Blogs
Stories about Design, Micromobility, Cities & Climate

šš½ Buenos Dias Mexico City!
Chosen from 108 applicants from around the world, we were in great company with startups like CityFlag and Urbvan creating networked solutions for a more equitable future of our cities

Som Ray
Mar 03, 2025
2 mins read

Why we do what we do!
A couple of months ago, my seven-year-old son was getting ready to go to the UN Climate march -He was working on his protest sign, which featured leaping flames and said, āSave our homeā. His classmateās poster said ā āThere is No Planet Bā.

Som Ray
Mar 03, 2025
9 mins read

How I learned to Stop worrying and Love the Daily Commute
Given the Modernist underpinnings of my Architectural education and compounded by the fact that I grew up inĀ Le CorbusierāsĀ Chandigarh, I was intellectually drawn to the design of the architectural artifacts and the flows between. Six hours north of Delhi, Chandigarh had been a heroic experiment to signify post-independent modern India. The aftermath of World War II, coupled with Modernist urban ideology, prompted a radical reimagining of the cityscape as elaborate mechanisms,

Som Ray
Feb 24, 2025
3 mins read

Visualizing Carbon Emissions
This year during Climate Week, CLIP set out to visualize the impact of a single day of all the passenger cars in NYC. This can be communicated as a very large number (~32,328,767 kg of CO2e) or as a 1:415 scale model of the Empire State Building encased in a glass vitrine that appears to fill with a glowing orange smog as a observer moves a slider from 0 to 24 hours.

David Krawczyk
Feb 24, 2025
2 mins read

A Gen-Z Perspective : CLIP sparks hope for my future š
To prevent irreversible climate catastrophe, scientists and policymakers are urging the U.S. to reduce at least 45% of emissions by 2030. In 2021, the transportation sector was the mostĀ responsible (29%) for U.S. anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions.

Sorah Park
Feb 24, 2025
3 mins read

Letting go of cars. You donāt have to stop loving them to stop using them.
a young teenager who had just moved to the United States, I was eager to belong, to understand the culture, and to learn its rituals. I was with my back on the driveway and faced looking up under a 1989 Ford Bronco when I realized I was getting initiated into a quintessential American ritual. My girlfriendās brother then asked me to help him pull out the transmission of his beloved track; the experience was both scary and empowering.

Manuel Toscano
Feb 24, 2025
5 mins read