Now showing items 7-13 of 13

    • Plan Canada - Volume 44, Number 4 (Winter 2004) 

      Unknown author (Canadian Institute of Planners, 2004-11)
      Moving minds|Remue-méninges
    • Secondary suites: Obstacles and opportunities demonstrated by a case study in Guelph, Ontario 

      Kraehling, Paul (Canadian Institute of Planners, 2004)
      Secondary suites, or accessory apartments as they are known in the Guelph context, are an important source of rental housing. Although this housing stock may only be a "temporary" supply in certain instances, it is ...
    • Strategic land use planning: Revitalization in St. Louis 

      Stanley, Rollin (Canadian Institute of Planners, 2004)
      Aggressive marketing using tax incentives is part of the everyday planner's life in many U.S. cities. Tax increment financing, abatement, and sales taxes are an important part of the revenue stream. Canadian cities need ...
    • Sustainable development in northern urban areas 

      Sweet, Pamela (Canadian Institute of Planners, 2004)
      Sustainable development principles are an important starting point for the planning of any urban area. In northern communities, where these principles are particularly critical, they are a challenge to implement. ...
    • Turning over the reins 

      Grant, Jill (Canadian Institute of Planners, 2004)
      Jill Grant reflects on her four years as Chair of the Editorial Board of Plan Canada, and welcomes Mark Seasons as her successor.
    • Urban innovations: Financial tools in brownfield revitalization 

      Brendon, Casey; Bergman, David; Dunstan, Judy; Lu, Hon (Canadian Institute of Planners, 2004)
      With increasing Canadian interest in brownfield redevelopment, many Ontario municipalities have begun to use financial tools such as tax increment equivalent grants to stimulate redevelopment. This article, based on a ...
    • Where to start? 

      Laliberté, Chantal (Canadian Institute of Planners, 2004)
      When facing different situations, both in our personal and professional lives, we seek information that will help us to find solutions. However, the information and advice we receive can be overwhelming, and we find ...