It’s hard to meaningfully engage with the poor when everything about our cities is designed to steer us away from them.
Read MoreSurprise, surprise: Americans love dense, walkable places connected to a sense of history.
Read MoreFor significant populations of people in the U.S., the requirement to drive is a major barrier to participating in city life.
Read MoreAging in American culture comes with the association of loneliness, dependence, and isolation. If cites were designed differently, this wouldn’t have to be the case.
Read MoreTiffany Owens is helping people open their eyes, put down their phones, and truly see their cities.
Read MoreWalking permits us to acquire more robust data about our surroundings than does traveling by car. Here are three questions to help guide you as you traverse your city on foot.
Read MoreCivic engagement doesn’t just improve our communities, it improves us as individuals, too.
Read MoreOne of the realities about cities is that they change—but in America, most cities are trapped in a regulatory environment that makes change extremely costly.
Read MoreAlthough many of us agree that walkability makes sense for countless reasons, few of us actually walk the cities where we live. Why? Because it sucks.
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