Walking for 30 minutes a day, five days a week is all you need to meet official exercise recommendations. Yet only 1 in 5 Americans do it. In our final episode, we’ll learn about a groundbreaking public health initiative to get Black women walk
A city’s narrative of itself does a lot to tell residents and visitors who owns the city, who belongs there, and what the city can become. But what does history have to do with walking? Much more than you might think.featuring Karilyn Crockett
Walking is more than transportation - it’s a form of city building. Garnette Cadogan walks us through his philosophy. Kenneth Bailey takes us through his work on spatial justice and public making with the Design Studio for Social Intervention.
Sustainable transportation advocates have long relied on local police to enforce their traffic safety efforts, creating tension with communities of color. In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic has driven that tension to new heights.featuring Dr. Adon
Walkability offers a solution to some of the most pressing urban challenges - from traffic congestion, to environmental degradation, to our struggling economy - but the approach is missing something crucial. In our first episode, meet some of t