Buildings & Design: Page 33
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Amazon confirms NYC, Northern Virginia as HQ2 locations
The company also announced a new Operations Center of Excellence in Nashville, TN.
By Kristin Musulin , Chris Teale • Nov. 13, 2018 -
Deep Dive
Fixing Chicago's freight rail congestion
Chicago is America's busiest freight rail hub, but severe congestion has stakeholders investing in infrastructure and technological improvements.
By Katie Pyzyk • Nov. 12, 2018 -
Trendline
Top 5 stories from Smart Cities Dive
From worsening climate change to a shifting transportation landscape and the housing affordability crisis, cities have their work cut out for them.
By Smart Cities Dive staff -
Deep Dive
Could midterm election results spark a renewed infrastructure push?
While leaders have increasingly talked about rebuilding America's roads, bridges and networks, political realities may prevent much progress on the bipartisan issue.
By Chris Teale • Nov. 8, 2018 -
Back to the future: 5 cities resurrecting historic buildings
More and more cities are using their older structures for new uses, whether it be in transportation, for research or to cultivate startups and technology.
By Chris Teale • Nov. 7, 2018 -
Honolulu named winner of Bloomberg's American Cities Climate Challenge
The city is the 18th honoree of 20 to be named, and is expected to use the assistance for initiatives such as green transportation and buildings.
By Chris Teale • Nov. 5, 2018 -
6 green certifications contractors should know about
Though they trail LEED and Energy Star, several other unique benchmarks for building in a way that is healthy for both occupants and the environment are gaining ground and can't be ignored.
By Kim Slowey • Nov. 5, 2018 -
Deloitte: To fund infrastructure, developing cities need private help
Governments spend roughly $2.5 trillion a year to build or repair transportation, water, energy, telecommunications and other infrastructure, the report found.
By Jason Plautz • Nov. 1, 2018 -
Port Authority of NY/NJ becomes first transit agency to target Paris Agreement
The authority pledged to electrify its entire bus fleet and spend $100 million on energy retrofits, part of a goal of cutting emissions 80% by 2050.
By Chris Teale • Nov. 1, 2018 -
At the Smart Columbus Experience Center, a glimpse into a city's future
The center enables visitors to try out electric vehicles and learn more about upcoming innovations such as autonomous vehicles and kiosks.
By Chris Teale • Oct. 30, 2018 -
Deep Dive
'Technology alone cannot solve our problems': Top takeaways from Smart Regions Conference
Speakers in Columbus, OH, emphasized the need for cities to put people first, but the age gap between elected leaders and smart city proponents could be a hindrance.
By Chris Teale • Oct. 29, 2018 -
Winners announced in first Smart Infrastructure Challenge
Honorees receive up to $10 million in four categories, although of the 80 total project proposals, officials said that between 75% and 80% could receive some backing.
By Chris Teale • Oct. 29, 2018 -
Chicago plans $5M in upgrades on popular bus corridors
Upgrades will include dedicated lanes and new signs to improve speed and reliability, as well as pedestrian safety, on the city's most-ridden routes.
By Katie Pyzyk • Oct. 23, 2018 -
1 year smarter: A look back at our favorite stories
To celebrate the one-year anniversary of our daily launch, Smart Cities Dive has rounded up our most popular posts on everything from drug-sniffing robots to blockchain tech.
By Kristin Musulin • Oct. 23, 2018 -
Urban Smart Logistics Institute to study subterranean deliveries
Transporting parcels through subterranean networks could be an "industry game changer" in solving last-mile challenges.
By Shefali Kapadia • Oct. 19, 2018 -
Baltimore City Council approves Complete Streets bill
The legislation requires the city's Department of Transportation "to the greatest extent possible, promote walking, biking and public transit."
By Chris Teale • Oct. 16, 2018 -
Deep Dive
On the smart city journey, everyone goes at their own pace
At Smart Cities Week in Washington, DC, leaders said that progress varies by jurisdiction, while it is key to change the conversation around innovation inside government.
By Chris Teale • Oct. 8, 2018 -
Sidewalk Labs advisor quits Toronto project over privacy concerns
Saadia Muzaffar said organizers showed "apathy and a lack of leadership regarding shaky public trust" over data and privacy concerns.
By Jason Plautz • Oct. 8, 2018 -
2018 Readiness Challenge winners reflect on their smart city journeys
Representatives from Cary, NC; Las Vegas; Birmingham, AL; Louisville, KY; Virginia and Puerto Rico all took the stage at Smart Cities Week to share how they have benefited from the program thus far.
By Kristin Musulin • Oct. 4, 2018 -
Minneapolis releases final draft of 2040 comprehensive plan
The plan heavily addresses equity and the environment, but a drastic increase in housing density was a contentious topic.
By Katie Pyzyk • Oct. 3, 2018 -
Amazon investment in prefab home company could signal smart home expansion
The e-commerce giant's investment in Plant Prefab through its Amazon Alexa Fund comes on the heels of other smart home technology partnerships.
By Katie Pyzyk • Oct. 2, 2018 -
Port of San Diego hit by cyberattack, ransomware demand
Goods are still moving at the port but some public services have been affected, while attackers demanded payment in Bitcoin.
By Katie Pyzyk • Oct. 1, 2018 -
US Census Bureau: Americans' commute times increased; transit ridership dropped
Data from 2017 shows more commuters are driving, and a shift in where people work is affecting commutes.
By Katie Pyzyk • Oct. 1, 2018 -
Construction of $2B Crenshaw-LAX rail is 5 months behind
A Los Angeles County MTA chief said the 8.5-mile light-rail line is approximately 86% complete, but electrical work is taking longer than anticipated.
By Kim Slowey • Sept. 25, 2018 -
Greater Phoenix Smart Region promises collaboration, workforce development
The initiative joins cities with academic institutions, businesses and nonprofits, and leaders said it will be about more than simply new technology.
By Chris Teale • Sept. 20, 2018 -
Deep Dive
'A' for effort: Improving safety in cities' school zones
Cities like Columbus, OH; Savannah, GA; Portland, OR and New York are implementing policies and technologies to enforce speed laws and keep students safe.
By Katie Pyzyk • Sept. 20, 2018