Denver
32°
hide
Change your location
Alamosa
Aspen
Aurora
Boulder
Broomfield
Centennial
Colorado Springs
Cortez
Denver
Durango
Fort Carson
Fort Collins
Grand Junction
Greeley
Gunnison
La Junta
Lamar
Leadville
Limon
Montrose
Pueblo
Rifle
Saguache
Springfield
Telluride
Trinidad
hide
News & Current Affairs
Documentary & History
Science & Nature
Arts & Entertainment
Lifestyle
Colorado
e-promo
Name
e-mail
Facing the Mortgage Crisis
Colorado State of Mind - Budget Cuts to Higher Education
Women in power: what drives them to lead and what holds them back?
Public lands in the media spotlight
Native American Heritage Month
Health Care
Frontline: The Card Game
Tuesday at 9pm
Charlie Rose: Barton Biggs, Traxis Partners Bonnie Hammer, President of NBC Universal Cable
Monday at 11pm
Charlie Rose: Episode #15237
Tuesday at 11pm
Charlie Rose: Episode #15238
Wednesday at 11pm
BBC World News: Episode #329
Wednesday at 10:30pm
News & Current Affairs
Blueprint America: Road to the Future
Miles O'Brien, former aviation and science correspondent for CNN, hosts this documentary about innovative infrastructure projects being discussed and created in Portland, Denver and New York City.
More discussions about
Blueprint America: Road to the Future
Which Denver neighborhoods do you like best?
Friday, May 8
What's your point of view?
christine
Saturday, May 9, 2009 › 9:41am
The Potter Highlands has it all! Little need for a car.
Judith
Tuesday, May 12, 2009 › 5:17pm
Congress Park has it all - no need for the car.
Could there be anything better than three parks, the zoo, botanic gardens, & history museum in walking distance. Galleries, music venues, restaurants of various economic levels, great book store & music store. Need a movie theater and the Middle school isn't as close as I'd like but OK with the bus. Great reliable transit on 12th & Colfax. Good transit on 6th and 18th. The 24 could use improvement
Diverse economically and socially. It Has retirement homes, multi family units, and single family houses. Model new development, infill, or renovations on the Congress Park area. The old trolley stop shopping areas on a grid are the key. Various sizes of homes and yards are also key.
LauraLynnie
Tuesday, May 12, 2009 › 10:24pm
Have to agree with Judith on a number of points about Congress Park (she forgot to mention CP Swimming Pool!) GREAT neighborhood! I grew up in Wash Park, another great neighborhood which is in danger of being gentrified to death--stop the scrapes & McMansions!!! Denver is doing well at keeping the inner city alive, but keep it accessible, economically AND socially=diversity! & transportation (bike trails & buses)
Michael Kinsley
Thursday, May 21, 2009 › 11:51am
Excellent program. One terrific addition would have been to mention the many other federal subsidies (e.g. sewers), and local subsidies (below cost supply of local public services to outlying areas), which have further driven sprawl.
christine
Thursday, May 21, 2009 › 9:11pm
Great program. I wish they would have highlighted the strides that Denver has made in terms of TOD. Also, I was really disappointed in Jayson Luber's comments.
Javascript is required to view this web page.
christine
Saturday, May 9, 2009 › 9:41am
The Potter Highlands has it all! Little need for a car.
Judith
Tuesday, May 12, 2009 › 5:17pm
Congress Park has it all - no need for the car.
Could there be anything better than three parks, the zoo, botanic gardens, & history museum in walking distance. Galleries, music venues, restaurants of various economic levels, great book store & music store. Need a movie theater and the Middle school isn't as close as I'd like but OK with the bus. Great reliable transit on 12th & Colfax. Good transit on 6th and 18th. The 24 could use improvement
Diverse economically and socially. It Has retirement homes, multi family units, and single family houses. Model new development, infill, or renovations on the Congress Park area. The old trolley stop shopping areas on a grid are the key. Various sizes of homes and yards are also key.
LauraLynnie
Tuesday, May 12, 2009 › 10:24pm
Have to agree with Judith on a number of points about Congress Park (she forgot to mention CP Swimming Pool!) GREAT neighborhood! I grew up in Wash Park, another great neighborhood which is in danger of being gentrified to death--stop the scrapes & McMansions!!! Denver is doing well at keeping the inner city alive, but keep it accessible, economically AND socially=diversity! & transportation (bike trails & buses)
Michael Kinsley
Thursday, May 21, 2009 › 11:51am
Excellent program. One terrific addition would have been to mention the many other federal subsidies (e.g. sewers), and local subsidies (below cost supply of local public services to outlying areas), which have further driven sprawl.
christine
Thursday, May 21, 2009 › 9:11pm
Great program. I wish they would have highlighted the strides that Denver has made in terms of TOD. Also, I was really disappointed in Jayson Luber's comments.
THIS SITE REQUIRES JAVASCRIPT
Please enable javascript in your browser.
Leave this field empty
Name:
E-mail:
Your e-mail address will not be shown.
Comment:
characters left
We welcome your comments, and hope to host energetic, civil discussions. As you post, please keep the following in mind:
Keep your comments focused on the topic at hand.
