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WikiProject report

The interesting world of urban planning

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By Rcsprinter123

According to the WHO, 54% of the world's population now lives in urban areas. Chances are that you are one of them. Many Wikipedians contribute to articles relating to where they live or have visited. But have you ever thought a little beyond that and written about concepts of the cities, the towns, the areas themselves? If not, don't worry! There's a project for that, and it is the subject of the WikiProject Report this week. WikiProject Urban studies and planning, founded in 2006, has only around 30 members, but is perfectly active, with a rather wide scope looking the things that are in front of our eyes every day, yet so often overlooked. Topics encompassed include architectural conservation, city plans, environmental planning, ghost towns, slums, urban historians, historic preservation, the history of urban planning, land use, metropolitan areas, urban decay, neighborhoods, public housing, redevelopment, streets, urban agriculture, urban design, and zoning. It has to be said, that is rather a lot. We got the inside story by interviewing Dan arndt, Daniel Case and Elekhh.

Plan of the City of Washington, by Pierre Charles L'Enfant, March 1792

What motivated you to join WikiProject Urban Studies & Planning? Do you work in this sector, or just have a keen interest?

Rue du Boulivent, Montmoreau, France

Can you explain precisely the scope of this project, and what things you do not cover?

Gravelly Hill Interchange, Birmingham, UK

The project has 8 pieces of featured material and 26 good articles. Have you contributed to any of these articles? Are you currently working on bringing an article up to FA or GA status?

Serhiy Bronevitskiy, an urban planner from Kiev, Ukraine

How do you fare gaining images for use within the project? Are there particular people who take photographs, or create diagrams and maps?

Does the project collaborate with any other projects?

What are the project's most pressing needs? How can a new member help today?

Next week, we'll have our 2014 update with WikiProject Military History. Until then, why not do some digging of your own in the archive?

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Sorry to have been slow to respond. I worked professionally in urban planning and remain deeply interested in it, but have also worked extensively on many US history articles, especially of the colonial era and 19th century. These are often related to or influenced by issues of urban development. I have worked to incorporate thinking about urban development into many history articles - for instance, in identifying how cities and towns well into the 19th century were generally developed primarily on rivers and other waters, as the main transportation networks until railroads and then improved highways supplanted them. Also, for contemporary roadways, I have changed wording so that content reflects that paths and roads have followed rivers, rather than that rivers "parallel such and such a road", as I have seen written more than once in these pages. I know what the editors meant, but it is up to us to provide the historical sense and show that development followed the rivers, not the other way around. Will also try to get more directly involved; have started working on a couple of articles related to St. Louis' Gateway Arch and Mall. Really need sources.Parkwells (talk) 23:40, 24 November 2014 (UTC)[reply]



       

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