City road view graphic illustration from above with cars, bikes, and pedestrians
Illustrations by Madison Ketcham

Feature

Reimagining Cities

Today’s challenges and how we address them will shape the way we live

By Gillian Rutherford

Illustrations by Madison Ketcham
August 09, 2022 • 14 minute read

Cities and rural areas around the world are facing big changes and big challenges. A lingering pandemic. Climate change. Access to the food, fuel and goods we depend on to live. If we want sustainable, livable communities, we will have to tackle some of the biggest challenges of our time. Fortunately, forward thinkers are harnessing research and bold ideas to create better communities for all of us. As we explore in this feature and its twin, “Rural Frontiers,” the answer requires examining rural and urban issues alongside each other.


Sandeep Agrawal smiles as he closes his eyes: “Let me stretch my imagination,” he says.

I’ve asked him to envision the next 50 years for Canada’s cities. There are so many challenges ahead — environmental, political, fiscal, demographic — it would be easy to feel discouraged. But Agrawal loves this part of urban planning and it’s not a surprise, given that he is a professor and the first director of the University of Alberta’s School of Urban and Regional Planning.

On social media, Agrawal calls himself “a common sense planner,” but he recognizes it’s also important for him and other U of A urban visionaries to dream big.

“Just imagining the future is very difficult, and yet, it is upon us,” he says. “It has the potential to bring the most significant change that has ever happened to our cities, ever.”

As he casts his mind toward the future, the very first thing that comes to Agrawal has a Jetsons ring to it: autonomous vehicles.

That one factor — self-driving cars — could address some of the daily challenges of city living. If your car can drive itself, there’s no need to park it right outside your house or office. You can send it a text to come get you when you’re ready. Since most of us use our cars for less than five per cent of the day, it makes less sense for everyone to own one, meaning greater use of ride shares and taxis and fewer cars on the road. Suddenly you’ve solved gridlock, shortened commute times and reduced carbon emissions. Cities might even find they no longer need as many roads, saving tax dollars for other priorities and freeing up space for more housing, parks and walking paths.

It’s just one of the many possibilities we need to consider now to plan for a future in which cities meet the many challenges ahead — and also meet our desire for livable, equitable, healthy spaces.


According to the United Nations, 68 per cent of the world’s population will live in cities by 2050. In Canada, more than 83 per cent of us already do.

Cities are the crucible where many of society’s problems come into focus. In Canada, one of the most pressing challenges is a severe housing shortage. Canada would need to build 1.8 million more dwellings to have the same number of homes per capita as the average of other G7 countries, according to a January 2022 report by the Bank of Nova Scotia. Home prices have fluctuated recently but continue to rise in most cities, putting ownership out of reach for many. Every Canadian city has witnessed an increase in homelessness during the pandemic.

These are the kinds of challenges Agrawal and his colleagues at the School of Urban and Regional Planning examine to help municipalities and other levels of government prepare for unprecedented — and unpredictable — change. The school, in the faculties of arts and science, conducts research and provides policy direction on everything from climate adaptation to citizen engagement to transportation safety. Agrawal, who moved to Canada in the 1990s, has travelled the world to hunt for solutions, from India to the United States, United Arab Emirates, Brazil, Sri Lanka and across Canada.

He knows that the solutions we come up with now will shape how we live, play and get around in Canada’s cities over the next half century.


Truly visionary urban planning looks at the big picture. It has to include transportation planning and land use as well as economic, environmental and social goals. Edmonton is a leader in North America with its city plan, a blueprint for how the city will grow over the next 40 years. Spearheaded by U of A grad Kalen Anderson, ’02 BA, ’04 MA, the plan plots the path toward a city of two million residents, double the current population, who will need 1.1 million more jobs. It’s an aspirational document that aims to honour the values of today — economic diversification, social inclusion, environmental responsibility, artistic opportunity — and build a community that feels like home to all residents.

“Long-range city planning is more like casting a spell than writing a prescription — everyone has to buy in and believe and work hard to achieve the vision,” says Anderson, who is now executive director at the developers’ group Urban Development Institute – Edmonton Metro.

