Blueprint For Living - Separate stories
Society & Culture:Places & Travel
Urban planning has become the latest target of conspiracy theorists. In recent weeks, the 15-minute city concept — where neighbourhoods provide life's essentials in 15 minutes by foot or bike — has become a harbinger of big brother in conspiracy-land.
Misinformation has triggered fierce protests against 15-minute city plans in the UK and Canada, with the City of Oxford even having to clarify they wouldn't be erecting physical barriers to separate citizens.
Brent Toderian, a keen urbanist and Vancouver's former chief planner, is here to help us understand how the polite world of urban planning crashed into conspiracies.
Paul Bangay's Garden Rudimental: A Buxus party
Lune's Kate Reid — from the racetrack to the boulangerie
Assembling an industrial suburb for Canberra
Colin Bisset’s Iconic Designs: The (disappearing) grille
Why do todays domestic interiors mimic 4 star hotels and what might Siegfried Kracauer have said about it?
Peter Donegan’s favourite tree
Annie Smithers' Kitchen Rudimental — Asparagus
Colin Bisset's Iconic Designs — The perfume atomiser
Looking to a prefab past to solve the housing crisis
The alt right diet, meat and masculinity
Paul Bangay's Garden Rudimental — Advice on soil, drainage and other gardening stumbling blocks
Annie Smithers' Kitchen Rudimental — truffles
Iconic Designs: The Green School, Bali
The architecture of therapy
Is the future of the city childless?
What does 'plant-based' actually mean?
Colin Bisset's Iconic Designs — The cog railway
Annie Smithers' Kitchen Rudimental: food memories
'We can do better than mulch': an urban tree recovery initiative
Paul Bangay's Garden Rudimental — Late winter woodland
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