❌

Reading view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.

Walking faster, hanging out less

City life is often described as β€œfast-paced.” A study coauthored by MIT scholars suggests that’s more true than ever: The average walking speed in three northeastern US cities increased 15% from 1980 to 2010, while the number of people lingering in public spaces declined by 14%.

The researchers used machine-learning tools to assess 1980s-era video footage captured in Boston, New York, and Philadelphia by William Whyte, an urbanist and social thinker best known as the author of The Organization Man. They compared the old material with newer videos from the same locations.

β€œSomething has changed over the past 40 years,” says coauthor Carlo Ratti, director of MIT’s Senseable City Lab. β€œPublic spaces are working in somewhat different ways, more as a thoroughfare and less a space of encounter.” The scholars speculate that some of the reasons may have to do with cell phones and Starbucks: People text each other to meet up instead of hanging around to encounter each other in public, and when they do get together, they often choose an indoor space like a coffee shop.

The results could help designers seeking to create new public areas or modify existing ones. β€œPublic space is such an important element of civic life, and today partly because it counteracts the polarization of digital space,” says Arianna Salazar-Miranda, MCP ’16, PhD ’23, an assistant professor at Yale and another coauthor. β€œThe more we can keep improving public space, the more we can make our cities suited for convening.” 

Estrada signs with the Dodgers

Like almost any MIT student, Mason Estrada wants to take what he learned on campus and apply it to the working world. Unlike any other current MIT student, Estrada’sΒ primary workplace isΒ a pitcher’s mound.

Estrada, the star pitcher for MIT’s baseball team, has signed a contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers, who selected him in the seventh round of the Major League Baseball draft on July 14. The right-hander, whose fastball has reached 96 miles per hour, is taking a leave of absence from the Institute and reported to the Dodgers’ instructional camp in Arizona.

An aero-astro major, Estrada says that pitching at MIT has never involved transferring aerodynamic knowledge from the classroom to the mound. Still, he says, he’s benefited as an athlete from β€œlearning to think like an engineer generally, learning to think through problems the right way and finding the best solution.”

In the 2025 season Estrada went 6–0 with a 2.21 ERA, striking out 66. He is the fifth MIT undergraduate selected in baseball’s draft, of whom oneβ€”Jason Szuminski ’00β€”reached the majors, with the San Diego Padres.Β 

❌