Like most cities across North America, from Winnipeg to Escondido, Calif., Edmonton has made it a top priority to reinvigorate the city’s downtown. A strong downtown matters to everyone in a city, whether they live or work downtown or not, because it’s often the economic heart. As of March 2022, there were 261 jobs per hectare in downtown Edmonton, and though the core accounts for only one per cent of the municipality’s land base, it generated 10 per cent of the city’s taxes.

A vibrant downtown requires more people: something like 30,000 more in Edmonton’s case, Anderson estimates.

“We need to build a truly vibrant downtown that is full of people 24/7, with a diversity of housing — from the $10-million penthouse to the most dignified supportive housing we can create — so everybody lives well and people aren’t unhoused on our streets,” she says.

But it’s important to get urban density just right. Too dense and it feels frenetic; in fact, it can be unhealthy. Not dense enough and the community isn’t complete and can’t sustain itself.

Sandeep Agrawal looking beyond the camera with blurred cityscape in the background
Sandeep Agrawal, director of the School of Urban and Regional Planning, has studied cities around the world. John Ulan

Agrawal has seen the effects of unchecked density first-hand in the small town of Ranchi, India, where he grew up. Having been away for 30 years, he set out to find his childhood home one sunny day. After searching all afternoon, it was dusk before he found it.

“The place had completely changed,” he remembers. “There had been large green fields all around my house when I was growing up, and a river flowing nearby, but I couldn’t see any of it. It was absolutely unrecognizable.”

What was once a sleepy town is now a bustling state capital of just over a million inhabitants, an industrial heartland due to its proximity to mineral reserves and forest products.

Canada doesn’t have quite the same issue with urban sprawl as does India, where Delhi almost doubled in geographic size between 1991 and 2011. Still, over the past 20 years, Canadian cities have grown by 34 per cent, while population density has fallen by six per cent, according to a CBC analysis in 2022 based on satellite imagery and artificial intelligence. Every day in Ontario alone new subdivisions eat up the equivalent of a family farm.

Agrawal and other planners agree that urban sprawl is likely to be reversed over the next half century. Places like Vancouver and Montreal are simply running out of room to expand, and there’s a growing recognition that ever-bigger cities are too expensive to maintain. In 2018, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development estimated that urban sprawl triples public service costs, and it tags Canada as one of the places where growth should be checked.

Agrawal says Canadian cities must get denser, not larger. But greater density doesn’t necessarily mean more skyscrapers. It means condos, townhouses, low-rise apartments and duplexes that house more people on the same plot of land than a single-family dwelling, no matter what part of town you live in. The current buzz name for the best in urban dwelling is the “15-minute district.” It’s a riff on the garden city movement first promoted back in the early 20th century in England to make industrial cities more livable. The goal is to find everything you need to live a good life — food, health care, work, exercise and entertainment — within a 15-minute walk, roller-skate, skateboard, bike or transit ride from home.

“It’s the reformulation of a very old idea,” says Anderson, noting the concept is a key part of Edmonton’s new plan. “People have always wanted to live in complete communities. The language has changed over time, but the idea is not new.”

According to a 2021 Statistics Canada report, only 20 per cent of Canadians live within that kind of proximity to the services and stores they need on a daily basis, so there’s plenty of scope for improvement. The 15-minute district concept has taken off in places as varied as Paris, Melbourne, Shanghai and Portland. In Vancouver, old-school shopping malls near SkyTrain stations are being replaced with new shops and denser housing developments. In Paris, the focus is on new bike lanes and better parks. As the pandemic has shown, we can’t always depend on global supply chains, so part of the appeal of a 15-minute district is that it is built around local businesses. Another key element is planning for more green space, not less — and many of us came to appreciate green space during the past two-plus years in a way we had not before the pandemic.


Growing up in St. Albert, a suburb of Edmonton, Karen Lee could never have imagined life without a car. Then she moved to New York City and, as a public health physician, contributed to creating health-promoting amenities along one of the best-used bike trails in the United States. The Manhattan Waterfront Greenway is a 52-kilometre trail that wends its way around the island. At certain times of the day the path is crowded with people with briefcases strapped on the back of their bikes, heading to work, stopping for coffee or a meal along the way, jostling with tourists snapping shots of the river views. People can stop to play basketball or tennis or go for a quick paddle in a kayak. Rather than a path to nowhere, this trail was built purposely to take people places they want to go.