Don't use profanity, personal attacks or hate speech.
Don't promote a business or raise money.
When all else fails, think "Golden Rule": Treat others the way you'd like to be treated yourself.
We reserve the right to remove posts that don't follow these guidelines.
Notify me when there is a new post in this thread.
Sign me up for Rocky Mountain PBS' weekly E-news.
Air Times
Not currently scheduled
CC - Closed Caption
HD - High Definition
16:9 - Anamorphic Widescreen
LTR - Letterbox
DVI - Descriptive Video Information
for the visually impaired
Episode Guide
Blueprint America: Road to the Future
first aired: May 20, 2009 (#0)
Miles O'Brien, former aviation and science correspondent for CNN, hosts ...
Javascript is required to view this web page.
More discussions about
Blueprint America: Road to the Future
Which Denver neighborhoods do you like best?
Friday, May 8
What's your point of view?
christine
Saturday, May 9, 2009 › 9:41am
The Potter Highlands has it all! Little need for a car.
Judith
Tuesday, May 12, 2009 › 5:17pm
Congress Park has it all - no need for the car.
Could there be anything better than three parks, the zoo, botanic gardens, & history museum in walking distance. Galleries, music venues, restaurants of various economic levels, great book store & music store. Need a movie theater and the Middle school isn't as close as I'd like but OK with the bus. Great reliable transit on 12th & Colfax. Good transit on 6th and 18th. The 24 could use improvement
Diverse economically and socially. It Has retirement homes, multi family units, and single family houses. Model new development, infill, or renovations on the Congress Park area. The old trolley stop shopping areas on a grid are the key. Various sizes of homes and yards are also key.
LauraLynnie
Tuesday, May 12, 2009 › 10:24pm
Have to agree with Judith on a number of points about Congress Park (she forgot to mention CP Swimming Pool!) GREAT neighborhood! I grew up in Wash Park, another great neighborhood which is in danger of being gentrified to death--stop the scrapes & McMansions!!! Denver is doing well at keeping the inner city alive, but keep it accessible, economically AND socially=diversity! & transportation (bike trails & buses)
Michael Kinsley
Thursday, May 21, 2009 › 11:51am
Excellent program. One terrific addition would have been to mention the many other federal subsidies (e.g. sewers), and local subsidies (below cost supply of local public services to outlying areas), which have further driven sprawl.
christine
Thursday, May 21, 2009 › 9:11pm
Great program. I wish they would have highlighted the strides that Denver has made in terms of TOD. Also, I was really disappointed in Jayson Luber's comments.
Javascript is required to view this web page.
christine
Saturday, May 9, 2009 › 9:41am
The Potter Highlands has it all! Little need for a car.
Judith
Tuesday, May 12, 2009 › 5:17pm
Congress Park has it all - no need for the car.
Could there be anything better than three parks, the zoo, botanic gardens, & history museum in walking distance. Galleries, music venues, restaurants of various economic levels, great book store & music store. Need a movie theater and the Middle school isn't as close as I'd like but OK with the bus. Great reliable transit on 12th & Colfax. Good transit on 6th and 18th. The 24 could use improvement
Diverse economically and socially. It Has retirement homes, multi family units, and single family houses. Model new development, infill, or renovations on the Congress Park area. The old trolley stop shopping areas on a grid are the key. Various sizes of homes and yards are also key.
LauraLynnie
Tuesday, May 12, 2009 › 10:24pm
Have to agree with Judith on a number of points about Congress Park (she forgot to mention CP Swimming Pool!) GREAT neighborhood! I grew up in Wash Park, another great neighborhood which is in danger of being gentrified to death--stop the scrapes & McMansions!!! Denver is doing well at keeping the inner city alive, but keep it accessible, economically AND socially=diversity! & transportation (bike trails & buses)
Michael Kinsley
Thursday, May 21, 2009 › 11:51am
Excellent program. One terrific addition would have been to mention the many other federal subsidies (e.g. sewers), and local subsidies (below cost supply of local public services to outlying areas), which have further driven sprawl.
christine
Thursday, May 21, 2009 › 9:11pm
Great program. I wish they would have highlighted the strides that Denver has made in terms of TOD. Also, I was really disappointed in Jayson Luber's comments.
THIS SITE REQUIRES JAVASCRIPT
Please enable javascript in your browser.
Leave this field empty
Name:
E-mail:
Your e-mail address will not be shown.
Comment:
characters left
We welcome your comments, and hope to host energetic, civil discussions. As you post, please keep the following in mind:
Keep your comments focused on the topic at hand.
Don't use profanity, personal attacks or hate speech.
Don't promote a business or raise money.
When all else fails, think "Golden Rule": Treat others the way you'd like to be treated yourself.
We reserve the right to remove posts that don't follow these guidelines.
Notify me when there is a new post in this thread.
Sign me up for Rocky Mountain PBS' weekly E-news.
Featured video
"NBR November 19, 2009" ›
More "Nightly Business Report" ›
Contact Us
|
Jobs
|
About Us
Copyright© 1995-2009 Rocky Mountain Public Broadcasting Network, Inc. All rights reserved.
Help
|
Privacy policy