Around the country, cities and states are starting to listen to decades-old demands to remove freeways that have displaced and fractured communities.

Writing in the Congress for New Urbanism’s (CNU) Public Square, Lauren Mayer reports on some of the freeways most nominated for CNU’s next biannual Freeways Without Futures report, which “highlights the efforts of local campaign organizers and activists seeking to revitalize their communities by dismantling the city highways that burden them with the significant health hazards of vehicle exhaust, a loss of local businesses and services, and streets that are hostile to pedestrians.”
So far, nominees include several major freeways in New York State, including I-81 in Syracuse, Buffalo’s Route 5 and Skyway, and the Inner Loop in Rochester. In New Orleans, a decade-long fight to remove the Claiborne Expressway is inching forward as the city’s mayor and local U.S. representative became part of a “growing consensus” that restoring Claiborne Avenue is “the right course of action for the Tremé neighborhood.”
Across the northern border, efforts to tear down Toronto’s Gardiner Expressway are bearing fruit. After one portion was removed in 1999, the city removed more ramps in 2021 as part of the Gardiner Expressway Strategic Rehabilitation Plan, which “will realign the expressway and help transform the area to improve transportation corridors and provide more efficient public transit and new public facilities.”
FULL STORY: News on the most nominated ‘Freeways Without Futures’

What ‘The Brutalist’ Teaches Us About Modern Cities
How architecture and urban landscapes reflect the trauma and dysfunction of the post-war experience.

‘Complete Streets’ Webpage Deleted in Federal Purge
Basic resources and information on building bike lanes and sidewalks, formerly housed on the government’s Complete Streets website, are now gone.

Downtown Los Angeles on the Rise: A Promising 2025
Fueled by new developments, cultural investments, and a growing dining scene, downtown Los Angeles is poised for significant growth in 2025, despite challenges from recent wildfires and economic uncertainties.

San Francisco Slow Streets Bucks Citywide Trend, Reducing Injuries by 61 Percent
Low-cost interventions aimed at slowing traffic are making a major impact on road safety.

How Single-Family Conversions Benefit Both Homeowners and Cities
Converting single-family homes to triplexes can ease the housing crisis and offer affordable, flexible options for more households. Why is it largely illegal?

Report: Transportation Equity Requires More Than Electrification
Lower-income households often lack the resources to buy electric cars, signaling a need for a more holistic approach to improving mobility and lowering transportation costs.
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