For Lee, finding the perfect balance of urban density is a passion. Now director of the U of A’s Housing for Health project and author of Fit Cities: My Quest to Improve the World’s Health and Wellness — Including Yours, she has devoted her career to promoting health.

She cites growing evidence that our built environment — the homes, streets and communities where we live — can actually make us healthier.

Lee encouraged health-supporting amenities along the Manhattan Waterfront Greenway when she was the inaugural director of New York’s Healthy Built Environment and Active Design Program and deputy to the assistant commissioner for Chronic Disease Prevention and Control. The greenway is recognized as a prime example of urban planning that meets goals in transportation, recreation, economics and health, all at once.

The New York City team also introduced other health interventions such as mandated nutrition labelling in restaurants and minimum active playtime for kids in daycare. And they gathered data to prove it made a difference: better chronic disease outcomes, more active New Yorkers and lower obesity rates in children. New Yorkers’ lifespan even increased faster than the average across the country. Traffic fatalities dropped for both pedestrians and drivers, and retail sales went up in many areas that had been improved for walking, cycling and transit.

Lee is now working to demonstrate how these ideas can work in Canada. She came back to Alberta in 2018 as associate professor of preventive medicine and adjunct professor in the U of A School of Public Health. She’s pulling together 200 people from across the country — city planners, health professionals, developers, architects, academics, even community league volunteers — anyone with an interest in building healthier communities. They’re working to produce the Canadian Healthy Community Guidelines by early 2023.

Lee says it doesn’t cost extra to plan for health from the beginning of a development. First, it’s important to select a location that’s close to grocery stores, recreation, schools, jobs and active transportation options. Then make sure sidewalks and crosswalks are wide enough so that all residents, including those in wheelchairs, can get around safely. Next, design buildings so the stairs are the most obvious option for those who can use them instead of an elevator, and make sure the stairwell is clean, brightly lit and finished with paint so it doesn’t feel like an afterthought. And even affordable buildings should offer fitness facilities. In one of Lee’s projects there’s a golf simulator right next to the exercise room.

Lee says that as we adopt new technologies like self-driving cars it’s important that cities prioritize opportunities to walk, cycle and use public transit — options that are affordable, accessible and promote social, physical and mental health.

“These daily things that we add to our lives, like walking around our neighbourhoods, running into a neighbour, using the stairs in our work and home buildings, can actually make a big difference to our health outcomes,” she says.

That includes supporting people to stay healthy, mentally and physically, as they age. Nearly a quarter of Canadians will be over 65 years of age by 2051, according to Statistics Canada. That presents all kinds of challenges.

“If you have to leave your neighbourhood as you age, it means you’re leaving your neighbours and friends and support systems,” says Lee.

“We want to age in place in all of our neighbourhoods, but to do that, we have to create neighbourhoods where we have the option to walk to amenities or take transit if we’re going further. That means we have to think about different types of housing typologies in multiple neighbourhoods, not just downtown.”


Canadian cities are not even mentioned in the Canadian Constitution; they are creatures of the provinces. And yet they have the responsibility to tackle some of society’s biggest challenges at the level closest to our everyday lives: our neighbourhoods, our jobs, our homes and our families. It’s a big, messy task, and the tools cities have to shape the future are awkward.

But if that seems daunting, think back to Agrawal’s vision of autonomous vehicles.

The best guesses say it could be a few decades before autonomous vehicles rule our roads. For Agrawal, their potential is much like the quantum progress in telephone technology since he left India. In 1990, it was almost impossible for a family to get a landline. Now everyone has their own cellphone and those personal cell numbers have revolutionized society.

“Individual identity in India was formed by those cellphone numbers. That cellphone gave individuals the independence to talk to whomever they wanted,” says Agrawal. “It helped them with employment. It helped them in their mobility,” he adds. “It helped them in so many different ways.”

He is hopeful we will see a similar leap forward in accessibility and equity as our cities of the future develop. His new book Rights and the City: Problems, Progress and Practice is about how cities can improve human rights, whether by removing discriminatory zoning rules that keep certain kinds of housing out of a neighbourhood or by keeping the price of a bus ticket affordable. For him, the autonomous vehicles and other changes coming at us so quickly have the potential to make our cities not only more livable, but also more equitable.

