Belgium follows France in introducing reparability index
Belgium is in the headlines in today's exciting recycling news. France was the first European country to introduce a reparability index. Essentially, this is a score that indicates how viable…
“South Downtown Hub” Outreach Ponders Chinatown Connectivity Without New Station - The Urbanist
On Wednesday, Sound Transit hosted an outreach event at Union Station aimed at building consensus and easing tensions in Chinatown. Organizer Brien Chow spoke out to argue the Fourth Avenue station option was being sidelined and shortcomings of the agency's North and South of CID preferred alternative were being papered over.
The “energy transition” depends on massive expansions of our high-voltage transmission grid. But capacity additions are falling, and per-mile costs and utility product costs are soaring.
The Case Against RapidRide and For Funding Massive Transit Service Expansion Now - The Urbanist
RapidRide projects soak up resources and take many years to come together. Instead of focusing on a trickle of RapidRide lines, Metro should ramp up bus service and route improvements systemwide with a network approach.
Designing to Move People | National Association of City Transportation Officials
Traditional volume measures fail to account for all the functions of urban streets, as well as the social, cultural, and economic activities served by transit, walking, and bicycling.
Paine Field: The Region’s Next Major Airport or Small Regional Airport? - The Urbanist
Paine Field Airport in Everett could see some notable expansions in the coming years to support increasing demand. Snohomish County, which owns the airport grounds but not the passenger terminal itself, has developed a draft master plan that is pending final approval from the feds and county council. A successful expansion would require far better transit options.
There are thousands of McDonald’s locations, but there are still more golf courses in the United States. This seems surprising, but some maps make it clear.
Immigrant settlement patterns, transit accessibility, and transit use
Public transit is immensely important among recent immigrants for enabling daily travel and activity participation. The objectives of this study are t…
L.A.'s worst parking lots? An expert explains how to fix them
Every driver has a parking lot they dread. A civil engineer analyzed the problems at some of L.A.'s most notorious parking lots and suggested ways to fix them.
Who is a refugee? A person outside the U.S. seeking refuge. The U.S., based on international law, defines “refugee” as a person outside the country of his or her nationality, who is unable or unwilling to return to that country because of persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution based on his or her race, religion, nationality,
The U.S. Refugee Resettlement Program – an Overview
This is an overview of the U.S. Refugee Resettlement Program. The Departments of Homeland Security (DHS), State and Health and Human Services (HHS) work together to uphold America’s humanitarian response to refugees through the U.S. Resettlement Program (USRP).
The 30-year rise of transit-oriented development, and its role in creating a resilient region
The journey to creating equitable transit-oriented development is a complicated one and requires looking at several moments in history that converged to get the region and the country to where we are now. This is the first piece in a limited series exploring the history, current policies, and initiatives to create and maintain equitable transit-oriented development in the region.
As relentless rains pounded LA, the city’s “sponge” infrastructure helped gather 8.6 billion gallons of water—enough to sustain over 100,000 households for a year.
Prime Stadium District Site Won’t Be Developed Until After World Cup - The Urbanist
The WOSCA site is a publicly owned five-acre scrap next to the south portal of the SR-99 tunnel, left over from that project. It will remain an undeveloped scrap for the time being with a temporary use during the 2026 World Cup and a permanent redevelopment envisioned thereafter. Mayor Harrell is seeking bids from private developers.
Washington Senate Committee Guts Popular Neighborhood Cafe Bill - The Urbanist
A popular neighborhood cafe bill that sailed through the Washington House has run into problems in the Senate, mostly dealing with the question of local control. The Association of Washington Cities and the City of Bellevue have lobbied against the bill.