Does “BC” Mean “Bans Clotheslines”?

Time for Canada’s greenest province to recognize the right to dry.

British Columbia prides itself on a commitment to renewable energy. Yet many British Columbians are forbidden from stringing up the simplest of solar devices: the clothesline.

These laundry-drying bans are written into the bylaws of strata corporations, which govern most of British Columbia’s condominiums, apartments, duplexes, and townhomes. Condos are a big and fast-growing housing choice in the province. In just 20 years, the percentage of Vancouverites dwelling in them has nearly doubled from under 25 percent to more than  …  read more »

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Light Rail and Racial Justice in Seattle

New report tackles gentrification, displacement, and opportunity.

Anyone familiar with Seattle’s Rainier Valley knows it’s a place in transition.

Long one of the most racially diverse neighborhoods in the Northwest, it has for many decades struggled economically. In recent years, some areas of the valley such as Columbia City have gentrified rapidly even while nearby neighborhoods were rocked by the economic downturn, experiencing high rates of foreclosure and unemployment.

It was in that complicated geography that the Puget Sound’s first light rail line arrived, bringing with it  …  read more »

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For Climate, Place Matters

Transfer of development rights can reduce emissions---but only if we get the details right.

At this point, most serious researchers agree that the average city-dweller produces fewer climate-warming emissions than a typical suburban or rural resident. City-folks tend to drive less, and walk or use transit more, than those of us who live in suburbs or out in the country. And city dwellers also tend to have less living space per capita, and are more likely to share walls or ceilings with their neighbors—all of which tend to reduce energy consumption per person. (And  …  read more »

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Introducing Bike Score

Walk Score keeps the awesome coming.
Minneapolis bike share. Photo by Christine Winckler.

Minneapolis bike share. Photo by Christine Winckler.

Those people at Walk Score just don’t know when to stop: today, they’ve announced new Bike Score rankings.

No surprises with the victors: Minneapolis takes the top spot (Bike Score: 79) while Portland and San Francisco settle for second and third (both have a Bike Score of 70). Seattle comes in at number seven (Bike Score: 64).

The block-by-block algorithm takes four criteria into account: bike lanes (how good is bike infrastructure), hills (how good is the geography), destinations …  read more »

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Weekend Reading 5/11/12

The scale of space, ego boosts, and more.

Railroad Union Stretches Truth About Coal Dust

An accurate picture of coal in western Washington.

Reduce, Reuse, Recycle—and Repair!

Is there a fixer revival underway?

26 Ways to Store Your Bike

Down-to-earth solutions for bike storage.

Panel: A Sustainable Rainier Valley

Experts talk about racial justice and transit oriented development.

Liar, Liar, Pants on Fire

Credibility of Big Chem’s star witness goes up in smoke.