This Week on Forefront
Amid a stalled peace progress and an increasingly hopeless political atmosphere, a growing number of young Palestinians are betting that they can design their way into a better future. In Ramallah, the de-facto Palestinian capital, young designers are making furniture out of trash in hopes of reducing landfill waste while increasing their country’s self-reliance. In East Jerusalem, Jews and Palestinians are working together to provide basic services to a Jerusalem neighborhood that ended up on the wrong side of the Israeli separation barriers. In villages across the region, people are working to preserve and reintroduce life to traditional Arab villages, even as the country begins its first stab at a planned California-style development. Middle-East based journalist Joseph Dana talks to these proactive architects and designers to find out how Palestine’s unlikely sustainability movement came into being — and where it is likely to go.
Amid a stalled peace progress and an increasingly hopeless political atmosphere, a growing number of young Palestinians are betting that they can design their way into a better future. In Ramallah, the de-facto Palestinian capital, young designers are making furniture out of trash in hopes of reducing landfill waste while increasing their country’s self-reliance. In East Jerusalem, Jews and Palestinians are working together to provide basic services to a Jerusalem neighborhood that ended up on the wrong side of the Israeli separation barriers. In villages across the region, people are working to preserve and reintroduce life to traditional Arab villages, even as the country begins its first stab at a planned California-style development. Middle-East based journalist Joseph Dana talks to these proactive architects and designers to find out how Palestine’s unlikely sustainability movement came into being — and where it is likely to go.
Next City Daily
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“I Think I Met Him in a Sewer”: On Urban Easter Eggs and Moses Gates’ ‘Hidden Cities’
Bradley Garrett, a Ph.D. candidate at the University of London studying urban exploration, talks about his friend Moses Gates’ book Hidden Cities. He also touches upon how the notion of public and private space differs depending on where you are and why seeing an empty train tunnel is worth the risk.
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Five Reasons Why Toronto Mayor Rob Ford May Have Smoked Crack Cocaine
What sober politician with his city’s best interests in mind would engage in the following?
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Arts, Music and Food in Next City’s ‘Hood This Weekend
The Brewerytown Spring Festival will take place in Next City’s home neighborhood this Saturday.
“I Think I Met Him in a Sewer”: On Urban Easter Eggs and Moses Gates’ ‘Hidden Cities’
Bradley Garrett, a Ph.D. candidate at the University of London studying urban exploration, talks about his friend Moses Gates’ book Hidden Cities. He also touches upon how the notion of public and private space differs depending on where you are and why seeing an empty train tunnel is worth the risk.
Five Reasons Why Toronto Mayor Rob Ford May Have Smoked Crack Cocaine
What sober politician with his city’s best interests in mind would engage in the following?
Arts, Music and Food in Next City’s ‘Hood This Weekend
The Brewerytown Spring Festival will take place in Next City’s home neighborhood this Saturday.








