A grassroots effort to bring bus riders in Rochester a little comfort and a little dignity.
Read MoreGoogle Street View has now been around long enough to let us see how our cities have changed over ten-plus years. Often those changes have been for the worse…but sometimes they’re for the better.
Read MoreCities are learning they must be able to flex and bend with the rising tides of change.
Read MoreThe new library was larger and offered more books and services. The reason it was so hard to connect with has a lot to say about the way we design our cities.
Read MoreA letter from the apartment complex is a reminder of how our cities prioritize cars over bikes.
Read MoreMany conveniences—the ease of driving, food delivery, one-stop shopping—seem nice on the surface, but they often come at a high cost to our communities.
Read MoreAn incredible video from 1906 San Francisco—colorized and digitally remastered—depicts a time when streets were truly available for every type of user.
Read MoreWhat do you do when you can’t travel further than your own backyard? Rediscover the backyard you only think you know.
Read MoreA bar in Utica wanted to close the street so businesses could serve patrons. The request was denied…but not because of parking restrictions. What the request—and the reasons it was denied—reveal about our highest priorities.
Read MoreWith fewer entertainment options available, Americans are turning to an old friend. They’re opening their wallets too.
Read MoreMaybe now we can drop the pretense: the best cities are informal, spontaneous, imperfect, and often messy.
Read MoreSome will use the spread of coronavirus as a knock against dense cities. But walkable, bikeable cities are also more adaptable — and will fare better in the long-run.
Read MoreBike infrastructure is important, but it isn’t a substitute for making our roads safer. Case in point: the long winter months when many bike trails become unusable.
Read MoreFor the last five years, Arian Horbovetz and “The Urban Phoenix” have been changing the national conversation about what it takes to build stronger towns and cities.
Read MoreHalf a century ago, Rochester, New York — like so many other cities — built an urban highway that tore at the social fabric, decimated neighborhoods, and made the city increasingly fragile. Today, Rochester is showing cities that there is a better way.
Read MoreWe romanticize the power of our vehicles, while downplaying our obligations to safety and community…with deadly results.
Read MoreA controversial new ad from Peloton has everyone talking. But will it finally get people talking about the benefits of real cycling—benefits that go far beyond just improved physical health?
Read MoreA begrudging trip downtown opened this suburb dweller’s eyes to the delights of a wonderful city street. What similar experience have YOU had that helped you see your place in a new light?
Read MoreIt’s an uncomfortable truth: doing the right thing for our communities usually means doing the hard thing. Or at least the less easy thing. What does this mean not only for the people who design our cities and towns but for those of us who live there?
Read MoreIt’s a paradox, but cities can set the stage for the unscripted. These playful surprises cater both to young and the young-at-heart, and they endear the community to visitors and residents alike.
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