August 22, 2019
The future of the global shipping industry is… bikes
In the rush to get packages to your doorstep faster, delivery companies are experimenting with far-out technologies like drones and robots that can circumvent traffic—and that, most importantly, don’t need a conventional place to park while they deliver. But companies like UPS and the U.K.-based company DPD are considering a low-tech option, too: bikes. DPD is rolling out a pilot program…
Infrastructure & Transportation | Innovation & Technology
August 21, 2019
Can Project Sidewalk use crowdsourcing to help Seattleites get around?
Jon Froehlich distinctly remembers the moment when Google first unveiled Street View in 2007. The computer scientist spent hours virtually wandering through distant city streets and immersing himself in parts of the world he had yet to visit in real life. Then Froehlich had a thought: “What else could we use this for?” Within a decade, he’d developed…
Data Science & Spatial Analysis | Diversity, Equity & Justice | Infrastructure & Transportation | Innovation & Technology
August 19, 2019
Breathing dirty city air is as bad for your lungs as smoking
Even if you’ve never smoked, just living in a city with polluted air could lead to emphysema. A new study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association found that air pollution—and in particular ozone, which is increasing with climate change—makes the lung disease progress faster. If you live in a city with high ozone levels for a…
Climate & Energy | Health & Well Being | Natural Hazards | Natural Resources & Environment
August 14, 2019
Seattle Growth Podcast 6.10: Case studies in building ‘neighborhood’ communities
Season six of the Seattle Growth Podcast, produced by UW Foster School of Business professor of marketing Jeff Shulman, has explored the many ways that Seattleites are building or finding a sense of community in a city that is growing and changing so rapidly. Episode 6.10 looks at efforts to build community within, well, communities. Neighborhoods…
Advocacy & Civic Engagement | Diversity, Equity & Justice
‘Vehicle ranching’ in Seattle: Inside the underground market of renting RVs to homeless people
Richard Winn considered himself a decent landlord, particularly in a cutthroat rental market like Seattle’s. Sometimes his tenants did not pay their $75 weekly rent, and weren’t required to sign a lease or put down a deposit. But there were trade-offs. Winn never gave residents keys to their units. Tenants were not to use the…
Advocacy & Civic Engagement | Diversity, Equity & Justice | Economy & Development | Health & Well Being | Housing & Homelessness | Infrastructure & Transportation | Land Use & Planning | Policy & Law
Tech companies step up to fund affordable housing, but experts say it’s not enough to curb shortages
Microsoft pledged $500 million for affordable housing in January. Five months later, Google said it would invest $1 billion to help the Bay Area housing crisis. Amazon and Salesforce also announced contributions of their own this year. Major tech companies are stepping up to help mitigate affordable housing shortages, caused in part by the influx of high-income labor they have imported to the…
Advocacy & Civic Engagement | Design & Building | Diversity, Equity & Justice | Economy & Development | Housing & Homelessness | Innovation & Technology | Security & Privacy
See how a Seattle artist is telling the painful story of redlining in his city
Warren Pope is hellbent on walloping the corneas of any Seattleite who believes this city is absolved from a racist past. With “Warren Pope: Blood Lines, Time Lines, Red Lines,” an exhibition running through Sept. 8 at the Northwest African American Museum (NAAM), the 72-year-old West Seattle artist says he yearns to expose how the…
Arts & Culture | Diversity, Equity & Justice | Economy & Development | History & Preservation | Housing & Homelessness | Policy & Law
August 12, 2019
How nature can improve your family’s mental health
People who study health outcomes – and any parent with common sense – have long known that having access to a green space is important for health. From decreased asthma and obesity to increased immunities and quality sleep, exposure to the outdoors is good for everyone. But a large, growing body of evidence, captured in a new meta-study, reveals that experiences in nature have especially…
Diversity, Equity & Justice | Health & Well Being | Land Use & Planning | Natural Resources & Environment
August 7, 2019
Can tiny houses help solve affordability crisis? A student who’s building one thinks so
Olivia Tyrnauer adjusts the ladder and carefully begins to climb, balancing on the steps as she carries a large window up to an empty frame. Positioned precariously on one of the top steps, she loops a screw gun out of her belt and pulls a screw from one of the pockets of her tan cargo…
Design & Building | Economy & Development | Housing & Homelessness | Infrastructure & Transportation | Innovation & Technology | Land Use & Planning
This startup wants to tame the chaos of city street parking
From the summer haze, and the cars and Ubers and bicycles and scooters and cement trucks and delivery vans and city buses that operate within it, emerges a white truck, the words “Belair Foods” and the image of a carrot plastered on its side. As a small crowd watches, the truck pulls into a parking spot….
Data Science & Spatial Analysis | Infrastructure & Transportation | Innovation & Technology | Land Use & Planning