IntroductionThis report deals with the methods that have been evolved in the USA for reallocating the costs of development infrastructure (roads, water supply, and other facilities) between the public and private sectors.In the past it has been assumed that the public sector should meet most of these costs, recouping them by means of general and local taxation and user charges. In both America and the UK, housebuilders and other developers have generally been expected to provide on-site services (local estate roads, link-up to mains water and drainage, car parking ,etc.), but the public sector has been responsible for off-site provision -- major roads, water supply, sewerage, and a range of other physical infrastructure and community facili...
This paper compares planning and funding arrangements for public infrastructure delivery in support ...
Special assessments, exactions, and development fees are quickly becoming popular among cities with ...
IntroductionThis is the second report resulting from my tenure of a Nuffield and Leverhulme Travelli...
IntroductionThis report deals with the methods that have been evolved in the USA for reallocating th...
In the post-war period, there were several largely unsuccessful attempts in England to introduce wor...
Development impact fee systems are a controversial topic among developers and planners. This article...
Development impact fees and exactions are financing mechanisms that local governments increasingly u...
This article explores the differences, similarities, comparative advantages and disadvantages betwee...
A Practitioner\u27s Guide to Development Impact Fees. By James C. Nicholas, Arthur C. Nelson, and J...
Regulation for Revenue: The Political Economy of Land Use Exactions, by Alan Altshuler \u26 Jose A....
Land prices have risen significantly in England over the last two decades, generating debate about h...
During the 1980's, governments in both Britain and the U.S. were increasingly inclined to shift cost...
Sprawl has defined development in the United States for the past fifty years. As people have moved f...
Over the last two decades, local governments throughout the country have been looking for additional...
Over the last five years the house-building industry has built an average of 140,000 new dwellings p...
This paper compares planning and funding arrangements for public infrastructure delivery in support ...
Special assessments, exactions, and development fees are quickly becoming popular among cities with ...
IntroductionThis is the second report resulting from my tenure of a Nuffield and Leverhulme Travelli...
IntroductionThis report deals with the methods that have been evolved in the USA for reallocating th...
In the post-war period, there were several largely unsuccessful attempts in England to introduce wor...
Development impact fee systems are a controversial topic among developers and planners. This article...
Development impact fees and exactions are financing mechanisms that local governments increasingly u...
This article explores the differences, similarities, comparative advantages and disadvantages betwee...
A Practitioner\u27s Guide to Development Impact Fees. By James C. Nicholas, Arthur C. Nelson, and J...
Regulation for Revenue: The Political Economy of Land Use Exactions, by Alan Altshuler \u26 Jose A....
Land prices have risen significantly in England over the last two decades, generating debate about h...
During the 1980's, governments in both Britain and the U.S. were increasingly inclined to shift cost...
Sprawl has defined development in the United States for the past fifty years. As people have moved f...
Over the last two decades, local governments throughout the country have been looking for additional...
Over the last five years the house-building industry has built an average of 140,000 new dwellings p...
This paper compares planning and funding arrangements for public infrastructure delivery in support ...
Special assessments, exactions, and development fees are quickly becoming popular among cities with ...
IntroductionThis is the second report resulting from my tenure of a Nuffield and Leverhulme Travelli...