Infrastructure
-
National Grid is expected to install the devices for 121,000 customers in the city. They will enable people to track energy usage via a portal, and will immediately alert the utility to power outages.
-
A new report from the Urban Institute outlines how many of the projects developed as part of the 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, including technology work, have been slow to finish and deploy.
-
Data center development, the subject of much public-sector conversation and policy, is predicted to expand, driven by the growth of AI. It's also expected to come at a cost and bring a selective benefit.
More Stories
-
In many parts of the country, federal low-income housing programs place poor families in locations that force them to spend big money on transportation.
-
A guide to understanding one of the hottest trends in municipal finance.
-
The project provides an opportunity to exchange ideas across the world and to see if there are ideas the Minnesota and German cities can take advantage of from the experience.
-
U.S. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx spoke to a crowd saying he doesn't know if the Midwestern city will win the grant, but lauded the progress it's already made.
-
The microgrid, which could operate independently of the regional power grid during an widespread outage, would supply power to multiple businesses, city utilities and homes.
-
U.S. states need to put in place new ozone air quality standards, but how they are measured – based on peak ozone – doesn't always best reflect a city's overall air quality.
-
The water crisis in the West has renewed debate about the effectiveness of major dams, with some pushing for the enormous Glen Canyon Dam on the Colorado River to be decommissioned.
-
Nationally, California leads the nation in buying hybrid electric vehicles, with 20.1 hybrids for every 1,000 people, according to U.S. Department of Energy.
-
Big Texas cities continue to add the greatest number of people, but the action is in the suburbs when it comes to rates of growth.
-
The pilot of the Solar Impulse, a completely sun-powered airplane, wanted to show that renewable energy and clean technology can achieve the impossible: flying without fuel.
-
The High-Speed Rail Authority informed the Obama administration, in a contract amendment, that it expects the Central Valley track to be complete by 2022 instead of 2018 as originally projected.
-
Many transportation stakeholders continue to question the feds’ long-term ability — and commitment — to funding roads and transit.
-
To develop such a system, the city would create a Smart City Institute and work with UC Berkeley and dozens of Bay Area companies.
-
The new rules allow individual water agencies to propose their own conservation standards based on the health of their water supplies and anticipated local demand.
-
Whether you’re terrified at the thought of robots taking over the task of driving, or you look forward to a day when human mistakes are eliminated, car manufacturers are installing autonomous features as quickly as they can.
-
The company joins Lyft, Google and others in the race to develop the technology that will allow humans to let go of the wheel.
-
The town that delivers more solar power per customer than any other in the country used batteries to get the job done. Could the same model work for other small towns and counties?
-
The patent is for an adhesive substance to be on the front of autonomous vehicles in the case that a pedestrian collision occurs. The adhesive will prevent further injury from the pedestrian hitting the ground after the impact.
Most Read