The 15-Minute City Is Coming to America. In a "15-minute city," all the essentials including work, school, culture, and grocery stores are a 15-minute walk, cycle or public transport ride away from people. This concept is gaining traction in European cities like Paris and Utah would be the first in the U.S. to build one of these car-light communities—construction begins in 2024. It's exciting to see that a public engagement process, and not a top-down approach, led to this vision. (Streetsblog USA) How to Design for Social Justice. The New Orleans-based architecture firm Colloqate Design is hiring local community residents as Community Design Advocates (CDAs) to ensure a bottom-up, collective vision. Their design principle Bryan Lee Jr. says, "For every injustice in this world there is an architecture, a plan, a design, that’s been built to sustain that injustice, and for so much of our work power is vested in land." For a project in Dallas on the site of a former jail, his team hired CDAs including people who were previously incarcerated to make its architecture accountable to the local community. (Next City) A Way to Improve Sidewalks. It's been almost two decades since the Supreme Court ruled that cities must keep their sidewalks accessible to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act and yet change has been slow. One proposed solution would require property owners to ensure the sidewalk next to their property is compliant when and if they decide to sell. The city could then provide subsidies for low-income sellers to make sure they are not left behind. (Bloomberg) |
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