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August 5, 2022

The rise of high-tech real estate investing platforms and their effect on housing affordability

Houses at the corner of 23rd and Yesler, Squire Park / Central District, Seattle, Washington.

Real estate tech startups are making it easier for people to invest and manage property. But critics argue that these software companies and their business models are gobbling up the limited amount of available housing in the process, driving up costs and pushing out first-time buyers. The demand from investors interested in purchasing real estate…


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August 4, 2022

College of Built Environments students help historically Black churches survive gentrification

View of Central District, Capitol Hill, and more from Columbia Center.

Rev. George Davenport Jr. had a vision of using real estate to sustain his church community in its historically Black Central District neighborhood. But while the streets around the church gentrified, he struggled through the complex landscape of zoning laws, building codes and speculative funding options. Then he stumbled upon the Nehemiah Initiative and the…


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August 2, 2022

Heat wave serves WA a lesson in climate adaptation, mitigation

Wildfire smoke over downtown Seattle viewed from West Seattle in 2018.

For better or worse, this heat wave is forcing Washington to recognize and confront the impacts of climate change. Last year’s “heat dome,” while jarring and traumatic for many, was an exceptional event. Earlier this week, King County officials warned that wildfires near Seattle, once thought impossible, are a growing threat. While that would be…


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July 28, 2022

King County hoping to close heat disparity gap in low-income areas

Aerial view of Downtown, South Lake Union, Capitol Hill, and the Central District - Seattle, WA. Differences in neighborhood infrastructure and tree canopy can result in heat disparities

Earlier this year, King County announced it is developing a heat strategy plan to better handle extreme heat waves. But data shows certain neighborhoods — particularly lower income areas — tend to get much hotter. Those behind the heat strategy say they’re hoping to close that heat disparity gap. The hottest areas are in south…


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July 26, 2022

With extreme heat, we can’t build roads and railways as we used to

Cars pass by a section of buckled highway in Decatur, Ga., Monday, April 17, 2017.

Roads and airport runways buckling. Train tracks warping. Bridges swelling. These are just some of the damaging effects extreme heat has had on critical infrastructure in recent years, as heat waves have become more frequent and intense — a stark reminder, experts say, of the need to adjust quickly to a warming planet. For roadways…


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July 22, 2022

Seattle’s soda tax benefits low-income communities, study finds

refrigerated display of beverages at a grocery store

A new study concludes that Seattle’s soda tax isn’t disproportionately harming lower-income families — and is actually benefiting lower-income households as a group. University of Washington researchers analyzed sugary drink purchases across more than 1,100 households in Philadelphia, San Francisco and Seattle in the first year the cities enacted soda taxes. In all three cities,…


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July 21, 2022

Climate change is pushing hospitals to tipping point

The emergency care tower at Evergreen Hospital Medical Center in Kirkland, Washington.

When an unprecedented heat wave baked the Pacific Northwest last July, emergency rooms sought any way possible to lower the core body temperatures of patients coming in droves with heat-related ailments. Many emergency departments in the region began putting people in body bags filled with ice to help safely adjust their temperatures. But despite their…


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July 19, 2022

New tsunami warning to those in Seattle: If the earth starts shaking, get to higher ground ASAP

Seattle Waterfront from Bell Harbor Pier.

If a really big earthquake hits offshore from Seattle, the city’s shorelines could be struck with massive tsunami waves within a matter of three minutes. In a worst-case scenario, the waves hitting Seattle’s Magnolia Bluff neighborhood could crest at 33 feet high. That’s the grim warning from a report out Thursday from the Washington State…


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July 18, 2022

How King County is preparing for extreme heat this summer

Downtown Seattle, WA.

Last summer, two heat waves blanketed the usually temperate Pacific Northwest. The first one, which saw at least 30 heat-related deaths and many more injuries, would become the deadliest climate-related event in King County’s recorded history. In the wake of the heat waves, residents and government officials are acknowledging how unprepared we are for extreme…


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July 15, 2022

Microsoft Targets Carbon Removal With Climate Research Effort

Microsoft Corp. has launched a climate research effort in a bid to build a network of participants to tackle some key problems affecting the environment. The Microsoft Climate Research Initiative will at first focus on carbon reduction and removal, carbon accounting and environmental resilience, the Redmond, Washington-based company said in a blog post Wednesday. An initial round of nine…


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