Indianapolis Urban Development and Rapid Transit
Topic: Indianapolis Living
Posted: Sat, Mar 10, 2007
Mike and I are in Austin, Texas attending the SXSW Interactive conference... and while we were exploring downtown Austin, we had an extended discussion comparing Austin and Indianapolis - and how Indy seems quite a bit behind on basic urban design and development. Last night, though, a related email landed in my inbox forwarded by my neighborhood association - a link to Indianapolis's website detailing their urban planning initiatives for downtown. There's a lot of interesting reading there, along with some discussion forums - so give them your two cents worth.
Also, if you'd like, take a survey on Indianapolis Rapid Transit - you know we need it; let them know.
TrackBacks
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.indyscribe.com/cgi-bin/mt-tb.cgi/408
Categories
- About Us
- Board and Video Games
- Books
- Day Trips
- Events & Festivals
- Film & TV
- Geek Bling
- History
- Hoosier Oddities
- Indianapolis In the News
- Indianapolis Living
- Kids' Stuff
- Local Attractions
- Local Celebrities
- Museums and Visual Arts
- Music
- Night Life
- Photos
- Restaurants
- Shopping
- Sports
- Theater
- Transportation
- Weather

Archives
IndyScribe Authors
- Jennifer Bortel
- Brad Koch
- Brent Mundy
Comments
1. Feb 12, 13 05:47 PM | Chat With Locals said:
Thanks for giving your ideas on this blog. Also, a myth regarding the financial institutions intentions if talking about property foreclosures is that the traditional bank will not getreceive my installments. There is a specific amount of time that this bank can take payments occasionally. If you are as well deep inside the hole, they may commonly demand that you pay the actual payment entirely. However, i am not saying that they will not take any sort of repayments at all. Should you and the traditional bank can be capable to work a thing out, the foreclosure procedure may halt. However, if you continue to miss out on payments under the new system, the foreclosed process can pick up where it left off.