Construction in downtown Los Angeles by Omar Bárcena licensed under Creative Commons.

Could the US government transform its underutilized buildings into housing? Asheville approves bill to invest in Black communities that have been undervalued due to racism. The miseducation of an urban planner.

What to do with 45,000 half-empty buildings: The US government owns an estimated 45,000 underutilized buildings and research suggests they could use these vacant spaces for affordable housing. There is a national affordable housing crisis that the public sector could bridge by following several steps with a multidisciplinary team to analyze requirements, identify properties and their values, and develop a transition strategy. (Sheila Botting | Harvard Business Review)

Asheville forms a reparations commission to support the creation of Black wealth: The Asheville City Council apologized for its role in slavery and in a unanimous decision approved reparations to Black residents. While this will not bring direct payments, it will instead pave the way for investments in Black neighborhoods which are underfunded and devalued due to past racism. (Joel Burgess | Asheville Citizen Times)

The miseducation of an urban planner: James Rojas proposes that while the education of urban planners is extremely organized and rationalized, what’s needed is a better understanding of how personal experiences, cultures, and community shape people and public spaces. This will allow us to confront inequities and design better spaces for all races, classes, genders, sexual orientations, ages, nationalities, ethnicities, and more. (James Rojas | Common Edge)

The plan to run freeways through Santa Cruz CA: Most agree that turning this city that runs primarily on tourism into a freeway would be terrible for the economy. The history of Santa Cruz has been a long and turbulent one with a 1955 flood that allowed San Jose to dig its claws into the city, a failed annexation that was essentially gentrification, and a freeway rebellion. Yet, through it all, they have kept their character. (Ross Eric Gibson | Santa Cruz Sentinel)

The stories of people fleeing the city are false: While the narrative persists that city-dwellers are preferring to move to suburbs rather than stay in dense cities in this time of a pandemic and contagion risk, there is minimal evidence to support this theory. While there are people who have left, there isn’t a large scale movement to the suburbs like the narrative suggests. (Jeff Andrews | Curbed)

Vanya Srivastava contributed to these summaries.

Quote of the Week

“Even though the president has said that he wants to make this process more efficient and effective, it’s going to make it even worse, because it’s going to create more litigation and uncertainty. The controversy and the confusion around these projects is going to increase, rather than decrease.”

Sharon Buccino of NRDC in Bloomberg discussing the Administration’s rollback of environmental regulations for the construction of infrastructure.

This week on the podcast, Miami Dade County Chief Resilience Officer Jim Murley joins the show.