We talk with author Jake Berman about the history of rail networks in America’s cities and why our transit systems are the way that they are in the current era.
Read MoreMost of your city’s zoning likely prohibits multifamily housing—even of a modest form, like triple-deckers. If so, you have the arrogance of early zoning reformers to thank for it.
Read MoreGreat ideas are great, but context determines application.
Read MoreA compelling new report, Divided by Design, from Smart Growth America examines the tangled history of highway building and so-called urban renewal in the U.S.
Read MoreWhy is it so hard to imagine removing a 60-year-old freeway from the heart of my city—even as someone who likes the idea?
Read MoreDating back to the 1800s, researchers in the U.S. have challenged the property tax system. So why, to this day, do the richest continue getting a "discount" on their taxes, while the poorest are overcharged?
Read MoreWhy does Erie, PA, keep giving up more and more of its lakefront to highway asphalt?
Read MoreThis series of studies of 19th-century development in St. Paul, MN, can help us understand some of the earliest traces of what would later become the suburban development pattern.
Read MoreWhat lessons can we glean from a century-old solution to housing crises?
Read MoreNew technologies can solve problems—or make them worse. In the chase for technofixes like flying cars, it's important to know when to pump the brakes.
Read MoreGood urbanism doesn’t have to mean large apartment buildings or an immaculate row of brownstones; the ad-hoc version on display in this Florida neighborhood is more relevant as a model of adaptation for the rest of us.
Read MoreFor a city to be “antifragile,” to bounce back from disaster and disruption stronger than it was before, it needs to embrace the lessons of healthy ecological systems.
Read MoreA drive through Shenandoah National Park, and a look back at its 1930s creation, offers a glimpse into the early era of American car culture, when motoring was a recreational activity with a lighter imprint on the landscape.
Read MoreWhat are the origins of our current water systems, and how should we think about them, going forward?
Read MoreThis film makes a human rights case for safer streets, while showing the historic roots of safe streets advocacy in the U.S. and the power of tactical urbanism.
Read MoreThe idea of a permanent community “character” was an invention of the suburban era, and it's showing its cracks now—because it was never an attainable or desirable goal.
Read MoreThis interactive map allows you to view just how much space is being wasted in your city (and in the rest of the U.S.) on parking lots.
Read MoreWhat if we could get back large buildings hosting businesses at a hyperlocal scale—and what if that actually helped reduce the sentiment we call NIMBYism?
Read MoreOur excessive expansion of the interstate highway system has destroyed urban downtowns—and it’s wiped out many small towns altogether.
Read MoreThe modern conceit is that we are far more advanced than the people of past generations—but how do our cities really stack up against those of the past?
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