News

“Behind each of the 65,000 property listings there used to be homes for families, workers, students, who today are expelled from their neighborhoods and see how their cities are turned into ...
The latest U.S. News & World Report rankings for 250 Best Places to Live in the U.S. are out, and let's just say the Live Music Capital isn't exactly headlining the charts. While several of our ...
Cities: Skylines 2's had a rough ride since it launched in 2023. There's no denying that Colossal Order has made some substantial improvements to the wonky launch build in the nearly two years ...
While economic headwinds continue to buffet the lives of many Americans, causing them, among other things, to be more frugal with summer vacations, a handful of US cities continue to hold vast ...
Summers mentioned how it’s one of the “most liveable cities in the US” complete with antique shops, food balls, and “excellent museums such as the Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art ...
An alarming new report reveals that right across the country, 28 US cities are sinking, showing the kind of geologic subsidence that could impact buildings and infrastructure sooner rather than later.
All the biggest US cities are sinking, a new study found with satellite analysis. In 28 cities, about 29,000 buildings are at risk of damage and worsening flooding. This sinking, or subsidence ...
The nation's biggest cities are sinking, according to data from a new study. Known scientifically as land "subsidence," the most common cause of the sinking is "massive ongoing groundwater ...
The nation's biggest cities are sinking, according to data from a new study. Known scientifically as land "subsidence," the most common cause of the sinking is "massive ongoing groundwater extraction, ...
While some cities show slight uplift, it's negligible and doesn't negate the overall sinking trend. In every city studied, at least 20% of the urban area is sinking – and in 25 of 28 cities ...
A new study has found that the 28 most populous cities in the United States — including New York, Chicago, Dallas and Denver — are sinking at rates between two and 10 millimeters (0.08 and 0.4 ...