Built Environment
Architecture, urban planning, infrastructure, and housing
184 episodes · Page 4 of 8
#3300: How Airlines Maximize Plane Utilization Daily
How airlines balance relentless pressure to fly expensive assets against non-negotiable safety requirements.
#3293: Can You Own a Cube of Air 60 Meters Up?
What if a high-rise worked like a vertical subdivision where developers build their own pods inside a shared frame?
#3292: Ghost Towers: Who Pays When a Luxury High-Rise Fails?
When luxury towers go bust in Jerusalem, the city gets stuck with the bill. Can adaptive reuse prevent the next ghost tower?
#3288: When Your Couch Won't Fit the Elevator
Why your sofa doesn't fit the elevator — and why that's about to get much worse in dense cities.
#3287: The Invisible Turnaround: Who Runs the Ramp?
How 15 unseen workers turn a 737 in 45 minutes — and why the ramp agent is aviation's most stressful job.
#3286: How Airport Slots Became $75 Million Assets
Two completely different slot systems run aviation — one worth millions, the other delays your flight.
#3285: How Glowing Wands Guide 200-Ton Aircraft
From airport tarmacs to aircraft carriers and oil rigs — the surprising story of marshalling sticks.
#3281: The Triple Squeeze: Housing, Food, and Wages
Housing, food, and wages are compressing the middle class from three directions at once.
#3274: Who Wins When Cars Leave the Street?
Removing cars doesn't create abundance—it creates a knife fight over eight meters of asphalt.
#3273: The Salad Bar Pan That Changed the World
How a German-engineered pan size became the hidden standard behind every buffet, airline meal, and fast-casual kitchen.
#3266: Designing a 2020s Art Deco for Jerusalem
How to build a 21st-century architectural movement with classical proportion, modern performance, and Jerusalem stone.
#3264: What Were Ancient Tefillin Actually Made From?
Archaeological evidence reveals the original leather used for tefillin boxes — and it's not what most people assume.
#3263: Mansfield's Wandering Boulders: Geology Meets Folklore
Why one Connecticut town has 4x the boulders of neighboring areas—and built a culture around them.
#3256: The Seasteading Dream That Sank
Silicon Valley tried to build floating nations. The ocean and the law had other plans.
#3251: Can One Person Really Build a Whole House?
The romantic fantasy vs. the 3,200-hour reality of solo house construction.
#3250: Where Does Unclaimed Land Still Exist?
Every habitable square meter on Earth is claimed. Here's how we got here and what that means for buyers.
#3243: Are We Modern Serfs? Land, Rent & Feudalism
How land ownership patterns mirror medieval feudalism—and what Henry George proposed to fix it.
#3240: How to Design Cities for People, Not Cars
The thinkers and interventions reshaping urban streets — without banning cars.
#3231: Hand-Painted Signs: The Lost Art of Enamel and Ruling Pens
Why enamel paint and ruling pens dominated sign painting for a century—and where to find them today.
#3219: What It Actually Takes to Get an ICAO Code for Your Airstrip
Only 5,000 of 45,000 ICAO-coded airfields are certified for safety. The rest? "Land at own risk.
#3212: Why Eilat Has 3 Airports for 55,000 People
Israel’s southernmost city is a tourism powerhouse with a neglected core. The VAT zone, land policies, and three airports tell the story.
#3198: Why Architects Still Use 1963 Pens
Why architects still use isographic pens and parallel rules in 2026 — and what that teaches us about thinking through our hands.
#3194: Four Schools of Urbanism After Jane Jacobs
Beyond Jacobs vs. Moses: mapping the four intellectual camps shaping today's cities.
#3193: Connected Villages: The Real Alternative to Suburban Sprawl
What if suburbs didn't require a car for everything? Exploring transit-first city planning that actually works.