Charting

a

Course

for

Our

Coast:

Not

All

Smooth

Sailing

David

R.

Godschalk

Civic

Meaning:

The

Role of

Place,

Typology

and Design

Values in

Urbanism

Linda

N.

Groat

13

>

CD

O

o

m

Z

H

en

Sustainability

and

Local

Economic

Development:

Can

Regions

'Learrfto

Become

Sustainable?

Saeed

Parto

27

Impact of

Urban

Boundaries

on

Mass

Transit:

A

Lesson

forAtlanta?

Allison

Frankel

39

BOOK

REVIEW

Understanding Loeal

Economic

Development,

by Emil

Malizia

and

Edward

Feser

Reviewed by

Deborah

M.

Markley

49

(6)

Historic

Preservation

o

CD

1

1

1

j

o

2

Preserve a

copy

of

Carolina Planning.

Back

issues

available.

Visit

the

Carolina

Planning

web

site

for

information

on

back

issues:

http://www.unc.edu/depts/dcrpweb/carplan/Default.htm

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