By Doreen Piano
Because of its growing popularity in urban centers, some fear street art will contribute to rising property costs while those in low income areas express dismay that tags and throws will lower their property value.
Place-based essays and interviews in environment(s) focus on individuals and groups involved in community action, outreach, innovation and change.
By Doreen Piano
Because of its growing popularity in urban centers, some fear street art will contribute to rising property costs while those in low income areas express dismay that tags and throws will lower their property value.
Photo by Frank McMains C.E. Richard is the author of the forthcoming collection Land’s End: Field Notes from the ‘End of the World’ (McFarland 2017), essays on the economic, environmental, and …
By Camille Broussard
Although bicycles are a valid vehicle and have the same rights as automobiles, motorists five times our size tend to disagree.
By Whitney Fontenot
No matter how much Rayne boasts about its flashy awards and festivities though, it is not all its “croaked” up to be. No amount of frog kissing makes Rayne a “charming” place to live.
By Shaye Hope
The monument reflects New Orleans’s shifting and often complicated, contentious attitudes about race and region.
By Monica Mankin
The City has relied on the tourism industry for decades. Even immediately after the storm, travelers could stop in for devastation tours.
By Jen Hirt
The point is, lots of city demographics are changing, and when officials make a city-wide change based on an old regulation instead of the new reality, it doesn’t always work.
By Mary Imgrund
Living in Harrisburg is relegated to the few who shoulder the brunt of the city taxes—the ones who can’t access groceries without a car, the burnouts and the families, the hipsters and the septuagenarian cat owners.
By Alexander Clark
Harrisburg might be known externally for the near miss of one of the worst unnatural disasters in human history, but inside it’s overwhelmingly verdant.