July 7, 2020
A/B Streets game lets you create the Seattle street grid of your dreams
It seems like a lifetime ago when we could just leave the house and go places, whether on foot or bike or (if we must) car. And as much as one might long for a return to normal-times, let’s not forget that normalcy also involved such headaches as congestion, traffic sewers, long waits for buses,…
Arts & Culture | Data Science & Spatial Analysis | Design & Building | Infrastructure & Transportation | Innovation & Technology | Land Use & Planning
Why host platforms? Extracts from an interview with Professor Thaisa Way
In early March 2020, Andrea Kahn (Synthesis Lab Director for SLU Urban Futures and former SLU Landscape Facilitator) met Thaisa Way, Facilitator for Urban@UW, to discuss the origins, actors, actions and impacts of the platform. Like SLU Landscape, Urban@UW is a network of researchers and practitioners engaging in different collaborative projects and initiatives across multiple…
Advocacy & Civic Engagement | Education
July 6, 2020
How urban design can make or break protests
If protesters could plan a perfect stage to voice their grievances, it might look a lot like Athens, Greece. Its broad, yet not overly long, central boulevards are almost tailor-made for parading. Its large parliament-facing square, Syntagma, forms a natural focal point for marchers. With a warren of narrow streets surrounding the center, including the…
Advocacy & Civic Engagement | Design & Building | Diversity, Equity & Justice | Infrastructure & Transportation | Land Use & Planning
July 2, 2020
Don’t be fooled by Seattle’s police-free zone
Seattle’s police-free “autonomous zone” is coming to an end. After two largely peaceful weeks, shootings over the last several days near the Capitol Hill Organized Protest area, CHOP for short, left a 19-year-old man dead and three others wounded. Mayor Jenny Durkan announced on June 22 that the city would retake the abandoned police precinct at the heart of…
Diversity, Equity & Justice | Economy & Development | History & Preservation | Housing & Homelessness | Land Use & Planning | Policy & Law
Fearful commuters on trains, buses hold one key to U.S. recovery
Masks are mandatory on subways and buses in Washington. San Francisco is betting longer trains will help riders social distance. Crews disinfect New York’s trains daily — stations twice a day — and are testing ultraviolet light devices to see if they kill Covid-19 on surfaces. As states gradually reopen, transit agencies are taking steps…
Economy & Development | Health & Well Being | Infrastructure & Transportation | Policy & Law
Monsanto will pay $95 million in PCB settlement with Washington state
The state of Washington will receive tens of millions of dollars in a settlement against Monsanto over its manufacture of toxic chemicals that were deposited decades ago in Washington soil and water and continue to wreak environmental damage today. State Attorney General Bob Ferguson’s office in 2016 sued the company over its production of polychlorinated…
Diversity, Equity & Justice | Food | Health & Well Being | Natural Resources & Environment | Policy & Law | Water
June 30, 2020
Seattle OKs transfer of old UW laundry near Mount Baker light rail station to build affordable housing
The Seattle City Council voted unanimously on June 22 to acquire a former UW Medical Center laundry next to the Mount Baker light rail station to develop affordable housing. The transfer comes at no cost to the city, and the project will count toward the 450 units of affordable housing the university agreed to build when the council…
Advocacy & Civic Engagement | Diversity, Equity & Justice | Economy & Development | Housing & Homelessness | Land Use & Planning
Study asks Washington state residents to describe food security and access during pandemic, economic downturn
The Washington State Food Security Survey, which went live June 18 and runs through July 31, is open to all Washington state residents aged 18 or over. It was created by researchers at the University of Washington, Washington State University and Tacoma Community College, along with input from partners in local, county and state governments —…
Diversity, Equity & Justice | Economy & Development | Food | Health & Well Being | Policy & Law
Seattle’s activist-occupied zone is just the latest in a long history of movements and protests
The six blocks of occupied Seattle streets now known as the Capitol Hill Organized Protest, or “CHOP”, have become a focal point of the nationwide anti-racist protests, eliciting both encouragement and concern. But for this Pacific Northwest city, it is far from the first time in the radical spotlight. Seattle has a long and storied history of…
Advocacy & Civic Engagement | Arts & Culture | Diversity, Equity & Justice | Economy & Development | History & Preservation | Policy & Law
June 22, 2020
Air pollution ebbs during the pandemic in Washington state
Kristi Straus, a lecturer in the University of Washington’s College of Environmental Studies program, said reduced traffic and work commutes have likely lowered nitrogen dioxide pollution and improved people’s quality of life during the COVID-19 pandemic. “Certainly commuting is a big way we spend our time and burn fossil fuels,” she said. “The reduced traffic…
Climate & Energy | Data Science & Spatial Analysis | Health & Well Being | Infrastructure & Transportation | Natural Hazards | Natural Resources & Environment