Why do some neighborhoods improve?
Density of highly educated residents, rather than income or housing costs, predicts revitalization.
Density of highly educated residents, rather than income or housing costs, predicts revitalization.
Selected cities and counties will receive funding and technical support from J-PAL to test innovative strategies in the fight against poverty.
Venture accelerator DesignX unleashes entrepreneurs’ ideas to transform the built environment.
In talk at MIT, Chicago mayor argues that major cities can lead on policy progress.
Advisor to $1.4 billion state plan sees health care as foundation for “Vital Brooklyn.”
Infrastructure, Smart Cities and Transportation Workshop sheds light on collaboration opportunities between MIT and Parsons Corporation.
Scholars at MIT and in Mexico collaborate on projects spanning design, technology, and art.
DUSP practicum proposes new approaches to mobility and housing in urban neighborhoods.
Collaboration will explore ways of working with natural systems to address climate change.
Startup brings solar-powered, phone-charging park benches and digital signs to cities worldwide.
“City Digits: Local Lotto” teaches Brooklyn high school students how to work with data by analyzing lottery spending patterns.
Research shows how rebuilding Britain’s Houses of Parliament in the 1800s helped create clean-air laws.
Initiative links MIT with São Paulo research centers to study affordability and accessibility.
Study shows carpooling apps could reduce congestion by a factor of three while still serving the same number of people.