Sunday, October 12, 2008

Best Careers

Urban Planner: A Day in the Life

Posted December 19, 2007

You're a planner for a midsize city, and, rather than filling the distant suburbs with minimansions, you're eager to redevelop faded urban areas. That approach will require fewer new roads and make better use of existing resources. So you've solicited proposals from developers and selected one. Now the real work begins. Today, you're reviewing geographic information system maps and other computer-based data to predict how many city services will be needed, from lampposts to libraries to fire hydrants. What mix of parking garages, additional bus service, and other transportation should be required? What about plug-in shared electric cars? You work with the mayor's office to figure out how to extract as many freebies from the developer as possible, things like subsidized low-income-housing units, wireless Internet for the community, and money for the local schools. You call the developer to float the proposal. He's furious and quickly turns the conversation to demanding variances in the building codes and zoning regulations. You knew that was coming.

You get off the phone and weigh the impact of the various proposals on all the people affected. You need to get out of the office, so you visit one of the proposed building sites to mull over the options firsthand. Finally, it's back to your office for a phone call with an economist, who can provide some figures to plug into the first-draft budget you'll start on tomorrow. The official workday ends at 5 p.m., but tonight, you need to attend a public hearing on the project. Everybody has a complaint. Environmentalists warn that wetlands will be destroyed. Preservationists worry that historic buildings might get torn down. Supporters insist that the community desperately needs redevelopment. Your job is simply to present the data. It's up to the politicians to decide whether to build or not.

advertisement

advertisement

Retirement Widget

Get Retirement News on Your Site

Click here to add a Usnews.com retirement widget.

20-Something Guide

Financial planning for twenty somethings

The Guide to Being a Grown-Up: 20-Something Financial Advice

Figuring out your finances doesn't have to be tough for 20-somethings. Learn more about careers, budgeting, investing, and paying off your debt.

advertisement

America's Best Places to Retire

Dennis Peck, a sailing instructor with the Punta Gorda Sailing Club, takes a Sunfish out into Charlotte Harbor. (Jeffrey MacMillan for USN&WR)

America's Best Healthy Places to Retire

U.S. News writers profile 10 healthy retirement spots around the country.

Reader Photos

Check out our readers' favorite retirement spots here. Have a photo of a retirement spot you'd like to share? Send it to retirementphotos@usnews.com

Suggest a Spot

From California to the Carolinas, where do you think you'll retire? What cities should have been on our list?

Get Stock Quotes

Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of our Terms and Conditions of Use and Privacy Policy.