Small cab on a street in DC by Jarett Hendrix licensed under Creative Commons.

Small cars largely disappeared from the US, but could they make a comeback? How fire departments have opposed policies that prioritize street safety and transit funding. AI as a tool for generating support for development projects.

Death of small cars in America: Smaller cars have continued to disappear from dealer showrooms around the US, replaced by larger SUVs and trucks. But what happened to the “compact” car? Joe Ligo argues it’s not low gas prices, but low interest rates and inflation that led to the demise of smaller cars. With electric cars emerging and battery weights contributing to vehicle costs, we might soon see a resurgence of smaller vehicles. (Joe Ligo | Autopian)

Fire departments are bad on urban policy: Fire departments typically have a positive image in the public’s imagination, but lately, they have been advocating for bad urban policy. Opposition against better street design in Los Angeles, congestion pricing in New York, and zoning reform in Arizona are among fire departments’ recent moves. Brad Hargreaves argues that their narrow mandate focused only on fire safety for buildings may cut against other issues they deal with daily including car crashes and homelessness. (Brad Hargreaves | Thesis Driven)

AI visuals generate sustainable development support: New research from MIT Sloan finds that artificial intelligence-generated visuals of sustainable car-free cities and transportation can influence people’s opinions on the built environment. 3,200 people were asked about a hypothetical transportation bill and shown images generated by AI which improved their willingness to support changes. Republicans surveyed had the greatest change in opinion from before they saw AI-generated images. (MIT Sloan School of Management)

Can we engineer out of climate change?: Many entities are attempting to use technology to capture carbon, some for climate aims and others so they will be able to engage in additional oil and gas drilling. Many technologists believe that these new carbon capture ideas and others such as geoengineering will be the answer to the climate crisis, but critics are skeptical and worried about unintended consequences. (This article may be behind a paywall). (David Gelles | New York Times)

Census changes race and ethnicity questions: The US Office of Management and Budget has announced that the US Census will change how it asks questions about race and ethnicity for the first time in over 30 years. Previous census forms had separated questions about Hispanic ethnicity and did not ask whether someone was of Middle Eastern or North African descent. The new question will have Middle Eastern and North African boxes for the first time. (Nicole Chavez | CNN)

Quote of the Week

“With a two-hour commute on the way home, for example, how can anyone make time for babies? The idea is to give people more leisure time after work.”

South Korean Land Minister Park Sang-woo in Reuters discusses plans for six new high-speed transit lines in Seoul, planned to be completed by 2035.

This week on the Talking Headways podcast, Heidi Simon of Smart Growth America talks to us about working with local officials to create safer streets through quick-build projects.