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October 24, 2019

The potential of green urban planning for mental health

Central Park, Manhattan, New York City.

Neighborhood architects, engineers, and policymakers look at all kinds of factors and needs when building a city, including transportation links, housing, aesthetics, amenities, and so forth. Natural spaces are also considered, for their aesthetic, recreational, and ecological benefits. A study published in July in Science Advances outlines a model that will let policymakers see nature’s impacts on…


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Seattle’s treasured P-Patch community gardens face uncertain future

Estelle P-Patch in the Mount Baker neighborhood of Rainier Valley, Seattle.

Have you stumbled on a P-Patch community garden in your neighborhood? These beehives of gardening and community populate every corner of Seattle. Both the gardens and the people are as diverse as the neighborhoods they serve. From sprawling production farms to tiny lots, each provides a green respite, an open and interactive space. To those…


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October 22, 2019

Global climate action motivates King County Council push for zero-emissions public transit by 2035

Proterra electric bus at Eastgate.

Back when King County first began to test electric buses in 2016, officials hoped to build a “zero-emission fleet” by 2040. But recent activism calling for aggressive measures to cut carbon emissions — especially from Indigenous demonstrators and students — has helped push forward proposed legislation that aims to accelerate that transition to 2035. Cities that truly aim for zero-emissions status…


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How the Urban Freight Lab seeks to fix the last 50 feet of shipping

UPS delivery truck stopped along a curb and a cyclist is riding past.

The very last step of shipping packages in a city ⁠— not the end mile but the “final 50 feet” ⁠— bedevils delivery drivers. Every day, they face the task of driving and parking safely and legally in urban environments not built for the brick-and-asphalt end journeys of e-commerce. For these workers every hour is rush hour,…


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October 17, 2019

Immigrants often revive struggling cities through housing, population growth

Protest march in support of immigrants, St. Paul, Minnesota, 2018.

President Trump has turned repeatedly throughout his tenure and his re-election campaign to two targets: immigrants whom he has described as “invading” the country, and American cities he has called out of control. But to the extent that each presents real policy challenges — how to integrate foreigners, what to do about struggling places —…


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Pop-up galleries and data: Visualizing the lives of homeless people and their animals

New One Health clinic serves homeless youth and their pets, connecting this vulnerable population to health care.

Sparked by a grant from the UW Population Health Initiative, the UW’s Center for One Health Research created a series of pop-up galleries featuring autobiographical photographs made by people experiencing homelessness with their animal companions. The first gallery was Oct. 4 in UW’s Red Square. Other pop-up gallery events took place in Occidental Square in Seattle’s Pioneer Square district; in Cal…


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October 15, 2019

How bike sharing in Seattle rose from the ashes of Pronto’s failure

Seattle’s docked bike-share program, Pronto, had problems shifting into a higher gear, and the city ended the program in 2017. Pronto bikes are seen here along Seattle’s waterfront.

In October 2014, Seattle launched Pronto, a docked bike-share program. But Pronto had problems shifting into a higher gear, and the city ended the program in 2017, making Seattle one of the few cities in the world to shut down a modern public bike sharing system. Then, four months later, Seattle became the first city…


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New Phase, Next Steps: Doorway 2.0 Fall Updates

"Nickelsville" homeless encampment (named after Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels) towards the end of its 3-month stay in the parking lot of the University Congregational United Church of Christ in the University District, Seattle, Washington.

The Doorway Project, a cross-campus and community-engaged project under Urban@UW’s Homelessness Research Initiative, has been busy! Check out their activities and plans for the future in their latest blog post:   Welcome to the Doorway Project blog! As a part of the new phase of the project, which we are calling Doorway Project 2.0, we…


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October 10, 2019

New UW Data Collaborative seeks to bring latest computing tools and data to researchers

UW Medicine Research Complex, South Lake Union.

Imagine a researcher at work in a small, windowless “cold room” with an automatic locking door and a desktop computer with zero chance of connecting to the internet in order to protect highly restricted health and population datasets. Cold rooms offer a strict environment that keeps data safe. But in a highly collaborative institution such…


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A space-strapped city gets an unusual opportunity: A brand-new neighborhood

View of Interbay and Downtown Seattle From Ella Bailey Park, 2015.

As apartment high-rises and office skyscrapers have filled and reshaped Seattle, there’s one long, thin strip of relatively untouched land that stands in sharp contrast to all the development around it. The 25-acre plot of land next to the Queen Anne neighborhood and near the shore of Elliott Bay—surrounded by a golf course, rail yard,…


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