Your Bio

The Bay Area faces a significant challenge over the next 25 years as the population of the region will increase by 1.7 million people—24 percent. Where will these people live? How will they get around? Will families and workers be able to afford homes here? Will we protect the Bay Area’s remaining open spaces? What about our air and water quality? Will we build a strong, equitable economy?

What does the future of the Bay Area look like?
DEADLINE: Midnight, August 31, 2007 | DETAILS: www.transcoalition.org | GRAND PRIZE: Lifetime Free SmugMug Pro Account
Additional Prizes from SmugMug, Patagonia, Photoworks of San Francisco, A1 Photo & Video Labs in Berkeley and Concord, Berkeley Rep, Bay Area Discovery Museum, AC Transit, SFMOMA, Missing Link Bicycle Cooperative, and The Mayors’ Institute on City Design.

Galleries

World-Class Transit : The vision: exceptional public transit; extensive bicycle and pedestrian infrastructure; real choices in how we get around.  The threats: congestion second only to LA; dangerous streets and intersections.

World-Class Transit

The vision: exceptional public transit; extensive bicycle and pedestri ...

Updated: Sep 13, 2007 6:37pm PST

Great Communities : The vision: walkable neighborhoods; wonderful parks; abundant open space; a sense of place; active living; transit-oriented development.  The threats: unchecked sprawl; loss of farmland; car-centered living instead of people-centered living.

Great Communities

The vision: walkable neighborhoods; wonderful parks; abundant open spa ...

Updated: Sep 13, 2007 6:26pm PST

Social Justice : The vision: access to jobs, education, services, and healthy food via transit; affordable housing; transportation activism and justice.  The threats: displacement; funding cuts.

Social Justice

The vision: access to jobs, education, services, and healthy food via ...

Updated: Sep 10, 2007 12:51am PST