Enjoy Sim City? Try Sim NIMBY
All the city news you can use.
Every day at The Overhead Wire we sort through over 1,500 news items about cities and share the best ones with our email list. At the end of the week, we take some of the most popular stories and share them with Urban Milwaukee readers. They are national (or international) links, sometimes entertaining and sometimes absurd, but hopefully useful.
Good luck playing Sim NIMBY: A lot of planners got into planning because of the blockbuster desktop computer game Sim City. One of the beauties of the game was its simplicity though it did leave out parking and the vibrant mixed use possibilities that make cities great. To show frustrations with today’s planning processes and opposition, two friends decided to make the opposite version, Sim NIMBY. Click on the Sim City looking board and the only answer you get is no. (Aaron Gordon | Motherboard)
Worst intersection in Kansas City? All of them: In August a user on a Kansas City subreddit asked what road intersection in the city was the most cursed. The short list included 40 intersections that are poor on safety and lack good infrastructure for pedestrians. Council member Eric Bunch believe it comes down to the embedded car culture where the mantra is traffic should flow no matter what and the idea that pedestrians should never have the right of way. (Celisa Calacal and Savannah Hawley | KCUR)
How cities can respond to flash floods: Around the world rainfall amounts in short bursts are increasing and cities are scrambling to deal with the threat of flash floods. Simple solutions such as bioswales and rain basins might not be enough when the storm sewers are overwhelmed. But there might be natural solutions including natural solutions like trees and for people, better warning systems may be better for safety than any engineering feat. (Jack Holmes | Esquire)
Warehouses in the fields: Amongst cattle feed lots and farms in Ontario California, an e-commerce facility headlined by Amazon has sprung up, changing the politics, job market, air quality, and previous way of life. The city is now home to more than 600 warehouses and endless development which pushed out what was once the highest yielding milk regions in the world. (Maanvi Singh | The Guardian)
Quote of the Week
Many homeowners whose houses were seized by eminent domain and destroyed by the government were also denied the ability to purchase new homes in whites-only suburbs. Displaced residents often had no choice but to move into shoddily maintained public housing, robbing them of their chance to pass down wealth in the form of real estate from parent to child, thereby cementing a cycle of generational poverty.
–Adam Paul Susaneck of Segregation by Design in the New York Times discussing highway projects that destroyed neighborhoods and generational wealth.
This week on the podcast, Michael E. Smith, an anthropologist and archeologist, talks about his Aeon Magazine article, “Energurized Crowding,” about life in early cities and neighborhoods.
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Urban Reads
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How Traffic Noise Impacts Children’s Brains
Jul 1st, 2024 by Jeff Wood -
Number of Super Commuters is Rising
Jun 22nd, 2024 by Jeff Wood -
Why Has the Walkable City Been Villainized?
Jun 9th, 2024 by Jeff Wood