Agrawal sees that as the beauty and importance of considered, informed city planning. He believes necessity will lead to innovative solutions and that practical decisions informed by imagination will help us build safe, accessible, delightful spaces where everyone can find a home.

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false
Thesis
How Long Until We Eat the Zoo?
false
Thesis
Have Your Burger and Eat It, Too
false
Alumni Awards
‘I think back with horror’
false
Trails
Tilting
false
Feature
Dementia Sets Lives Adrift. Research Is Finding a Better Way Forward
false
Health
The Elusive Cure
false
Thesis
Why You Feel Like Your Friends Are Having More Fun on Social Media
false
Thesis
Where Does Consciousness Live?
false
Living
Tips on How to Stink Less
false
Continuing Education
Five Things I’ve Learned About Perseverance
false
Continuing Education
Grant Me the Serenity to Accept My Inner Volcano
false
Tech
These Are Not Your Average Rabbits
These are not your average rabbits
false
At Work
How to Launch a Career During COVID-19
false
Profile
7 Things You Should Know About Billy-Ray Belcourt
false
Did You Know
What Do You Do When There’s No Reliable Internet?
false
Continuing Education
Check Your Blind Spots
false
Tech
They Saw What on YouTube?
false
Just For Fun
Flashback
Just For Fun
Fashion Sense
false
Discovery
Five Objects That Changed Our Lives
Alumni Awards
For giving Canadians insight into urgent global stories
false
Profile
For Fighting for LGBTQ Rights
Alumni Awards
For Bringing News and Entertainment to Canadian TV viewers
false
Feature
A Call to Bear Witness
false
Feature
Indigenous on Campus
false
Feature
Behind the Bodice
false
Feature
Reading Toward Reconciliation and More
News
Campus News
false
Did You Know
The Gateway's New Identity
false
Living
Put on Your Cape and Pants; It's Time to Go Out
false
Discovery
Research in the News
false
Continuing Education
Findings in the Field
false
Did You Know
Dark Cosmic Mysteries Illuminated
false
Environment
Alumni Among Wildfire Heroes
false
News
Research in the News
false
Discovery
'Welding' Neurons Opens Door to Repairing Nerves
false
Discovery
Paleontologists Discover Complete Baby Dino Skeleton
false
News
Alumni in the News
Did You Know
New Student Residence and Indigenous Gathering Place Coming to North Campus
false
Did You Know
Lecture Hall to Legislature
false
Health
When Food is Your Enemy
Discovery
Research Briefs
false
Environment
Our Man on Mars
false
Discovery
Who's the Boss of Evolution?
false
News
Kim Campbell Heads New College
Did You Know
From the Collections
false
Profile
Learning to Lead
false
Environment
Five Questions About Frankenstorms
false
Discovery
Blue Sky Green Moss
false
Profile
The Road to a Rhodes
News
Campus News
false
Health
A Mighty Heart
false
Did You Know
Medal of Freedom
false
Sweating the Small Stuff
false
Environment
Taking The Initiative
false
Discovery
Cell Mates
false
Did You Know
It Is Brain Surgery
false
In Memoriam
Remembering Robert Kroetch
Notes
Powerful Women
Notes
Royal Society of Canada Honours
Notes
Meet Your Reunion Organizer
false
Health
Treating the King Georges of Edmonton... and Calgary
false
Discovery
Weird Science
false
Feature
Whatsoever Things Are True
false
Feature
U of A's Newest Building
false
Continuing Education
Rhodes Worthy
false
Did You Know
Uphill Racer
false
Profile
PhD Prize Money
photo of the Ambassador bridge behind Canadian and US flags
Commentary
What’s a Tariff, Anyway?
Underwater photo of spawning Pink Salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha) along Kuliak Bay, photo by Paul Souders/WorldFoto
Feature
A Planet Called ‘Sea’
colour photo of Atul Malhotra, dark green background
2024 Distinguished Alumni Award
His Work Helps Patients Breathe Easier
Meteorite
Discovery
How Does a Space Rock Sound When It Hits the Ground?
 Illustration of a woman climbing stairs made of architectural columns
