Architect Jeanne Gang (of Studio Gang) has just been named to the TIME 100, which is Time magazine's annual list of the world's most influential people. Jeanne is the only architect to be included in the 2019 list.
Jeanne was named to the "Titans" category, which typically honors those who are at the top of their respective field. She sits alongside Mark Zuckerberg, Tiger Woods, and LeBron James in this year's TIME 100.
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Past honorees within the architecture profession include Elizabeth Diller, David Adjaye, and Bjarke Ingels. All, stars.
The list is in its 16th year. But it'll be the first year where there will also be a day-long conference. (Lynne and Marc Benioff, of Salesforce, acquired the magazine in 2018 for $190 million in cash and are making some changes.)
Congratulations Jeanne.
Full disclosure: Studio Gang is the design architect for our One Delisle project in midtown Toronto.

According to the National Association of City Transportation Officials (NACTO), scooter trips in the US surpassed station-based bike share trips for the first time in 2018. Here is a chart taken from Streetsblog:

Dockless electric scooters have created a public nuisance in many of our cities, but what is clear is that the demand is there. Which perhaps isn't all that surprising given that they require less effort than traditional cycling.
The other interesting takeaway from NACTO's analysis, which is likely also not that surprising, is that bike share trips are heavily concentrated in a select few cities.
In 2018, there were about 36.5 million bike share trips across the US. And about 84% of them took place in just 6 cities: New York, Boston, Chicago, DC, Honolulu, and San Francisco.
Almost half of the 36.5 million trips were on NYC's Citi Bike network.


Over the weekend I stumbled upon this illustrated Medium post by Alfred Twu comparing sloped and flat roofs. The argument is that these two roof types are coded. In this part of the world, at least, sloped roofs signal low-rise "house" and flat roofs signal big city "high-rise."
I'm not yet convinced of this association with height, or of all the claims made in the article. Did New York City really make the flat roof commonplace in our cities? But the idea that a roofline can trigger certain associations -- or even become divisive -- is a fascinating one.
Take, for example, Am Fischtal in Berlin. On one side of the street you have, still to this day, homes with flat roofs. And on the other side you have homes with sloped roofs. This clean divide is the result of a supposed "roof war" that took place during the Weimar Republic.
At this moment in time in the suburbs of Berlin, the kind of roof you chose to live under was a proclamation of your political orientation. I'm not sure roofs have as much gravitas as they did in the 1920's on Am Fischtal, but they still do say something.
Image: Alfred Twu
