Resources


Mapping

David Rumsey Historical Map Collection

The David Rumsey Collection was started nearly 20 years ago, and focuses primarily on cartography of the Americas from the 18th and 19th centuries, but also has maps of the World, Asia, Africa, Europe, and Oceania. The collection includes atlases, globes, school geographies, books, maritime charts, and a variety of separate maps, including pocket, wall, children’s and manuscript.

Google Earth

Google Earth lets you fly anywhere on Earth to view satellite imagery, maps, terrain, 3D buildings and even explore galaxies in the Sky. You can explore rich geographical content, save your toured places and share with others.

Navigateur Urbain

Navigateur Urbain, or Navurb for short is an on line map including the subway system, parks, Geobase and elevations of buildings and topography of the city of Montreal. This interactive map is seriously full of information and if you need to know say how high your neighbours house is, this is the place to look.

Policy Map

PolicyMap is a revolutionary, easy, new way to explore geographic data through maps, tables and reports. Policy Map is GIS and Demographic Mapping Made Easy: PolicyMap is an innovative geographic information system which allows you to easily create custom maps, tables, and charts

Ride the City

Plot out safe bike routes through New York City using this tool. The concept is pretty simple. Just like MapQuest, Google, Microsoft, and other mapping programs, Ride the City finds the shortest distance between two points. But there are two major differences. First, RTC excludes roads that aren’t meant for biking, like the BQE and the Queens Midtown tunnel. Second, RTC tries to locate routes that maximize the use of bike lanes and greenways.

Strange Maps

A collection of maps of different type and intent. There is everything from the ‘Sarajevo Siege Map’ to ‘The Cat’s Map of the Bed.’ While this site could be the source of the perfect map for what you are looking for, the joy of it is in its very randomness.


Networking

Centre for Social Innovation

Looking for work space in downtown Toronto? Become a member of the Centre for Social Innovation!
The Centre provides members with access to a fully functioning office environment, including high-speed Internet, meeting rooms, photocopy and fax machines, kitchen facilities, audio-visual equipment, mail boxes and much more. We’re located in a bright and beautifully restored factory warehouse space that’s been decked out with the latest in eco-design. Members can book varying degrees of time to have all the resources of an office, without the overhead.

Ulsan Online

A portal for foreigners living in the city of Ulsan, South Korea. Everything people need to survive, including movie listings, how-to guides, maps, weather and more.


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Doorway to the Neighbourhood

The Mall Series

Namba Parks

Namba Parks was the result of a visionary design, in a city that wanted something great and didn’t have real estate to waste on parking spaces. The resulting commercial mall and mixed use residential complex is what a mall should be.

Canal City: The Anatomy of a Japanese Mega Mall

Canal City is a mixed use development with a primarily commercial focus and a number of cultural and entertainment functions as well. The project was designed by Jerde and covers 9 acres with a total building area of 240,000 square meters.

The Birth of the Shopping Mall, Welcome to Southdale Centre

Southdale Centre. Southdale center opened in Edina, Minnesota in 1956. The complex was the first climate controlled shopping complex, fully enclosed and featuring rival department stores. Minneapolis has an interesting relationship with the mall being the first city to house one, and the home to the largest mall in America, the aptly named Mall of America, which is just four miles away from its progenitor.

Eyes on the Street

Neighbourhood Favourites

France's Big Bridge

The Millau bridge in France currently holds the record for the worlds tallest road bridge. At a towering 343m (1,125ft) at its highest point, it is definitely not for anyone afraid of heights. The bridge crosses the River Tarn and the valley of the same name and has been termed by some as "one of the most breathtaking ever built."

Is that a mock Tudor Castle in your haystack or are you just happy to see me?

In Redhill Surry Robert fiddler created a massive pile of hay bales in his yard and his neighbours didn’t really think anything of it, he is a farmer after all. Then about six years later the bales came down and voila a Mock Tudor Castle. The fiddlers built the house in secret over the course of two years and then lived in it while it was hidden within the hay bales for four years in a bit to avoid needing to get planning permission for the structure. The town council wants it down but Robert fiddler is arguing that he followed the letter of the law. A law which states that if a structure has been built/erected for four years and there are no objections to it then planning permission is automatically granted.

The Pedestrianization of Times Square and the Naked Cowboy

Times Square is an iconic location in the City of New York. In planner speak a place like this is often called a magnet, attactions like these generate activity and draw in people. They call them attractions for a reason. One of Times Square's more notable citizens is Robert John Burck, more popularly known as the Naked Cowboy, an American Busker with a signature style of wearing only his hat, cowboy boots, a pair of tighty whiteys and a strategically placed guitar.....until recently Times Square, while known as an attraction for people, was predominantly a space for cars. However with the induction of New York's Fearless new Transportation Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan, and the changes that have come with her, Times Square is now a different place.

The 'Hotel Of Doom' Awakes!

The infamous 105-storey Ryugyong Hotel in Pyongyang has awoken from its slumber and is once again seeing construction work. It has been reported that Egypt’s Orascom group has been contracted to refurbish the top floors of what has been termed by some as the ‘Hotel of Doom.’ Construction originally started in 1987 and it was thought that the tower was a jealous response to the South’s Olympic construction boom. The structure is 105 stories high and, if it were fully finished, it would contain 3.9 million square feet of floor space. Kim Ill Sung started construction to show off the state's burgeoning economic power.

Super Green Buildings, the urban farm

In the not so distant future, it is predicted that as much as 80% of the world's population will live in urban areas and, by 2050, the population of the world will increase by as many as 3 billion people. Three billion people require a fair bit of food and current farming practices are unlikely to be able to provide the needed supply. Dr Dickson Despommier suggests Vertical Farms.

The battle of the Super towers

In the last few years, every town, village and post office box has announced it's plans to build the tallest building in the neighbourhood, town, province, or galaxy. It's gotten rather confusing, but I'm going to try and sort through the hype and look at some of the future giants that will make the skylines of Korea more unique. People might try to point out the lack of super tall buildings currently in Korea, but one must remember that the Burj Dubai is being built by none other than Samsung construction.

Green on Top: Toronto Passes Green Roof Legislation

Regulations will require green roofs on new residential buildings in the city starting January 31st 2010 that are more then 2,000 square meters and 20 meters or higher. Industrial construction will have an extra 12 months to prepare for the requirements. For industrial buildings they will have to reserve either 10% of the roof area or 2,000 square meters, and have the option to choose the lesser amount for sod and other greenery.