Society
Political Actors
false
Feature
Ground Rules
Conceptual photo of three wooden medallions on a yellow background, icons on medallions represent balance between human and AI morality.
Profile
Five Things I Learned About Making Artificial Intelligence Safe
Teacher working with students on a computer
Tech
Four Tips for Teachers (and Parents) on Using the Latest AI Tools
false
At Home
Your Summer Reading List
Portrait of U of A grad Terris Mah
Profile
Five Things I’ve Learned Through First Peoples’ House
false
Research, Health and Wellness
The Possibility for Change
Glowing orb with emanating binary code and light.
Did You Know
What’s Up With Quantum Science?
An illustrated silhouette of a human head surrounded by stylized electronic waves
Discovery
AI Research in Action
a photo of Deena Hinshaw
2023 Distinguished Alumni Award
Calm in the Eye of the Pandemic Storm
a photo of Gordon Wilkes
2023 Distinguished Alumni Award
He Helped Give Patients Confidence to Face the World
Colourful grid of different coloured bananas
Did You Know
Does ChatGPT Really Understand Us?
hildren telling scary stories in a tent at night
Just for Fun
How to Tell a Terrifying Tale
Mature male adult with headphones on, taking a hearing test in a soundproof booth
Health
Breaking the Silence on Hearing Loss
Lazina Mckenzie at a November Project workout
Health
How to Become a Morning Exercise Person in Any Season
false
Profile
Nine Questions With Your New Alumni Association President
People rock climbing
Thesis
Reading, Riding and Arithmetic
false
Feature
Why You Should Care About Small Molecule Drugs
Corridor of people with a man at the center
Tiny
What Is the Smallest Small?
Helping child to read
How-to
How to Help a Child Read Better
false
Tiny
Teeny Words Expose Societal Changes
Couple walking outside
Health
One Small Step
false
Distinguished Alumni Award
Scientist-Entrepreneur Creates Drug Molecules That Can Change Lives
false
Profile
Five Things I’ve Learned About Preserving Indigenous Languages
false
Thesis
It Lies in the Making
false
Continuing Education
A Matter of Meat
false
At Work
How to Manage Imposter Syndrome
false
Thesis
Linger In the In-Between
false
Society
‘We Can Hear the Fighting From Afar’’
false
Society
Pitch Perfect
false
Society
5 Things I've Learned About Black History on the Prairies
false
Living
Let It Snow
false
Discovery
What Has a Nobel Prize Ever Done For You?
false
Relationships
Friends Forever
false
Thesis
Route of Memory
false
In Memoriam
To My Unknown Friend
false
Living
How to Be Media Literate
false
At Home
What Is the Pandemic Doing to My Young Child?
false
Continuing Education
Don't Be Boring!
false
Environment
The Future of Farming is Smarter
false
Discovery
A Nobel Search
false
Environment
How to Fashion a Sustainable Future
false
Living
See Spot Cope
false
New Trail 100
Lawnmowers and Rabbits: A Tale of Progress
false
New Trail 100
Then and Now: Discoveries That Keep on Giving
Photo of Michael Houghton
Health
In Conversation: Michael Houghton
false
New Trail 100
Mystery on Campus
false
Alumni Awards
Stanley Read Brought Compassion to Families Living with HIV/AIDS
false
At Work
How To Network
false
Thesis
Wrong Way, Again
false
At Work
Rethink Your Next Job Interview
false
Discovery
COVID-19-Fighting Tools
false
Environment
Renewable Energy Myths, Busted
false
Profile
Coming Home
false
Just For Fun
A Great Catch
false
Feature
The Virus of Social Unrest
false
Commentary
Reflections on Flight PS752
false
Money
The Dos and Don’ts of Investing After a Market Crash
false
Alumni Recommend
Feed Your Inner, Isolated Art Lover
false
At Work
Business As Unusual
false
At Work
When the Lectern Is in the Living Room
false
At Home
Tips to Help School Your Kids at Home
false
How-to
Support Your Kids During the COVID-19 Pandemic
false
In Memoriam
‘He Was One of a Kind’
false
Thesis
When Your Thoughts Run Away With You
false
Feature
Cinnamon Buns: A Love Story
