Also: How to create safer public housing projects, and when Soviet industrial designers imagined a better world. | Continue reading
“For some of you, this will be the hardest thing you’ve ever done," the lead trainer told us. He was right. | Continue reading
The government is planning to restrict cars in 138 city centers, and a new survey suggests a large majority will welcome it. | Continue reading
Architects worry that new housing czar Sir Roger Scruton will reignite style wars that pit traditional design against modern design. | Continue reading
Despite its fearsome reputation, a new study finds most low-income housing projects aren't magnets for crime. What makes some more dangerous? | Continue reading
For transport to truly enhance quality of life in a city, one regional agency should have jurisdiction over everything transportation-related in a metro area. | Continue reading
From taxis to trams to recycling programs, the All-Union Scientific Research Institute of Technical Aesthetics had no lack of good-but-unrealized ideas. Thanks to the Moscow Design Museum, their proposals can be seen by a new generation of designers. | Continue reading
Also: Amazon’s HQ2 search was about specialized talent, and New York’s small businesses hope for a lifeline. | Continue reading
The War on Terror and the War on Drugs have melded together, creating a Frankenstein-esque nexus of immigration enforcement and policing. | Continue reading
Leaders at the city and state levels say they're prepared to help small businesses. | Continue reading
New York is the place to be for global finance and management talent. D.C. puts Amazon closer to tech talent, as well as government leaders and the Department of Defense. | Continue reading
States with more working-class voters are solidly red; those with a dominant creative class are solidly blue; service-class heavy states aren’t easily defined. | Continue reading
We need your stories for upcoming coverage. | Continue reading
Also: A brutally honest appraisal of U.S. transit, and the Red Tide left a mess for Florida’s counties. | Continue reading
The 2018 red tide has been longer and more lethal than usual, forcing officials to improvise cleanup methods—and hope this is not the new normal. | Continue reading
In some cities black homebuyers did better than whites, Latinos, and Asians in recent years. The problem is that there aren’t enough of them. | Continue reading
A map-packed "atlas of transit" shows why good public transportation systems work, and bad ones don't. | Continue reading
The city’s bill is the most expansive effort yet to tame the unpredictable schedules of service workers. | Continue reading
GM’s announcement that it will shutter its Lordstown plant outside Youngstown, Ohio, is just the latest in a long series of economic blows to the city since the 1970s. | Continue reading
Also: What density means for the last Senate race of 2018, and what Black Friday says about parking in America. | Continue reading
Democrats hoping to pull off an upset in Mississippi’s U.S. Senate race have to struggle against the state’s unusually small urban and suburban population. | Continue reading
There's plenty of room, but the city has to decide if it wants to build in or build out. | Continue reading
Even the biggest shopping day of the year can’t fill up the enormous oversupply of parking that rings U.S. shopping centers. | Continue reading
St. Olav's is a laboratory of sorts for the state’s ambitious plan to embrace a different way of creating buildings, transit, and even websites by 2025. | Continue reading
Democrats and Republicans are using ballot measures to motivate voters. The record turnout in the midterm elections this November may indicate that it’s working. | Continue reading
Renowned for its long quilt-making tradition, the rural hamlet of Gee’s Bend (now Boykin), Alabama, struggles with deep poverty. Would incorporating as a town help? | Continue reading
Also: José Andrés talks about the role of food in disaster recovery, and Dutch cities try out temporary tiny homes. | Continue reading
For one thing, the population of young kids is increasing, even as the country struggles with low birth rates. | Continue reading
San Jose, the National League of Cities, and the U.S. Conference of Mayors agree: The FCC’s order on 5G rollout will leave millions of Americans behind. | Continue reading
The second-largest city in the Netherlands has promised to start construction and installation of up to 3,000 mobile housing units in hopes of managing its housing shortage. | Continue reading
The scourge of autumn, annoyer of millions. Can anyone stop the seasonal siege of gas-powered landscaping equipment? | Continue reading
You can play LOOP while actually riding the L, for some meta-transit action. | Continue reading
You can play LOOP while actually riding the L, for some meta-transit action. | Continue reading
A new documentary looks at one urban wanderer's pursuit of a simple goal: To walk each block of New York’s five boroughs. | Continue reading
A construction boom that begun under Salam Fayyad has claimed much of the historic architecture in Ramallah. Some locals are trying to save what is left. | Continue reading
As gentrification brings shifts to the East End of Houston, a new resident hopes to bring the community together with a greet, eat, and meet gathering. | Continue reading
The celebrity chef and humanitarian talks about the role of food in recovering from a disaster and why building local capacity is so important. | Continue reading
Macy’s is famously tight-lipped about the parade’s price tag, but for NYPD and locals trying to get around, the costs can add up. | Continue reading
Also: Can Amazon really rename a neighborhood? And why Denver voted to fund mental-health treatment. | Continue reading
As the gap between winning and losing U.S. metros widens, experts from the Brookings Institution talk about how to bring economic opportunity to America's left-behind places. | Continue reading
Photographer Edward Keating captures the history of Route 66 over the decades as towns along "the mother road" have fallen into disrepair and obscurity. | Continue reading
Amazon awarded HQ2 to Northern Virginia’s “National Landing.” Locals know it as Crystal City. For neighborhood boosters, it’s a shot at a much-needed rebrand. | Continue reading
A new city sales tax will offer dedicated funding to treat mental health and addiction, focusing on treatment centers and therapy over police and jails. | Continue reading
Corporate America can still prosper as it relinquishes outdated hiring models and gives everyone, including the formerly incarcerated and refugees, opportunity. | Continue reading
A new way to categorize all 435 U.S. congressional districts by their density, on a spectrum from rural to urban. | Continue reading
“No,” says a former chief demographer; they would resign before allowing the Trump Administration to violate the confidentiality prized by Census Bureau culture. | Continue reading
In the end, New York’s MTA and D.C.’s Metro were the only transportation networks capable of handling such an influx of new residents. | Continue reading
Also: HQ2 was always about transit, and the skyscraper dividing Quebec City. | Continue reading