OpenLayers - Welcome

Cities & Planning
Beavers Offer Lessons About Managing Water in a Changing Climate, Whether the Challenge Is Drought or Floods | naked capitalism
Beavers, nature's engineers, seem able to dam any stream, building structures with logs and mud that can flood large areas, thus restoring ecosystems and mitigating the effects of climate change.
Gondolas Could Be the Light Rail Complement Seattle Needs
Seattle has plenty of hills and waterways which makes a subway system attractive in comparison to road-based solutions. But even a subway needs to worry about steep hills and water unless you’re wi…
An urban gondola in Seattle? Redesigning I-5? Your transportation questions answered
The Traffic Lab team is launching a new Q&A column to answer readers’ questions about the region’s thorny transportation issues.
Gondolas could help Seattle rise above traffic mess, some say
As crosstown traffic becomes intolerable, a few Seattle thinkers are suggesting a gondola as the best way out of the mess. One possible route would go from the light-rail station being built on Capitol Hill to Olympic Sculpture Park, serving...
Comparison of SkyLink with West Seattle Link light rail connection
This is a comparison of capacity, carbon footprint, technology, availability, and construction impact between Link light rail and SkyLink urban gondola for West Seattle.
Seattle Gondola « The Gondola Project
S400: Glass Bubbles in the Sky
Rail transportation in the United States - Wikipedia
Steel Interstate Coalition
The North American Steel Interstate Coalition supports higher speed passenger and freight rail development, including putting trucks on trains in truck ferries.
Nationalize the railroads?
In the 1980s, it was the granting of 48 state authorities by the ICC that opened the trucking and airline industry to competition. This could work for rail—not just local reciprocal switching, but national reciprocal trackage rights might enable competition over shared lines. Let’s reimagine rail.
Nationalize the railroads? A "what if."
On December 26, 1917, President Woodrow Wilson issued a presidential order that effectively seized the railroads for the U.S. government. Several factors, both governmental and economic, had conspired over the previous decade to result in an inefficient system suffering from labor unrest, poor scheduling, car shortages, and outright inability of the railroads to respond to wartime requirements. On or before December 28, the Treasury Department took possession of the railroads, and their operat
Sunk Costs: Seawalls Alone Won't Save a Sinking Jakarta from Future Floods - 99% Invisible
Jakarta is a coastal city run through with rivers, yet paradoxically: the city is sinking in no small part due to a lack of water as well. As residents pull water to drink from underground aquifers, the city settles — in some places dropping inches each year. At its current rate of descent, most of
Crops under solar panels can be a win-win
In dry places, photovoltaic shade can even reduce water use.
Report: Restoring the California Dream | Newgeography.com
Nuro Upgrades Their Autonomous Delivery Vehicle with External Airbags for Pedestrians - Core77
When we last looked at Nuro, the developers of an autonomous electric delivery vehicle, they were on their second-generation R2. To refresh your memory, it was essentially a diminutive car designed to carry goods, not people, and Dominos successfully used them to deliver pizzas in a pilot program in Texas.
The Cincinnati Nightmare | Newgeography.com
ElectricBrands | Infinite variety, electrically thought
Bold Proposal to Make Central Berlin a Mostly Car-Free Zone
A group of Berlin residents has put forward a proposal to turn all of central Berlin (an area larger than Manhattan) into a car-
Drawing pictures of cities
We need to visualize the kinds of urban environments we want to live in
4 underused U.S. rail lines that should follow New York’s lead and be revived
New York Governor Kathy Hochul announced plans for a 14-mile Interborough Express on train tracks that already exist. Other U.S. states should take note.
Berlin is planning a car-free area larger than Manhattan
The citizen-driven plan that the city is considering now would create the largest car-free area in a city anywhere in the world.
The Next American Cities, a New Report from Urban Reform Insitute | Newgeography.com
Transpo Notes: Additive Sound Transit Bill, Pets Ahoy, Café Streets, and Via to Transit
This week’s Traspo Notes highlights: hearing on an additive Sound Transit funding bill, cats and dogs can ride the King County Water Taxi, the state transportation department has a new mobility pla…
Deep Seattle Light Rail Stations, Other ST3 Details Emerging Ahead of January 28 Draft Plan Release
Reaching the station platform could take six minutes at the deepest stations. Sound Transit’s preferred alignment for the next phase of light rail in Seattle includes a Westlake Station that …
Locked public restrooms are the ultimate sign of urban decay | Boing Boing
Locked public restrooms are an easy-to-spot sign that a municipality is suffering from an underinvestment in public infrastructure. If a city doesn’t maintain public restrooms it’s likely tha…
Moving the Ballard Bridge Will Remake Northwest Seattle for the Better
Prepare for light rail, slow down Interbay, and save 15th Avenue Imagine for a moment taking a pleasant walk from Ballard to Queen Anne. Coming from one of the neighborhood’s fine breweries, you step out onto a tree lined Northwest 14th Avenue, busy with folks walking and rolling. You head south, stopping occasionally at crosswalks
Embracing a wetter future, the Dutch turn to floating homes
Faced with worsening floods and a shortage of housing, the Netherlands is seeing growing interest in floating homes.
When you think of hospitals, you think of hallways. Here’s why we designed a hospital without them
The approach—which has been replicated throughout Rwanda and beyond—simply serves patients better.
Homemade thermal battery system keeps the shop cool with Arduino | Arduino Blog
When trying to cool off a space, most people reach for an air conditioning unit that uses a pump, compressor, refrigerant, and a radiator to move heat from inside a room to the outside air. But in a break from this typical model, YouTuber Curtis in Seattle came up with a system that pumps water between […]