Car ownership is expensive, and building parking costs money.
Unbundling our Housing Choices
Strong Towns discusses the oversimplification of surveys on housing preferences and the "bundling" of housing options, and how to provide better options in housing and neighborhoods.
Demographics and Housing Options
Even though some recent evidence points to Millennials making a shift to more suburban lifestyles, this may not be because of a change in preference, but rather simply because they don't have options to live in walkable neighborhoods.
How Not To Be Pedestrian Friendly
Examples of pedestrian unfriendly-amenities. Can you spot the types that occur in Eugene's neighborhoods?
Video Games and Zoning
Games like SimCity and Cities:Skyline make some interesting, and not always correct, assumptions about how we can and should build our environment.
Renters have shorter commutes
New Housing has to go somewhere
Link Roundup
Stop the crosswalk begging
One example of how Eugene prioritizes cars over people-- at many intersections throughout the city, we have what are known as "beg buttons," those little buttons you have to press to get the walk single.