false
Did You Know
What Baseball Fights Tell Us About Ourselves
false
Commentary
Opining the Opinions
false
Thesis
Seen One, Seen ’Em All
false
Thesis
More Than the Sum of Your Parts
false
Thesis
Whole Medicines
false
Environment
Tips to Free You From Plastic
false
Just For Fun
Are You a Sucker for Pseudoscience?
false
Energy
From Research to Reality
false
Energy
Lost in Transmission
Energy
Decontaminate Water With Chicken Feathers
false
Energy
Reworking the Flywheel for Better Energy Storage
false
Just for Fun
How to Start a Podcast
false
Health
New Food Labels Will Help You Choose
false
Just For Fun
How to Find a Great Podcast
false
Just For Fun
How to Skate Like Connor McDavid
false
Did You Know
How to Feed Your Inner Genealogist
false
Just For Fun
How to Make a Paper Airplane to Challenge Your Assumptions
false
Did You Know
How to Take Part in a Round Dance
false
Living
How to See Like an Artist
false
Relationships
How to Avoid Death by Small Talk
false
Health
Sugar Highs Are Not a Real Thing
false
Continuing Education
That Time I Enrolled in a Community
false
Thesis
Good News for Picky Eaters
Alumni Awards
For being a coach and a leader
false
Thesis
Deserts and Swamps
false
Just For Fun
Registration Woes
false
Environment
Not a Drop Wasted
false
At Home
How to Hang Art Like a Boss
false
Thesis
Your Tech, Your Self
false
Thesis
When Medicine Is Designed Just for You
false
Trails
In Lister Town
false
Feature
The Advance of AI: Should We Be Worried?
false
Tech
Have You Heard the One About the Robot Comedian?
Tech
Unexpected insights from an AI rock star
false
Trails
Modern Campus Life
false
Tech
Fighting Fire With Data
false
Health
Keeping Gym-Class Dropouts in the Game
false
Living
7 Things You Should Know to Rock Your Look
false
Profile
A Sport Psychologist Was Among the Supporters and Athletes Hurrying Hard in Pyeongchang
false
Health
Clearing the Smoke on Cannabis
false
Feature
Seen/Unseen
Feature
Words and Images
Alumni Awards
For finding new ways to succeed in sports
Alumni Awards
For being a powerful voice for change
Alumni Awards
For Being a Model of Leadership
Alumni Awards
For devoting his life to serving the public
false
Feature
How We Can Work Together
false
Feature
A Hard Walk
false
Feature
Facing the Painful Truth
false
Feature
More From the TRC
false
Commentary
Fake News and Surviving a Post-truth World
false
Society
A Cultural Space in a Natural Place
false
Did You Know
Salt Could Save Lives
false
Health
Research Rises From the Ashes
false
Did You Know
The Power of his Song
false
Health
A Healthier Future for Women and Children Is Closer Than Ever
Did You Know
For the Public Good
false
Tech
Changing the Game: Why Teaching AI to Play is More Than Fun and Games
Discovery
Research in the News
false
News
News Briefs
false
Living
Beyond the Books in Italy
false
Did You Know
Milk in Tea Can Reduce Teeth Stains
false
News
Campus News
false
News
Alumni in the News
false
News
David Turpin Named Next U of A President
News
University Plans Land Trust
News
News Briefs
false
Just For Fun
Hiding and Seeking Fun
Discovery
Research in the News
false
Did You Know
Alumna in Judge's Seat at Olympics
false
Just For Fun
Superlative U
false
Just For Fun
Raise a Glass for the Bears and Pandas
false
Society
The Accidental Protestor
false
Health
New Horizons in Health Care
false
Did You Know
The Alumni Effect
false
Profile
The New Kid on Campus
false
Health
Mastering Health Sciences Education
false
Discovery
Research VP Wins Top Prize
false
Discovery
Water Bearers
false
Relationships
Team Building
Continuing Education
High School Reunion
Society
Biotechnology Meets Art
false
Living
One Village at a Time
Notes
Alumni in Australia
false
News
Ultra-Sonic Performance
false
Discovery
Hot Tip
false
Feature
Easy Rider Endowment
false
Health
Master Mind
false
Discovery
Cell Mates
false
Did You Know
Mission to Mars
false
Discovery
You Do the Math