May 23, 2018
How Seattle’s appetite for construction is creating a growing waste problem
The sun has barely burned the fog off Lake Washington as Noel Stout, standing near the water’s edge, peers at a heavy wooden trellis suspended 20 feet above a concrete backyard patio. He’s rigged a system of ropes and pulleys to the cedar latticework, which just yesterday supported a deck with a sweeping view across…
Climate & Energy | Data Science & Spatial Analysis | Design & Building | Economy & Development | History & Preservation | Housing & Homelessness | Infrastructure & Transportation | Innovation & Technology | Land Use & Planning | Natural Resources & Environment
May 16, 2018
With world’s worst air, Indian city struggles to track pollution
In the world’s most polluted city, Kanpur in northern India, the biggest hospital is so overcrowded with patients with respiratory ailments that they are often bedded in the ophthalmology ward. Kanpur, home to 3 million people, is followed by 13 other Indian cities in a list of the places with the worst air in the…
Design & Building | Health & Well Being | Infrastructure & Transportation | Innovation & Technology | Natural Resources & Environment
May 10, 2018
Vikram Prakash’s ‘ArchitectureTalk’ podcast explores topics ‘at the edge of the known’
Vikram Prakash says his weekly “ArchitectureTalk” podcast got its start, as many things do, from a student’s idea. Prakash is a professor of architecture in the University of Washington College of Built Environments. An architect himself, he is also an author, a theorist and an architectural historian. He said he has always felt “energized” by discussions in…
Arts & Culture | Design & Building | Education | History & Preservation | Housing & Homelessness | Infrastructure & Transportation | Innovation & Technology | Land Use & Planning | Natural Hazards | Natural Resources & Environment | Policy & Law
May 8, 2018
In a concrete jungle, one architect pushes for plywood for giants
Timber is coming back in the Northwest. I don’t mean old growth forests. Those have been holding steady for a couple of decades.I mean architecture. Cross-laminated timber, or CLT, is a material a true modernist can love — and not just for furniture and finishes. It’s very strong, and too beautiful to hide inside walls….
Arts & Culture | Design & Building | Infrastructure & Transportation | Innovation & Technology | Land Use & Planning | Natural Resources & Environment
May 2, 2018
CSDE Affiliates Examine Equity Issues Associated with Tolled Roads
Last week, Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan proposed instituting a toll on downtown roads to curb congestion. The Seattle Times examined the potential benefits and implications of the toll. In unpacking the possible equity issues, the Times turned to a 2009 study conducted by Affiliate Jennifer Romich, Associate Professor at the School of Social Work; Affiliate Robert Plotnick, Professor Emeritus at the Evans School of…
Climate & Energy | Data Science & Spatial Analysis | Design & Building | Infrastructure & Transportation | Innovation & Technology | Policy & Law
April 23, 2018
Urban Scholar Highlight: Margaret O’Mara
Margaret O’Mara is a Professor in the Department of History and a founding member of Urban@UW. She writes and teaches about the urban, political, and economic history of the modern United States. What led you to your current research interests? I’ve always been interested in how politics and government work with business and economics, and…
Data Science & Spatial Analysis | Economy & Development | Education | History & Preservation | Infrastructure & Transportation | Innovation & Technology | Land Use & Planning
April 17, 2018
Students research historic South, East Tacoma for Livable City project
The City of Tacoma’s Historic Preservation Office is partnering with the University of Washington on a Livable City Year project to identify historic resources in South and East Tacoma. For this project, graduate and undergraduate students are researching the histories of two neighborhoods: McKinley Hill in East Tacoma, and the Edison Neighborhood along South Tacoma…
Arts & Culture | Design & Building | Economy & Development | Health & Well Being | History & Preservation | Housing & Homelessness | Infrastructure & Transportation | Innovation & Technology | Land Use & Planning
April 11, 2018
Everyone wants to know how Seattle’s dockless bike share experiment is going
City planners and researchers are eager to get feedback on Seattle’s novel dockless bike sharing pilot to determine whether it is a viable mobility solution or an oversaturated fad. The Seattle Department of Transportation launched a survey (first spotted by Curbed) to find out how riders feel about the three bike share services that arrived in their city…
Data Science & Spatial Analysis | Infrastructure & Transportation | Innovation & Technology
April 10, 2018
How Texas is ‘building back better’ from Hurricane Harvey
For most Americans, the one-two punch of last fall’s hurricanes is ancient history. But hard-hit communities in Texas, Florida and the Caribbean are still rebuilding. Nicole Errett, lecturer in the Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, recently traveled with public health students from the University of Washington to southeast Texas, where the impacts of…
Climate & Energy | Design & Building | Diversity, Equity & Justice | Economy & Development | Health & Well Being | Housing & Homelessness | Infrastructure & Transportation | Land Use & Planning | Natural Hazards | Natural Resources & Environment | Policy & Law
April 6, 2018
‘Building Blocks’ exhibit charts 15-year grassroots evolution
Building Blocks: Storefront Studio on Mainstreet charts the grassroots evolution of a community outreach studio offered by the University of Washington College Built Environments. Since 2003, Director Jim Nicholls and senior lecturer in the College of Built Environments has been leading groups of architecture, landscape, and planning students to partner with local small towns to study their main…
Arts & Culture | Design & Building | Innovation & Technology