New 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 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 MoreIt's hard being the driver of a large truck, these days. You want your urban truck-driving experience to be better, but how? Answer: By supporting great pedestrian and cycling projects!
Read MoreWe often speak to the “good old days” as a measure of the U.S. at its best…but in 1950, the average American home was 983 square feet, as opposed to the 2,300 square feet of today.
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 MoreWith a baby on the way, I’ve been lectured multiple times about safe car seats, and heard nothing about how to minimize the most dangerous activity people do with their children: drive.
Read MoreCar crashes aren’t the result of mere human error or recklessness, they’re the result of design. Beth Osborne of Transportation for America digs into this in our latest podcast episode.
Read MoreQuestion: “Why don’t people dance in the street today?” Answer: Because the design of our cities shapes the design of our lives.
Read More40,000 people die in automobile accidents every year in the United States. So why aren’t we responding to this obvious problem with more urgency?
Read MoreIn this Not Just Bikes video, Jason Slaughter explains how raising children in the suburbs significantly restricts their ability to be independent.
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 MoreYou can build it, but they won’t park there.
Read MoreOr in anyone else’s, for that matter! A strong neighborhood has businesses that keep money in the local economy, instead of siphoning money out.
Read MoreMarketing campaigns to shame or shock don't change driver behavior. Changing the environment they drive in will.
Read MoreThis Not Just Bikes video takes a look at airport business parks as an interesting (and infuriating) case study for places designed for cars instead of people
Read MoreNorth Virginia will make multi-billion dollar decisions this year on the region’s transportation future—decisions that are only going to induce more driving.
Read MoreJust off the coast of Toronto, Canada's largest city, you'll find a group of 15 small car-free islands. But just in case you thought you'd like to live here: you can't.
Read MoreBecause we depend so heavily on cars, what happens when roads become too icy to drive on? The answer: road salt. But there are serious consequences to relying on salt for road-clearing.
Read MoreCities should not be afraid to impose design standards that meet the community’s needs and that don’t jeopardize long-term planning for the public realm.
Read MoreTechnology historian Peter Norton talks about why we need to be more skeptical toward the utopian promises of self-driving cars.
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