3 Questions: How are cities managing record-setting temperatures?
Professor of urban and environmental planning David Hsu explains what municipal governments are doing as climate change accelerates.
Professor of urban and environmental planning David Hsu explains what municipal governments are doing as climate change accelerates.
Mens, Manus and Machina (M3S) will design technology, training programs, and institutions for successful human-machine collaboration.
PhD student Nick Caros develops tools to help transit agencies serve the public in an era of remote work.
Study shows that cities’ plans often won’t achieve their goals, but decarbonizing the local grid could make the difference.
A collaboration between MIT and Miami-Dade County has students working with city planning officials to understand why people wait patiently for a bus — and why they bail.
MIT Environmental Solutions Initiative Research Program Director Marcela Angel MCP ’18 has built an international program in natural climate solutions.
MIT’s Senseable City Lab popularized visual tools that show how cities work. A new book reflects on the promise of dynamic urban maps.
MIT Mobility Forum considers whether startups can provide the infrastructure for electric vehicles, or if more automakers must step in.
Mobility-related data show the pandemic has had a lasting effect, limiting the breadth of places people visit in cities.
The technology of MIT alumni-founded Hosta a.i. creates detailed property assessments from photos.
Created by community organizer and MIT adjunct professor emeritus Mel King, the program continues to empower and connect changemakers.
Beloved mentor and colleague, who died at 94 on March 28, leaves behind a profound legacy at MIT, in Boston, and beyond.
Projects, publications, and academia-industry networks produce pathways for the real estate industry to address the climate crisis.
Flavio Emilio Vila Skrzypek, a graduate student in the Department of Urban Studies and Planning, wants to design cities without inequities.
Open-source tool from MIT’s Senseable City Lab lets people check air quality, cheaply.