The rapid urbanization of Houston: How it happened and why it matters
URBAN EDGE : October 5, 2020
From 1997 to 2016, almost 187,000 football fields of impervious surfaces such as concrete were added in the Houston metro area. A sociologist and an ecologist examined what drove growth during the period, which has had critical implications for humans and the environment.
Outdated and inaccurate, FEMA flood maps fail to fully capture risk
URBAN EDGE : September 30, 2020
New risk models show nearly twice as many properties are at risk from a 100-year flood today than the government's flood maps indicate. Analysis of damage from Hurricane Harvey shows Black and Hispanic residents disproportionately experienced flooding in areas beyond FEMA’s 100-year flood zones.
Texas Flood Registry 2020 Report
RESEARCH : August 25, 2020
This report includes updates on Harvey’s long-term impact and recent findings
about the health and housing effects of the May 2019 storms and Tropical Storm Imelda.
Libraries are crucial to disaster recovery, but the coronavirus is keeping them closed
URBAN EDGE : August 20, 2020
In many places, the public library often functions as a community center — a free and shared space that provides crucial social infrastructure for neighborhoods. That’s especially true when a disaster such as Hurricane Harvey hits. But what happens when a crisis like COVID-19 keeps libraries closed for five months and counting.
Texas named America’s 5th most dangerous state in 2020
URBAN EDGE : June 2, 2020
The safety rankings were determined by comparing states’ level of coronavirus support, rate of unemployment, uninsured rate and financial costs of climate disasters per capita, among other criteria.
How Houston has changed — and stayed the same — in the past 10 years
URBAN EDGE : January 7, 2020
It’s been a decade since the Kinder Institute for Urban Research was formed at Rice University. During that time, a lot has changed at the institute and in the Houston metropolitan area. In 2020, the Urban Edge will feature a number of stories related to the 10-year anniversary of the institute. To kick things off, let's compare the Houston area of 2010 with the city today.
Greens Bayou resiliency plans tie engagement and technical expertise together
URBAN EDGE : November 27, 2019
Public engagement and sharing information with members of a community help as critical steps of any planning effort or public project. Too often, though, that engagement asks residents to communicate with professionals or experts about subjects they are not adept in. When discussing a technical topic such as flood control or transportation planning, residents can get lost in a sea of acronyms or complicated renderings. Finding ways to offer residents meaningful information that they can digest and use to shape their opinions is essential to making engagement meaningful.