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October 8, 2019

One in nine Seattle residents lives below the poverty line

University District, Seattle, 2008.

Washington was one of only 14 states in the country where poverty rates fell from 2017 to 2018. According to new Census data released this month, the poverty rate in Seattle is 11 percent, down from 12.5 percent in 2017, but is considered statistically unchanged. Still, about one in nine residents live in poverty. “The…


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October 3, 2019

Seattle Growth Podcast 6.11: Building community among filmmakers and film lovers

Seattle Growth Podcast is produced by UW Marketing professor Jeff Shulman.

Seattle is a city of cinephiles. And film lovers and film makers, like other affinity groups, tend to seek each other out. Season six of the Seattle Growth Podcast continues its exploration of the myriad communities that have formed as the city grows and changes. Episode 11 introduces communities built around the movies. Vivian Hua, a local writer, filmmaker…


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American poverty is moving from the cities to the suburbs

Youngstown, once a booming centre of steel production with a peak population of 170,000, is now a hollowed-out town of 65,000, with a poverty rate 37% higher than in nearby Cleveland.

For many, the stereotypical image of American poverty still resembles the infamous Cabrini-Green Homes, a housing estate completed in 1962 near the heart of Chicago. It became overrun by gangs, drugs and violence. City police, in effect, ceded control. This popular conception of poverty remains largely urban, black and ghettoised. But the stereotype is outdated….


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October 1, 2019

Urban Scholar Highlight: Rachel Berney

Rachel Berney presenting to local leaders in the community of Ciudad Romero, El Salvador, March 2019.

Rachel Berney is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Urban Design and Planning, Adjunct Assistant Professor in Landscape Architecture, an Urban@UW Fellow, and author of Learning from Bogotá: Pedagogical Urbanism and the Reshaping of Public Space. Her primary interests include community sustainable design, public space, and international development in the Americas, as well as…


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September 30, 2019

Urban@UW at 4 years: looking back, looking ahead

Urban@UW launch event

The Launch of a Leading-Edge Collaborative Research Center: Urban@UW Urban@UW launched in 2015 as an initiative of the Office of Research and CoMotion, funded through the Provost. We convened our first meeting of faculty to discuss urban challenges that same spring on June 1, a conversation that surfaced key themes that Urban@UW would go on…



On the ground in disaster’s wake

Eric Gowins marvels at the sight of his still-standing fireplace within his decimated home in Paradise, California, Dec. 17, 2018.

From flood-damaged Houston to fire-ravaged Paradise, CA, Nicole Errett’s research takes her into the heart of communities trying to recover after catastrophe strikes. As a disaster researcher and lecturer in the UW Department of Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences, Errett works with communities struck by hurricanes, floods and other disasters to gather data on how disasters…


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September 26, 2019

Tall buildings out of timber? In the face of climate change, Seattle encourages it

Construction on a cross-laminated timber high-rise emits 25% less carbon dioxide than a concrete building.

The loggers who worked in Ballard when it was Shingletown, a center of the national timber industry, are long gone. And only a few wooden landmarks of the timber heyday, mostly churches, still exist on Ballard’s low-slung skyline. But as concerns over climate change give new life to wooden building design, that could change. In the…


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September 25, 2019

How a VR project documenting Seattle’s music history revealed the risk of a new digital divide

Seattle's Central District, 1968.

Yolanda Barton loves Seattle’s music history — the history that starts decades before Pearl Jam, Nirvana and Soundgarden came screaming onto the scene and Macklemore took fans thrift store shopping. We’re talking about the “honey at dusk” vocals of jazz legend Ernestine Anderson; about booty-celebrating rap superstar Sir Mix-a-Lot; about Quincy Jones, the jazz and pop music virtuoso and winner…


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September 23, 2019

Americans would rather drive themselves to work than have an autonomous vehicle drive them, study says

1st Ave, downtown Seattle, WA

Many Americans use a ride-hailing service — like Uber or Lyft — to get to and from work. It provides the privacy of riding in a personal car and the convenience of catching up on emails or social media during traffic jams. In the future, self-driving vehicles could provide the same service, except without a…


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Data Science for Social Good team analyzes equity of congestion pricing on Interstate 405

Traffic volumes on I-405 range from 83,000 to 125,000 vehicles per day. The freeway serves as a major interstate freight and commuter route.

A team in the eScience Institute’s Data Science for Social Good (DSSG) program has partnered with the Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) to study the usage patterns, price sensitivities and equity impacts of congestion pricing on Interstate 405. The project utilizes data on the more than 16 million trips taken in the high-occupancy toll (HOT) lanes of I-405…


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