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From: "Vandenbroucke, David A" <David.A.Vandenbroucke@hud.gov> on 4/20/2007 1:05:19 PM
Subject: AHS 2005 Wall Charts

The 2005 edition of the much-prized American Housing Survey wall
chart is now available. You can order one for free from the HUD
USER web store, https://webstore.huduser.gov/catalog/index.php .

The wall chart is a poster-sized summary of the characteristics of
the U.S. housing stock. It's good as a reference, a way to show
students and colleagues what they can find in the AHS, and it's
guaranteed to break the ice at parties.

Dav Vandenbroucke
Senior Economist
U.S. Dept. HUD
david_a._vandenbroucke@hud.gov
202-402-5890


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From: Katrin Anacker <kanacker@vt.edu> on 4/23/2007 1:21:54 PM
Subject: OT: third/final call for abstracts: A Suburban World? Global Decentralization and the New Metropolis

***Apologies for multiple postings
Call for abstracts (due by April 30, 2007 May 15, 2007)

International conference
Reston, Virginia, USA
April 6-April 8, 2008

A Suburban World? Global Decentralization and the New Metropolis

Hosted by
Dr. Juliann Allison (Blakely Center for Sustainable Suburban Development),
Dr. Edward Blakely (University of Sydney and University of New Orleans),
Dr. Paul Knox (Virginia Tech),
Dr. Robert Lang (Metropolitan Institute),
Dr. Arthur C. Nelson (Metropolitan Institute)

We have entered a new era where the areas outside worldwide core
cities are forming different settlement systems. In Europe, even
tight building controls have not curbed the appetite of households to
move out of the central cities. China and India, with fast-growing
middle classes, are witnessing a startling expansion of their urban
areas with rapid auto-dependent growth on the fringe. Mexico and
Indonesia are beginning to adapt American-style suburban development
patterns. As urban form changes, new research and policy have to be
created to address the challenges of sprawl, congestion, and
affordable housing. This conference will explore these and other
issues in the American as well as international context.

Tracks:
* Immigration/Changing Demographics of the Suburbs
* Special Segregation by Lifestyle/Economics; Gated Communities
* Megapolitans/Metropolitan Form
* Transportation
* Energy Consumption/Sustainable Environment
* Disasters/Adaptation
* Transnational Communities/Residential Tourism
* Governance & Regulation
* Business of Suburbia/Economic Development/Economic Space
* Suburban Decline
* Urban Form at the Neighborhood Level
* Newburbia/Newtowns
* History

Conference Website:
http://www.mi.vt.edu/
Katrin B. Anacker, Ph.D.
Acting Managing Editor Housing Policy Debate
Post Doctoral Fellow Metropolitan Institute at Virginia Tech
Suite 100
1021 Prince St.
Alexandria, VA 22314
e. kanacker@vt.edu
ph. 703.838.8320
fx. 703.518.8009
www.mi.vt.edu
Conference "A Suburban World? Global Decentralization and the New Metropolis"
(Reston, VA, April 6-8, 2008; abstracts due May 15, 2007)
http://www.mi.vt.edu/index.asp?page=23&id=58



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