Also: SCOTUS strikes down a gerrymandering challenge, and the high cost of saving travel time. | Continue reading
The startup Katerra is betting that it can build faster, cheaper, and better by using new technology and super-strong wood. | Continue reading
A new study of time/cost trade-offs between transit, Uber, and Lyft hints at a sea change in how travelers value minutes. | Continue reading
The Public Design Commission has created new guidelines to making public housing brighter, more neighborly, and on budget. | Continue reading
The startup Katerra is betting that it can build faster, cheaper, and better by using new technology and super-strong wood. | Continue reading
“The fear is historic in this region and the policies of hate in this administration have reached new levels,” says a community organizer in Alamo, Texas. | Continue reading
Despite its embrace of renewable energy, Denmark's emissions are expected to rise as tech companies locate data centers there. | Continue reading
Nearly all of them look silly, but if taken seriously, they could be a really big deal for urban transportation. | Continue reading
Many cities and states have long used "sanctuary" status as a means of resisting Trump's immigration policy. Now, they're floating several new ideas. | Continue reading
Nearly all of them look silly, but if taken seriously, they could be a really big deal for urban transportation. | Continue reading
The hardest thing about living in an eco-friendly master-planned metropolis? Meeting your neighbors. | Continue reading
After the executive order signed by the Trump administration, the situation for kids and families detained at the border is even more uncertain than it was before. But here are some scenarios, mapped. | Continue reading
A sweeping plan to reform the federal government could be considered an effort to undo the New Deal with a single org chart. | Continue reading
The hardest thing about living in an eco-friendly master-planned metropolis? Meeting your neighbors. | Continue reading
Also: The problem with suburban police, and Pride arrives in smaller cities. | Continue reading
Several smaller U.S. cities are hosting their first Pride parades this year. For locals, it’s a chance to assert that they don’t need to leave their community to be gay. | Continue reading
The East Pittsburgh police department that is responsible for killing the unarmed teenager Antwon Rose, Jr. is one of more than a hundred police departments across metro Pittsburgh—and that's a problem. | Continue reading
In the Indian city of Madurai, a volunteer group deals humanely with emergencies of the reptile kind. | Continue reading
When the Cavaliers needed to sell some executive suites in 1994, it was time to bust out the smooth jazz. | Continue reading
Without these 250 new trains, the Underground might well be on a fast-track to meltdown. | Continue reading
The hardest thing about living in an eco-friendly master-planned metropolis? Meeting your neighbors. | Continue reading
Can e-bikes, electric scooters, hoverboards, velomobiles, and other battery-boosted mobility gizmos rid the city of the private car? | Continue reading
Critics call it another effort by Secretary Ben Carson to dial back the department's enforcement of civil rights. | Continue reading
Also: Relocating like LeBron, and the successes of “informal” development. | Continue reading
Minnesota's pro-housing advocates are fighting with local governments, reluctant neighbors—and each other. | Continue reading
There's a tax on banking while black or Latinx, and it's applied even in the your small, friendly, neighborhood banks. | Continue reading
An area made famous by Slumdog Millionaire might look crammed and chaotic to outsiders, but a local urbanist group shows the intricate, valuable complexity that exists there. Can that save the neighborhood from demolition? | Continue reading
Many Americans don't think too hard about where to live, but LeBron James is the living symbol of taking location seriously. | Continue reading
A biweekly tour of the ever-expanding cartographic landscape. | Continue reading
In the 1980s, the South African band Umoja made upbeat pop hits under the watchful eye of the South Africa Broadcast Corporation. It’s impossible not to love “Money, Money.” | Continue reading
Also: Paving over the Everglades, and why cities want their own cryptocurrency. | Continue reading
Support for the controversial ballot measure fell on familiar race and class lines. | Continue reading
Cities want to launch their own virtual money, but what can it do that cash can’t? | Continue reading
“Anti-vagrancy” laws are cruel, costly, and counterproductive. | Continue reading
Cities want to launch their own virtual money, but what can it do that cash can’t? | Continue reading
City and state permitting mechanisms could be an obstacle to keeping open a detention center for immigrant children, Sylvester Turner said. | Continue reading
After the tragic, deadly fire in London, there have been calls for increased regulation and inspection, but that alone will drive up rents for the most vulnerable. Cities need a radical change in the way they approach housing. | Continue reading
The carmaker's new campus in downtown Detroit will be a hub for self-driving and electric vehicle projects. | Continue reading
A tour of the city's high-end boutique gyms reveals a lot about the changes in the city—and in me. | Continue reading
Also: Create better jobs by fixing the bad ones, and the complex statistics of mass incarceration. | Continue reading
They're not doomed to be insecure, low-paying occupations forever. | Continue reading
Although a new app Raheem.Ai, stems from an incident of brutality, it's for the sharing of all police interactions, good and bad, to support solutions to end police violence. | Continue reading
The carmaker's new campus in downtown Detroit will be a hub for self-driving and electric vehicle projects. | Continue reading
Two researchers surveyed 373 Brooklyn bus operators in search of ideas for transit reform. | Continue reading
Also: Rate your latest police encounter, and the brilliant artist that Chicago nearly forgot. | Continue reading
Although a new app Raheem.Ai, stems from an incident of brutality, it's for the sharing of all police interactions, good and bad, to support solutions to end police violence. | Continue reading
Two researchers surveyed 373 Brooklyn bus operators in search of ideas for transit reform. | Continue reading
Edgar Miller was an immensely talented artist and designer, but his best work lies behind closed doors. Finally, the public is getting a chance to see it. | Continue reading