Planetizen | |
Logocaption: | --> |
Commercial: | Yes |
Type: | News website |
Language: | English |
Content Licence: | --> |
Editors: | --> |
Planetizen is a planning-related news website and e-learning platform based in Los Angeles, California. It features user-submitted news, editor-evaluated news and weekly user-contributed op-eds about urban planning and several related fields. The website also publishes an annual list of the top 10 books in the field published during the current year, and a directory and ranking of graduate-level education in the field of urban planning.
The name of the website is a concatenation of Plan, as in the word, planning, and Netizen, a portmanteau of Internet and citizen.[1] The website self-reports that it is visited by 1.5 million unique visitors each year.[2]
In 2006, the website also started publishing books, including the first urban planning book for children, Where Things Are, From Near to Far, published in 2008 by Planetizen Press. This book was reviewed by The New York Times.[3] Their 2007 book Planetizen's Contemporary Debates in Urban Planning, a collection of brief essays published by Island Press, received positive reviews.[4]
Planetizen introduced a much-needed broader perspective on city planning in the US, which very often extends into international practice as well. Coming out of the very formal car-oriented planning philosophy and practice following the Second World War, American urbanism risked becoming a dinosaur as it missed all the (at the time) new New Urbanist practices being implemented. The great value of Planetizen was to juxtapose ALL planning practice and let readers judge the effectiveness of each idea. Coming as it did in the internet age, it provided, and continues to provide, an extremely useful central location for urbanists and planners to follow what is happening around the world. More than any other site, Planetizen is a clearing house of planning ideas, and its inclusivity without any ideological prejudice is both refreshing and invaluable.
The major problem in developed economies is urban sprawl and its energy-devouring urban morphology. Planetizen has broadly championed the New Urbanist solutions while juxtaposing a variety of alternatives and criticisms. This interplay lays the groundwork for facing a difficult problem. Debate on Planetizen juxtaposes practical concerns of developers and government entities with the need for more sustainable urban fabric. Developers who build Sprawl are being educated towards new strategies for a more livable suburbia.
In the Developing World, the major problem facing both economies and governments lies in owner-built settlements, favelas, villas miserias, gecekondu, or slums by any other name. Here the debate is more difficult to access, because for a long time, the problems and solutions found in informal settlements have been either ignored or misinterpreted by mainstream planners. Solutions to this exponentially growing problem are not obvious. Planetizen has commendably brought attention to this other side of urbanism, so often ignored by the urban planning schools. For example, it sponsored a discussion on the Bombay slum Dharavi, which brought the topic of slum clearance versus upgrading to worldwide attention.[5]
World economies and major construction companies are driven in part by building megaprojects, the most prominent component of which is one or more skyscrapers. Planetizen has opened up the debate on skyscrapers more than once. A city has to balance the drive to build high, using high-tech, with the theoretical objections that skyscrapers drain the resources and energy from the region in which they are implanted. New skyscrapers are claimed to be eco-sustainable, but those claims have as many critics as they have proponents. Again, there is a need for a broad debate, and Planetizen contains many different and dissenting viewpoints on the question of skyscrapers as a viable building typology.
Planetizen has ranked planning graduate programs in the United States through six editions of its Guide to Urban Planning Graduate Programs, and has published the top 10 ranks on its website.
Rank | 7th Edition (2023)[6] | 6th Edition (2019)[7] | 5th Edition (2017)[8] | 4th Edition (2015)[9] | 3rd Edition (2012)[10] | 2nd Edition (2009)[11] | 1st Edition (2007)[12] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) | MIT | MIT | MIT | MIT | MIT | MIT | |
2 | Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) | Berkeley | Berkeley | Berkeley | Cornell | Berkeley | Berkeley | |
3 | Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey (Rutgers) | Rutgers | UNC-Chapel Hill | Urbana-Champaign | Rutgers | UNC-Chapel Hill | UNC-Chapel Hill | |
4 | University of California, Berkeley (Berkeley) | UCLA | UCLA | UCLA | Berkeley | Rutgers | Harvard | |
5 | University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (UNC-Chapel Hill) | UNC-Chapel Hill | Rutgers | Georgia Tech | Urbana-Champaign | Urbana-Champaign | UPenn | |
6 | Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech) | Harvard | Harvard | Rutgers | UNC-Chapel Hill | Cornell | UCLA | |
7 | Harvard University (Harvard) | University of Pennsylvania (UPenn) | Georgia Tech | Cornell | USC | Harvard | Cornell | |
8 | University of Southern California (USC) | USC | University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign (Urbana-Champaign) | UNC-Chapel Hill | Georgia Tech | UCLA | Rutgers | |
9 | University of Texas at Austin (UT-Austin) | University of Michigan | USC | USC | UCLA | USC | USC | |
10 | Tufts University (Tufts) | Georgia Tech | Cornell University (Cornell) | Harvard | UPenn | UPenn | Urbana-Champaign |
Planetizen is often criticized for running news stories or user-contributed op-eds that are critical of current urban planning practices. Planetizen is also criticized by some urban planning educators in higher education for ranking graduate-level urban planning programs in the Guide to Graduate Urban Planning Education.[13]
The site was created in February 2000 by co-editors in chief Abhijeet Chavan and Chris Steins. In 2005 David Gest was appointed the first managing editor. Subsequent managing editors have included Christian Peralta Madera (2006), Timothy Halbur (2008), Jonathan Nettler, AICP (2012) and James Brasuell (2014).[23]
Planetizen Press is the publishing arm of Planetizen, and has published several print books.