Cities & Planning

Cities & Planning

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Alaska Will Not Save Us - The Urbanist
Alaska Will Not Save Us - The Urbanist
Like a giant overhead bin full of cookies and cash, Alaska sits for many as potential salvation. Quietly looming above, it waits as a refuge for the smart and mobile who can escape the inevitable collapse of climate and economy. Too many people think they’re going to see the signs of the American series finale
·theurbanist.org·
Alaska Will Not Save Us - The Urbanist
Could selling sewage save the Salish Sea?
Could selling sewage save the Salish Sea?
Waste flushed into Puget Sound harms fish and marine life. A nutrient pricing system — like WA's cap-and-trade program — may curb pollution.
·crosscut.com·
Could selling sewage save the Salish Sea?
Turning an old car into a powerful generator | Arduino Blog
Turning an old car into a powerful generator | Arduino Blog
Generators are expensive pieces of equipment. You can get a small low-quality model for a few hundred dollars, but powerful high-quality generators cost thousands or even tens of thousands of dollars. Old cars, on the other hand, can be very cheap — especially if they aren’t roadworthy anymore. Jake von Slatt has a video series […]
·blog.arduino.cc·
Turning an old car into a powerful generator | Arduino Blog
Morales Proposes Adding Sidewalks to Seattle’s Complete Streets Ordinance - The Urbanist
Morales Proposes Adding Sidewalks to Seattle’s Complete Streets Ordinance - The Urbanist
One in four Seattle blocks lack sidewalks, but a new bill would require that significant repaving projects add or repair them. In 2016, after the Seattle Department of Transportation (SDOT) repaved a long stretch of Greenwood Avenue N in North Seattle, between N 112th Street and N 125th Street, road users were left with an
·theurbanist.org·
Morales Proposes Adding Sidewalks to Seattle’s Complete Streets Ordinance - The Urbanist
Cautionary Tales of the Sydney Opera House - 99% Invisible
Cautionary Tales of the Sydney Opera House - 99% Invisible
The Sydney Opera House is one of the most iconic and distinctive buildings in the world — but it took a relative newcomer and architectural outsider to dream up. The making of this future world heritage landmark is a tale for the ages — a cautionary tale, for which we turn to Tim Harford, producer
·99percentinvisible.org·
Cautionary Tales of the Sydney Opera House - 99% Invisible
How to Cool Down a City
How to Cool Down a City
Singapore is rethinking its sweltering urban areas to dampen the effects of climate change. Can it be a model?
·nytimes.com·
How to Cool Down a City
Pockets of Utopia
Pockets of Utopia
What capitalism's inevitable collapse, disaster anarchism, mutual aid, and human nature can teach us about the curious concept of Utopia.
·beneaththepavement.substack.com·
Pockets of Utopia
What happened to the great West Coast cities?
What happened to the great West Coast cities?
America’s urban woes aren’t limited to the West Coast, of course. But the decline there has generally been steeper than elsewhere. Why? How
·thespectator.com·
What happened to the great West Coast cities?
Sunday Video: The Insane Ways Traffic Engineers Try to Make Streets ‘Safe’ for Walking - The Urbanist
Sunday Video: The Insane Ways Traffic Engineers Try to Make Streets ‘Safe’ for Walking - The Urbanist
In this CityNerd video, Ray Delahanty tackled the various bell and whistles traffic engineers use on street crossings so as to not provide actually safe streets. From Rectangular Rapid Flashing Beacons (RRFB) to High-intensity Activated Walk (HAWK) signals, traffic engineers have a plethora of acronym-based interventions that largely do not seem up to the task
·theurbanist.org·
Sunday Video: The Insane Ways Traffic Engineers Try to Make Streets ‘Safe’ for Walking - The Urbanist
The Roger Rabbit Theory
The Roger Rabbit Theory
"General Motors Killed America's Streetcars"—Right? Not so Fast...
·straphanger.substack.com·
The Roger Rabbit Theory
The Fatal Flaw in 1970s-Style Environmental Laws
The Fatal Flaw in 1970s-Style Environmental Laws
For the second time, a group of Minneapolis residents—enabled by existing law—have halted implementation of the city’s Minneapolis 2040 plan over its supposed environmental impact. Here’s why they’re doing more harm than good.
·strongtowns.org·
The Fatal Flaw in 1970s-Style Environmental Laws
A Next Step for Autonomous Buses? — Human Transit
A Next Step for Autonomous Buses? — Human Transit
A fully autonomous bus is now in regular service in Scotland.  It still has employees, two in fact, but that’s part of the process of testing the technology. Eventually, if this technology works out, the point will be to run buses with no employees on board. In wealthy countries, the cost of running a bus […]
·humantransit.org·
A Next Step for Autonomous Buses? — Human Transit