Medical Centers Can Serve as a Catalyst for Cities
They have a lot to offer.

Q&A with Rose Gowen: How Brownsville is fighting public obesity and making a more vibrant city
Rose Gowen is a city commissioner and OB-GYN in Brownsville, a city of 180,000 that sits just north of the Texas-Mexico border. The greater Brownsville area has the highest poverty rate in the country – 35 percent – which has contributed to an obesity and diabetes epidemic. Gowen spoke with the Kinder Institute’s Ryan Holeywell about how the city is trying to combat a public health crisis. The interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Cities tap university expertise to cure urban ills
They’re trying to make “big data” more than a catch phrase.

Buses aren’t always convenient. Houston Metro plans to fix that.
Even though Kurt Luhrsen works for the Houston-area transit agency, he knows its bus system is less than ideal.

HISD opens massive school district data sets to researchers
Hundreds of professors across the country spend countless hours researching education, but few are likely to affect the way schools are actually run.

How to Make Sure Philanthropy Pays Off
Richard and Nancy Kinder endowed the Kinder Institute with a $15 million gift in 2010. It was part of a bigger strategy.

What Millennials Think of Homeownership (and why it matters)
Optimistic about their own economic futures, they're still leery of the housing market almost a decade after the real estate bubble burst.

Mapping a community one parking spot at a time
Maps are one way to represent how we understand a given space.

Urban inequality is not just about the concentration of poverty. It is also about the concentration of wealth. The renewed focus on wealth has received recent media attention – and rightfully so. But researchers need to take careful steps as they tell the story of wealth concentration in cities that are racially and ethnically diverse.

Q&A with Kinder Institute Director Bill Fulton: The Path Forward
Bill Fulton’s been in Houston since August, listening to city leaders and planning a future for the Kinder Institute for Urban Research. Last week, at the unveiling of this year’s results of its flagship Kinder Houston Area Survey, he unveiled the organization’s long-term plan.

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