Born and raised in Washington, D.C., currently living in Philadelphia, Megan is focused on How we use storytelling and the sharing of life expriences to effect real change

Housing Discrimination Made Summers Even Hotter

American cities face increasingly unbearable summers—but the heat isn’t distributed equally. Low-income and minority neighborhoods can get significantly warmer than their surrounding areas due to the urban heat island effect. These areas typically lack trees and other cooling infrastructure that provide shade during the day, and stay uncomfortably warm at night as the heat absorbed by impervious surfaces escapes back into the air.

Continue reading at Bloomberg CityLab here, courtesy of Linda Poon.

Confronting Architecture’s Complicity with Racism

How Unfair Property Taxes Keep Black Families From Gaining Wealth