FutureStructure Infrastructure
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Each winning city will receive an individualized Readiness Workshop and host of tech tools to help further its efforts toward becoming a smart city.
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Some 1,500 intersections in Los Angeles to get upgraded with new traffic signal equipment.
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The Boring Company will construct a four-mile tunnel to connect a rail station with Ontario International Airport in the Los Angeles region. The tunnel will accommodate zero-emission and possibly autonomous vehicles.
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The Smart Cities Week conference runs through Oct. 5 in Washington D.C.
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The toll gates have been removed and now all nine bridge and tunnel crossings are cashless.
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Timothy Blute is heading up NGA Future, a new initiative by the National Governors Association to explore how technology can be used throughout state government.
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In its quest to spearhead last-mile fiber-optic broadband at gigabit speeds, Riverside County seeks participants, not mere proposals, for a project worth as much as $4 billion.
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San Jose's most recent Bay Area Rapid Transit project is causing traffic snarls, but would one tunnel or two be less disruptive for the city?
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Officials in North Huntingdon, Pa., are using technology that will allow them to more accurately identify roadways in need of repair.
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The Camden County Municipal Utilities Authority will use one million gallons of effluent from its wastewater treatment plant as a form of energy for a nearby power plant, hoping to create a sustainability loop between the plants.
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Mayor Kenney unveiled the Vision Zero Three-Year Action Plan aimed to remove traffic-related deaths in the city by the year 2030.
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Being ranked number 19 in a list of most dangerous cities, Baton Rouge has decided to get a joint initiative between AARP Louisiana and the Center for Planning Excellence to make streets safer for pedestrians.
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The ConnectATL summit last week united elected, public and business officials discussing the future of transit, transportation and planning in the region.
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Recent natural disasters have shown cities what precautions are necessary to keeping their communities safe.
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Though the push for underground power lines make sense in an area threatened by hurricanes, the change would not come cheap. Estimates say the $9.1 million project could take 30 years to pay off.
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The level of emergency for California's drought has dropped, but the conservation already needs to begin for the next.
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From road repairs to IT upgrades, cities are fighting to keep debt in check. More and more, the numbers show that debt is where cities of all sizes are spending the most.
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The Cincinnati International Airport installed a network of sensors, software and other equipment to help reduce security wait times, and it's getting positive results.
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Bill 100 didn't reach the governors desk, but supporters who want to help make California a carbon neutral state by 2045 aren't throwing in the towel yet.
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After a historic storm on Houston, a change of zoning would play a major part in how much Houston would handle the rain.
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Many are even teaming up with home builders to develop connected homes from the ground up.