Recent Streetsblog NYC posts about Streetsblog

STREETSBLOG USA

Zoning Reform Will Boost Housing Affordability and Walkability in D.C.

| | No Comments
A change to D.C.’s zoning code will allow homeowners to build and rent out a basement apartment, or an apartment over the garage, without the long, expensive hassle of obtaining special permission. Advocates in many high-rent cities, like Austin, have fought for this kind of legislation. It not only helps alleviate the housing crunch, it also creates better […]
STREETSBLOG USA

How Boston Will Cut Transit Construction Costs Without Diluting Transit

| | No Comments
Boston’s 4.7-mile Green Line extension is supposed to bring light rail service to some of the nation’s most densely populated neighborhoods, but skyrocketing construction costs have threatened to sink the project. After the price tag ballooned to $3 billion last year, about a 50 percent increase, the project was in danger of being cancelled altogether. Yesterday, the Massachusetts Bay Transportation […]
STREETSBLOG USA

Paris Kicks Off Monthly Car-Free Sundays on the Champs-Élysées

| | No Comments
It’s been almost six months since Paris held its big car-free day, a jubilant event that temporarily cleared the air of poisonous diesel emissions and imparted a sense of how great streets could be without the constant roar of motor vehicles. Now Mayor Anne Hidalgo is moving to make “open streets” a monthly event. Richard Layman at Rebuilding Place in the […]
STREETSBLOG USA

It’s Not Rocket Science: If Streets Are Safe, More Kids Walk or Bike to School

| | No Comments
Yesterday was national Bike to School Day, an event that shows kids what it’s like to power their own way to school. The fact that we have a special day to promote what used to be part of the daily routine for many children also speaks to the way biking and walking have been marginalized on American streets. Two generations ago, in 1969, almost half […]