CityLab Daily
Also today: LA homelessness drops for a second year, and why restaurants are being blamed for gentrification in Mexico City.
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In a growing handful of North American cities, intersections are going Dutch. From Fremont, California, to Washington, DC, to a few cities in Canada, officials are installing a kind of protected intersection widely adopted in the Netherlands. 

The “Dutch-style” design features football-shaped corner islands that position cyclists and pedestrian in easy view of drivers, helping minimize zones of conflict and decreasing the likelihood and severity of collisions. In this configuration, cyclists riding straight through a junction, for example, are less likely to be victims of  “right hook” crashes, in which a driver turning left turns directly into their path. Read more from contributor Kevin Schoenmakers today on CityLab: The Dutch Intersection Is Coming to Save Your Life

— Linda Poon

More on CityLab

LA Homelessness Drops for Second Year
State and local policies are beginning to show results in a region that has been beset by homelessness for decades.

Why the Best Bike Lanes Always Get Blamed
A standoff over cycling infrastructure and traffic congestion in Toronto shows why building protected bike lanes on essential corridors draws controversy along with riders. 

How Did Mexico City's Restaurants Become the Villain?
The capital’s red-hot food scene has been made a scapegoat for gentrification. That’s a big risk for its tourist-friendly image.

More on CityLab

  • A Virginia public library is fighting off a takeover by private equity (Literary Hub)

  • Immigration agents demand tenant information from landlords, stirring questions and confusion (Associated Press)

  • Inside the grassroots fight against Trump’s deportation machine (Rolling Stone)

  • The rapid rise of killings by police in rural America (Wall Street Journal)

  • An Ohio solar project overcomes local opposition and misinformation (Canary Media)


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