Sentences with phrase «planning professor»

The latest contrarian volley comes from Dowell Myers, an urban planning professor at USC.
«Millennials are sick and tired of rent increases, so they're getting into the game in larger numbers,» says Dowell Myers, a demography and urban planning professor at the University of Southern California.
Last week Ron Rhoades, financial planning professor, researcher, practitioner and thought leader, acknowledged their work, writing in his blog about the Institute and Best Practices:
Concordia University city planning professor John Zacharias has studied several underground cities, especially in Japan and China, and told me that the biggest challenge is psychological.
A recent study by University of Utah Department of City & Metropolitan Planning professor Reid Ewing and his colleagues in Utah, Texas and Louisiana, tested the relationship between urban sprawl and upward mobility for metropolitan areas in the United States.
It's the brainchild of University of New Mexico (UNM) School of Architecture and Planning professor Anne Taylor and architect George Vlastos, and is a collaboration between the UNM and K - 12 schools throughout the Albuquerque area.
Gateway project, sprawling suburbs widen the province's ecological footprint, says UBC planning professor [Bill Rees]
Every fall, urban planning professor Pierre Filion asks the same question of new students at the University of Waterloo.
What this change in housing preference really shows, according to USC urban planning professor Dowell Myers, is that we have now reached «Peak Millennial.»
«Generally speaking, the US gets about a D + for things like this,» Vivek Shandas, an urban - planning professor at Portland State University, told Business Insider after the fall's triple threat of hurricanes lashed Puerto Rico and mainland US.
In contrast to Sherrill and Arzt, Mitchell Moss, an urban policy and planning professor at NYU, wasn't much willing to credit Nixon's candidacy at all.
Here's a great quote from Don Shoup, planning professor at UCLA and author of The High Cost of Free Parking:
Kyle Ezell, a planning professor at Ohio State University, noted in his book «Retire Downtown» that «ruppies» — retired urban people — live more active and healthier lives than suburban contemporaries, stimulated by the large number of choices available to them in downtown settings.
«The farmer gets a payment and then the development rights are in effect extinguished on the property,» said Tom Daniel, a planning professor at the University of Pennsylvania and former director of the Lancaster County program.
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