Buildings & Design: Page 16
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Could Zoom towns go bust?
Money is flowing into cities like Boise, Idaho, but some analysts wonder about the sustainability of their growth.
By Leslie Shaver • March 22, 2022 -
Toyota's Woven Planet, NYU create open-source dataset to improve VPR tech for accessibility, autonomy
To test how visual place recognition technology can help visually impaired pedestrians, autonomous vehicles and delivery robots better navigate cities, the project captured over 200,000 images of part of an NYC neighborhood.
By Cailin Crowe • March 21, 2022 -
Trendline
Top 5 stories from Smart Cities Dive
From worsening climate change to a shifting transportation landscape and the housing affordability crisis, cities have their work cut out for them.
By Smart Cities Dive staff -
6 cities set to add the highest percentage of new apartments in 2022
Nashville, Phoenix and Austin, Texas, will build 6% new inventory this year, as apartment construction is projected to hit a 30-year high.
By Leslie Shaver • March 8, 2022 -
Apartment sales jumped 128% last year, good luck finding one
The pandemic widened the gap between apartments and other sectors, as apartments were flooded with applications from people moving to new areas. But are the industry's high prices here to stay?
By Leslie Shaver • March 7, 2022 -
Sponsored by Buildings Performance Institute of Europe
Buildings are a key climate solution: How the U.S. and Europe are cooperating to make progress
The U.S. and E.U. have committed to reaching net zero emissions by 2050. Building decarbonization is essential to achieving this goal.
By Oliver Rapf, executive director, BPIE (Building Performance Institute Europe), and Lotte Schlegel, executive director, IMT (Institute for Market Transformation) • Feb. 28, 2022 -
Opinion
Revisiting California's natural gas hookup subsidies
California is one of the biggest consumers of natural gas in the U.S., and has been adding new gas customers faster than any other state. These trends are in direct conflict with its ambitious climate goals, the authors write.
By Clifford Rechtschaffen and Simi Rose George • Feb. 23, 2022 -
Orlando emphasizes 'wow factor' in digital twin project
Unlike many other cities' digital twins, the project will map the entire 40-square-mile metro region. It will be updated with real-time data to help inform infrastructure policies and act as a marketing tool for the metro region.
By Jason Plautz • Feb. 22, 2022 -
Opinion
To decarbonize buildings, think like an entrepreneur
The most innovative ideas to slash emissions won’t have impact if they never reach the market, writes Reshma Singh, who focuses on building technologies at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
By Reshma Singh • Feb. 18, 2022 -
To prevent evictions, cities should take a multifaceted approach, NLC report says
A new National League of Cities report says cities can tailor eviction policies to meet the unique needs of their communities with interventions such as legal and financial assistance, hotlines, and resources.
By Jason Plautz • Feb. 7, 2022 -
Pittsburgh bridge collapse raises questions, infrastructure funding concerns
The span fell the day President Joe Biden was visiting to promote the IIJA, underscoring his push to improve the nation's dated infrastructure.
By Matthew Thibault • Feb. 1, 2022 -
DC joins growing list of cities requiring new buildings to include EV parking
A make-ready rule requires 20% of parking to be ready for EV charging in certain new and refurbished buildings. But a parking reform expert said the rules ignore a bigger climate question: Is new parking necessary at all?
By Jason Plautz • Jan. 27, 2022 -
8 trends shaping cities in 2022
Cities continue to confront challenges surrounding the pandemic, the climate crisis, rising inequality and public safety this year.
By Cailin Crowe, Danielle McLean, Maria Rachal, Dan Zukowski and Jason Plautz • Jan. 26, 2022 -
White House forms coalition with local governments to pursue building performance policies
In a federal show of support for locally led decarbonization and retrofitting efforts, the coalition will cover nearly 20% of the U.S. building footprint and aims to advance legislation or regulation over the next two years.
By Maria Rachal • Jan. 24, 2022 -
The pitfalls of place-based revitalization in Atlanta, San Diego: reports
Revitalization efforts in disinvested communities can result in two opposing results: They can contribute to gentrification or leave neighborhoods as impoverished as when the initiatives started, the Urban Institute reports.
By Cailin Crowe • Jan. 14, 2022 -
Cities are murky on how they define 'green infrastructure': analysis
The term is increasingly popping up in strategic plans and climate plans alike, but many U.S. cities that reference goals for green infrastructure don't explicitly define what it is, a recent study found.
By Maria Rachal • Jan. 13, 2022 -
12 predictions about the trends that will shape smart cities in 2022
As local leaders continue to adapt to the tremendous changes that the past year brought, industry players share how they anticipate cities will evolve.
By Cailin Crowe • Jan. 5, 2022 -
Q&A's from 2021 that spotlight 13 smart cities voices
Revisit the year's one-on-one conversations, including with tech and climate leaders in Honolulu, Phoenix and San Diego and with execs at Revel, Veo and Drop Mobility.
Dec. 23, 2021 -
How the pandemic has shaped driver and pedestrian behavior
The past year has seen drastic changes to driver behavior and commuting patterns, ushering in an era of high traffic and pedestrian deaths.
Dec. 22, 2021 -
NYC's new gas ban highlights market growth needs for building electrification
Outgoing Mayor Bill de Blasio signed the climate legislation in his final days in office, but work to expand awareness, market development and worker training remains.
By Maria Rachal • Dec. 22, 2021 -
Building electrification momentum grew in US cities in 2021
From Denver to Ithaca, New York, cities are charting new territory in their quest to slash built-environment emissions. Solutions include changing codes and adding performance standards, and even electrifying entire city building stocks.
By Maria Rachal • Dec. 8, 2021 -
Tesla solar roof fires subject of SEC, Consumer Product Safety Commission investigations
A former Tesla employee accused the company of failing to disclose safety risks from solar panels.
By Jason Plautz • Dec. 8, 2021 -
5 of the largest mixed-use development projects in the works across the US
Developments in Boston; Alexandria, Virginia; Frisco, Texas; and elsewhere will be home to new residential, retail and office spaces valued in the billions.
By Mary Salmonsen • Nov. 30, 2021 -
Traffic is Boring: Tracking Elon Musk's tunneling proposals
Some projects for The Boring Co. have gotten off — or rather under — the ground, as others peter out. Here's where the ambitious plans stand today.
By Zachary Phillips • Nov. 17, 2021 -
Initiative will rethink San Francisco downtown for 'post-COVID' work patterns
How should a commercial downtown evolve if the masses of 9-to-5 workers don't return to pre-pandemic commuting? One San Francisco group has launched a project to address that question.
By Jason Plautz • Nov. 15, 2021 -
Deep Dive
Flooding risk complicates cities' push to legalize basement apartments
In the age of extreme weather, amid the deaths of 11 New Yorkers living in basement units following heavy rainfall from remnants of Hurricane Ida, cities aim to balance safety with affordable housing accessibility.
By Jason Plautz • Nov. 11, 2021