Recent Streetsblog NYC posts about Streetsblog

STREETSBLOG USA

You Don’t Have to Trash BRT to Make the Case for Light Rail, and Vice Versa

| | No Comments
In cities considering a light rail project, it’s common for transit opponents to suddenly cast themselves as big believers in bus rapid transit. They don’t really want to build BRT, they just want to derail the transit expansion. The light rail advocates then have to make their case not only on the merits of the project, but also in relation to […]

This Week: Hudson Greenway Detour, Bike-Share in Brooklyn

| | 2 Comments
This summer the Parks Department presented a plan to route cyclists away from the waterfront greenway and onto a hilly, poorly-lit path between 72nd Street and 83rd Street. The greenway can get crowded along the water on summer days, but most of the time the current path doesn’t pose a problem. Nevertheless, as presented, the Parks Department’s proposal […]
STREETSBLOG USA

How Cities Like Cleveland Can Grow and Tackle Climate Change

| | No Comments
City leaders from around the world are meeting right now in Quito, Ecuador, for the summit known as Habitat III — convened by the United Nations to map out a strategy for sustainable urbanization as more people flock to cities. Demographers forecast enormous populations shifts to urban areas in the coming decades. The nature of this growth will have profound effects […]
STREETSBLOG USA

Affordable Transportation and Affordable Housing Need to Go Hand-in-Hand

| | No Comments
Rents continue to rise in cities across the U.S., and Pittsburgh is no exception. Noting the escalating housing costs in walkable neighborhoods, Alex Shewczyk at Bike Pittsburgh looks at how transportation and housing policy can coordinate to make places more affordable. We know from resources like the Center for Neighborhood Technology’s Housing+Transportation Index that transportation costs are a large household expense […]
STREETSBLOG USA

Does WMATA Have Enough Credibility to Avoid Doomsday Service Cuts?

| | No Comments
WMATA, the DC region’s transit agency, is in crisis. DC is a rarity among major American cities, with transit mode share declining over the last decade. In the past year, the federal government took over WMATA’s safety oversight authority after a number of embarrassing failures, culminating in the whole Metro being temporarily shut down. Confidence in the agency is in short supply. On […]