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West Coast Cities Lead in Sustainability
Posted by Hillary Rosner on June 2, 2006 - 11:58am.
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Score another point for Portland, the king of green cities. SustainLane, a web site devoted to healthy communities, ranked Portland number one in its 2006 list of sustainable cities. SustainLane's second annual study compared the 50 largest U.S. cities in categories such as air quality, public transportation, land use planning, energy policy, and green building. The top 10 winners, in order, are: Portland, San Francisco, Seattle, Philadelphia, Chicago, Oakland, New York, Boston, Denver, and Minneapolis.

SustainLane conducted surveys and interviews with employees of city government agencies and NGOs, as well as compiling publicly available data on scores of issues related to sustainability. The web site provides rankings in 15 categories - and these provide a snapshot of the areas in which each city is excelling or lagging. Denver, for instance, which ranked 9th overall, came in 6th in the "green economy" category, which considers things like number of green buildings and farmers' markets per capita and presence of incubators for clean technology.

Oddly, Phoenix and Albuquerque, two of the cities with the country's worst sprawl problems, ranked in the top 10 in the "planning/land use" category - Phoenix came in 9th and Albuquerque a startling 5th - despite coming in at 22nd and 19th overall. From the web site's explanation of that category, it looks like the main consideration was number of parks per acre or something like that - whereas there are surely better measures of sustainable land use.

Faring worst on SustainLane's city list: Virginia Beach, Oklahoma City, and Columbus.

Photo credit: Sierra Club



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<em>aboriginalster</em>'s picture
interesting
by aboriginalster on June 2, 2006 - 2:00pm

<em>deluxe_sample</em>'s picture
europe
by deluxe_sample on June 2, 2006 - 2:03pm
did you conduct surveys in europe as well? i think europe is much more developed than the u.s when it comes to sustainability. while american companies are mostly interested in making money and following the right trends - europe is developing a more and more sustainable environment for it's citizens...
<em>chrix</em>'s picture
re : europe
by chrix on June 5, 2006 - 3:04am
I agree, you may find a lot of "green places" from northern areas (Netherlands, Sweden..) to south (france, italy, spain). The real wellness is there ;-)) ! Ch.
<em>omshanti</em>'s picture
New York?
by omshanti on June 2, 2006 - 8:10pm
Is NYC really number 7? we have more public transportation and farmer's markets than any other city.....
<em>warren</em>'s picture
Sprawl Index
by warren on June 4, 2006 - 11:52pm
To calirfiy the author's critique of SustainLane's planning/land use rating for Albuquerque and Phoenix in its US City Rankings. SustainLane used Smart Growth America's Sprawl Index, which rated Albuquerque at #10 out of 46 US cities, and rated Phoenix/Mesa at #17 out of 46 for overall sprawl. It combiend that with park land per total city area. Have you been to Albuquerque?: last time I was there I stayed in a remote mountain cabin about 30 minutes from downtown. It's the same East and West of town, which has a nice compact footprint. Not quite the type of experience you might have in Atlanta (#46 for sprawl) or Fort Worth/Arlington (tied at #44). Now that's some bad sprawl. So the ranking is about relativity to other cities based on data, not about some arbitrary subjective conjecturing.
<em>Vicki_R</em>'s picture
harder in the burbs
by Vicki_R on April 23, 2007 - 4:38pm

I live near Philadelphia, and I keep on getting surprised by how high it continues to rank when it comes to green cities or top cities to live in.  One live in the burbs and actually think it is more difficult sometimes to live green.  Public transportion is not convenient, walking to the store is unrealistic and getting the up to date in eco-friendly trends takes time.

It was good to see so many cities are doing a great job in becoming more green. 


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