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January 20, 2021

The environmental psychology of COVID-19 with Professor Lynne Manzo

We are living through a new reality, adjusting to life during a global pandemic. We are all changing our routines, our travel plans, our holiday traditions. For those of us who have been able to keep our jobs through this economic crash, we have had to adapt to a new working environment, working from our…


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January 16, 2021

University of Washington tests wastewater to track COVID-19 outbreaks in Seattle neighborhoods

Seattle City Council District 4 showing Neighborhoods and Neighborhood Districts near the University of Washington.

The University of Washington is studying a new way to track COVID-19 outbreaks in Seattle neighborhoods, and let’s just say they are not letting anything go to waste. The College of Engineering is investigating a new large-scale testing method to detect COVID-19 in wastewater by pulling sewage samples from Seattle pump stations. The goal is to quantify how many…


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How much will homelessness rise? Grim study shows possible ‘impact of doing nothing,’ researchers say

A few tents lining the walkway in Pioneer Square, Seattle during the rainy winter months.

A recession following the coronavirus pandemic could cause twice as much homelessness nationwide as the Great Recession did more than a decade ago, says a grim study released Tuesday by Economic Roundtable, an L.A. research group. Using detailed data on unemployment and homelessness from L.A. County social services, authors of the study project that people at the…


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January 15, 2021

Uber and Lyft operating in US cities linked to rises in car ownership

As the number of vehicles increase in urban settings, vehicles on the road in downtown Seattle increase.

The introduction of ride-sharing companies, including Uber and Lyft, has been associated with a 0.7 percent increase in car ownership on average in US urban areas. “In a lot of respects, this is not surprising,” says Os Keyes, PhD student at the Department of Human-Centered Design & Engineering at the University of Washington in Seattle. “If…


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January 13, 2021

Building knowledge: The architect and the builder with Professor Ann Huppert

A view of Gould Hall, where the UW College of Built Environments is housed.

Throughout history, we’ve seen shifts in how people communicate regarding design. The question of how communication happens between architect and builder is as fundamental today as it was hundreds of years ago. While the dynamics of these communication processes are nuanced, our understanding of them has been colored by a narrative of the past. One…


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January 9, 2021

How a year of protests changed Seattle

Protesters marching up Pine Street on Capitol Hill, as part of the George Floyd protests.

It took the ripples of outrage over the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis last May about three days to reach Seattle, driving thousands of protesters into the streets in solidarity with demands to end police violence against people of color and address, finally, the institutional racism that feeds it. Seven months later, those tear…


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January 8, 2021

Spanaway tops list of toughest places in the U.S. to buy a home

A view of several buildings at the University of Washington, Tacoma Campus, where the School of Urban Studies is housed.

When Eric Seiler started looking to buy a house near Spanaway at the height of this year’s coronavirus lockdowns, he thought he might find a buyers’ market. Instead, Seiler and his fiancée started on a home search that involved making at least 15 offers on homes, only to be beat out by other buyers. “There…


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January 6, 2021

The year inequality became less visible, and more visible than ever

The Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel's International District/Chinatown station with several King County Metro buses. This view is from the northbound platform, looking north. The nearest bus is No. 6846, a 2008 New Flyer DE60LF hybrid bus. This station opened in 1990, for use by dual-mode buses (diesel/trolley) that operated as trolleybuses in the tunnel. Several years later it was modified for use additionally by Sound Transit Link light rail, and Link service began in 2009.

This year, many Americans left the places where it was still possible to encounter one another. White-collar workers stopped going downtown, past homeless encampments and to lunch counters with minimum-wage staff. The well-off stopped riding public transit, where in some cities they once sat alongside commuting students and custodial workers. Diners stopped eating in restaurants,…


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January 4, 2021

Poetry vs. programming: Wandering the city, a writer finds the intersection of literature and code

A view of the Amazon Spheres from the Sixth Avenue side, located in Seattle, Washington.

Originally written by Frances McCue, a poet, writer, co-founder of nonprofit community writing center Hugo House, and teaching professor at the University of Washington Department of English, as a special installment of the GeekWire Podcast. I needed to take a break from work and get outside. Also, I’d been reading a lot of Baudelaire so…


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December 24, 2020

Did COVID lockdowns really clear the air?

A view of Seattle's typically busy freeways with very few vehicles, due to working from home and social distancing mandates.

The early days of the Covid-19 lockdowns were seen as an environmental marvel. With fewer commuters and empty highways, residents of cities from Los Angeles to New Delhi witnessed clear blue skies and mountain views that had long been obscured by smog. The dramatic atmospheric transformation was one of first of the “silver linings” that the coronavirus…


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Urban@UW shares stories of urban research, teaching, and engagement by the University of Washington community through original publication and amplification of externally published articles, in order to bring visibility to the great work across the university. For communications inquiries, please email urbanuw@uw.edu

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