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Sustainability : Featured Stories

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An "advisory bike lane" in Edina

Change comes to car country: Biking, walking on the rise in the suburbs

From "road diets" to "advisory bike lanes" to Complete Streets programs, Twin Cities suburbs are beginning to create infrastructure and policy to turn their familiar auto-only paradigm into a new vision of walkable, bikeable streets.

Burough

The New North Loop: Both Cool and Comfortable

The bars and restaurants in this uber-trendy corner of downtown Minneapolis draw national attention. Meanwhile, developers, community groups, and residents are turning the surrounding neighborhood into a pleasantly dense, lively, and livable urban village.

Winona LaDuke

A Line or Two: Dinner with LaDuke

In A Line or Two, I share some of my enthusiasms and discoveries as I make my way around the Twin Cities. Call it an editor's note as blog entry. This week: Thanks to the cooks-with-a-conscience at Eat for Equity, you've got a chance to share a meal, and a cause, with famed activist (and Green Party vice-presidential candidate) Winona La Duke.

John Larsen in conversation with Jon Spayde

Young Leaders 1: Architect/Philanthropist John Larsen on Going Beyond Grantmaking

In this first of an occasional series of interviews with young movers and shakers in the Twin Cities, we talk with John Larsen, an architect whose personal giving, and family foundation, support deeply held personal values rooted in personal experiences. For Larsen, philanthropy needs to explore options beyond writing checks--like new partnerships with government.

Matt Entenza

The New Green Job Scene

While the concept of the green job is a nice fusion of much-needed employment growth and environmental responsibility, it's been hard to get a handle on the size and even the definition of this part of the job market. But according to Matt Entenza and other experts, the picture in Minnesota is getting clearer as more jobs fit the category. In fact, this small but growing sector may be the IT of the future.

Nice Ride

Bikes Mean Better Business

It's long been known that biking is good for your health, good as a transportation option, good for reducing carbon emissions. But it's becoming clearer and clearer that cities that are bike-friendly are also attracting the kind of talent that builds the businesses of the future.

Solera Chef Jorge Guzman with Gunnar Liden of the Youth Farm and Market Project

Farm in the Cities: A Slide Show

The two groups that anchor the Twin Cities' food and restaurant renaissance--the growers and the chefs--came together in impressive numbers Sunday night for Farm in the Cities, the second annual celebration of furrow-to-table hyperlocal food culture, held at our preeminent Spanish restaurant, Solera. And Managing Photographer Bill Kelley was there.

Jayne Miller, Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board superintendent

Creating public park 3.0

The Twin Cities' long tradition of innovation in public green space is continuing, and even ramping up, as park planners invent ways to meet new challenges: ambitious riverfront development plans, changing environmental concerns, the Central Corridor, urban farming, and the needs of new immigrants.

Annie Sprinkle and Beth Stephens

A Line or Two: Ecosexual Movie Night

In A Line or Two, I share some of my discoveries and enthusiasms as I make my way around the Twin Cities. Call it an editor's note as blog entry. This week: a pair of highly unusual--as in flamboyantly libidinous--eco-activists bring their film-in-progress to town.

A Buffered (but not protected) bike lane on First Avenue in Minneapolis

The Green Lane Project: Making Cities Safer for Bikes

It's a different "greening" of the urban landscape: highly visible bike lanes, often protected from other traffic. Is it the next step in making America a leader in 21st-century transportation?

Blackbrook Farm

Farmers' Market confidential

The debut of a new market in Minneapolis' Linden Hills neighborhood underlines the exciting upsides--and a few lesser-known downsides--of the farmers' market boom.

Practical Goods Flier

In Praise of Bricks and Mortar

Geographer Bill Lindeke has an eye for the urban details that make the Twin Cities pleasurable and intriguing--and when those details have something to do with the walkable portions of our streets, they're likely to appear as images or words in his blog, Twin City Sidewalks. In this post, from last week, he highlights a Saint Paul store that embodies--and symbolizes--why, in an age of burgeoning online commerce, we will always need real places to buy things.

Shakir Taliaferro

The Odd (Retail) Couple

Need a kicky pair of high heels or an affordable, eco-friendly coffin? Two shops sharing a building on Saint Paul's evolving Smith Avenue are ready to help with fashion or funerals.

Jon and the Blue Bike

A Line or Two: Okay, I'll Bike!

In A Line or Two, I share some of my discoveries and enthusiasms as I make my way around the Twin Cities. Call it an editor's-note-as-blog-entry. This week: National Bike Month, with its galaxy of two-wheel events and promotions, has the potential to get me out from behind the computer.

Karen Washington

Karen Washington tells local urban gardeners: to go permanent, get political

What do you do when the urban garden you've struggled to create gets sold out from under you? At the recent Community Garden Spring Resource Fair, New York gardening advocate Karen Washington told local growers that if they want their gardens to be really sustainable--i.e., permanent--they'd better get savvy about the political system.
90 Articles | Page: | Show All
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