Lewis Mumford Lecture: “Pressing Change in the Increasing Inflexible City,” Featuring Emily Badger

Dates
Thu, Apr 27, 2023 - 06:00 PM — Thu, Apr 27, 2023 - 07:30 PM
Admission Fee
Free
Event Address
Bernard and Anne Spitzer School of Architecture
141 Convent Avenue at West 135th Street
New York, NY 10031
Sciame Auditorium
Phone Number
2126506225
Event Location
Bernard and Anne Spitzer School of Architecture Sciame Auditorium
Event Details

Please join us on Thursday, April 27, 2023, at 6 pm for our prestigious Lewis Mumford Lecture. This year we have the honor to welcome The New York Times staff writer Emily Badger, who will be presenting her lecture "Pressing Change in the Increasing Inflexible City."

All lectures are free, open to the public, and held in the Bernard and Anne Spitzer School of Architecture Sciame Auditorium with a remote option available.

If you are interested in attending via Zoom, please register here.

See https://www.ccny.cuny.edu/return-campus for current requirements for in-person visitors.

Emily Badger is a staff writer with The New York Times, covering cities and urban policy. She is particularly interested in housing, transportation, and inequality — and how they’re all connected. Prior to joining the Times in 2016, she wrote for The Washington Post and The Atlantic Cities (now CityLab). She grew up in Chicago, a city that has shaped a lot of her thinking about these topics, and today she lives in and writes from Washington, D.C.

"Pressing Change in the Increasing Inflexible City": As we emerge from the pandemic, we need to adapt so much of city life: We need offices to become homes and our homes to become workplaces. We need hotels to become SROs. We need sidewalks to become restaurants, and parking lanes to become bus corridors, and roads dedicated to cars to become safe routes for cyclists and pedestrians. But in many ways, cities have become increasingly inflexible to change, through the cumulative complexity of decades of building and zoning codes, through a tangled mix of good intentions and NIMBY politics. Adapting the city as we need for the future — from the level of individual buildings to citywide policy — will require understanding and confronting that legacy of inflexibility.

Suggested Reading: Whatever Happened to the Starter Home? and So You Want to Turn an Office Building Into a Home?

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