Pedestrian traffic lights

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Pedestrian traffic lights

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15?? More like 5.
What's the population of the place/town/city you live in?
1–9, it's just me and/or some family or a neighbor or two
10–99, small village
100–499, big village
500–999, tiny town
1,000–4,999, small town
5,000–9,999, town
10,000–49,999, big town
50,000–99,999, small city
100,000–499,999, city
500,000–999,999, big city
1,000,000–2,999,999, metropolis
3,000,000 or more, massive metropolis
We ask your questions so you don’t have to! Submit your questions to have them posted anonymously as polls.
Benches are microcosms of an expansive debate about who belongs in urban public spaces. When they are removed or made uninviting, we lose mo
Benches aren’t just disappearing from large railroad stations, but also from subways, parks, plazas, sidewalks, and esplanades. Public transit systems in Philadelphia, Chicago, Anaheim, and New York City have lost benches, as have the entrance to Seattle’s Pike Place Market, a National Park plaza in Washington, D.C., a thoroughfare of San Francisco’s Tenderloin, a boulevard dedicated to Korean veterans in Nashville, and a tiny riverfront park in Janesville, Wisconsin. Some of these seats were replaced with armatures for perching or leaning, but most were not. There is no firm data on how many benches have been removed in total, nor when the trend precisely started. But anecdotal evidence suggests that in the past decade, across the United States, hundreds of places to sit in public have quietly disappeared. Benches, like other public amenities, are places where optimistic visions of civic life meet messier realities. They’re sites of leisure and contestation that invite a range of constituencies with vastly differing needs and desires. Office workers may lunch and seniors may rest, but teenagers might socialize at decibels unwelcome by their elders. Benches beckon skateboarders trying to perfect their nosegrinds, and men who sip drinks concealed in paper bags. Unlike parks or homeless shelters, they’re small and relatively inexpensive interventions, six-foot-long microcosms of a far broader debate over whom our cities should be structured to serve and how best to do so. To remove benches, or to curate who gets to sit, is to abandon the work of defining a civic ideal and determining, together, how to live up to it. When seating disappears, our relationship with public space becomes more grudging and utilitarian. Benches are symbols of hospitality, an invitation to participate in the civic realm.
21 April 2026
Dave Krugman’s ‘WINDOWS’ Captures a Multitudinous Portrait of New York City

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Internet-voted most terrifying urban scenes in China, all real footage (Chongqing, Shanghai, Shenzhen, Guangxi, etc.)
In China if a building bears occult markers, like taiji trigrams or eerie sculptures, or strangely shaped (e.g. a coffin), it’s feng shui-engineered. The rationale behind such designs is often bone-chilling, which is why locals give them a wide berth.
The two creepiest pics I didn’t post (even I felt unnerved: 1) A folk deity statue in an abandoned temple, wrapped in plastic sheeting (shot from above), its upturned eyes staring straight into the lens. Commenters claimed it’s already ‘occupied.’ 2) A backrooms-style decaying staircase, the lower half swallowed by pure darkness. previous post