Are Floating Cities the Solution to Rising Seas?
Is living on the water our future? Floating developments, including a project in progress in South Korea, suggest that it’s more than a pipe dream.
Is living on the water our future? Floating developments, including a project in progress in South Korea, suggest that it’s more than a pipe dream.
It starts with keeping our humanity and recognizing it in others.
The Biden administration is spending billions to reconnect communities of color that have been fragmented by highways. Some projects have stirred debates over how to mend longstanding harms.
Most of Gaza’s schools, including all of its universities, have severe damage that makes them unusable, which could harm an entire generation, the United Nations and others say.
The $15 billion expected from new traffic tolls is earmarked for modernizing old infrastructure but is threatened by a raft of lawsuits.
The automaker led by Elon Musk is no longer planning to take the lead in expanding the number of places to fuel electric vehicles. It’s not clear how quickly other companies will fill the gap.
In a stop in Wilmington, N.C., the president announced $3 billion in new spending to upgrade water systems around the country.
White House officials have barnstormed Wisconsin to make the connection between big changes and their signature laws.
Las agencias internacionales de desarrollo se han reunido con empresarios y urbanistas de Medio Oriente para trazar un futuro económico para el territorio.
We think of adding regulation as something liberals do and removing regulation as something conservatives do. But that is only part of the story.