Urban Planning Books as Gifts

Tis’ the season for gifts and what better gifts than books on urban planning. I revived the Urban Planning Bookstore on this blog after abruptly shutting it down last year. I later realized that plenty of people had in fact used it to find interesting books. Anyway, I am listing some books that I had the pleasure of reading this past year and think they’ll make excellent gifts:

Couple of books in this list are available in Kindle format. I have been using the Kindle app on my iPad to read books and find it really convenient.

The Transportation Planning Rule Every City Should Reform

The source of the disconnect between San Francisco's transit-first heart and its car-centric hand is an arcane engineering measure called "level of service," or LOS. In brief, LOS suggests that whenever the city wants to change some element of a street — say by adding a bike lane or even just painting a crosswalk — it should calculate the effect that change will have on car traffic. If the change produces too much congestion, then a great deal of time, money, and additional analysis must go toward the project's consideration.

[Link to The Transportation Planning Rule Every City Should Reform]