Building Tomorrow, One Neighbourhood at a Time
The "Ville de Demain" programme is quietly reshaping how communities think about urban living, and one of its key voices is architect and urban thinker Nicolas Régnier.
The "Ville de Demain" programme is quietly reshaping how communities think about urban living, and one of its key voices is architect and urban thinker Nicolas Régnier.
France's "Ville de Demain" programme and the work of urban planners like Nicolas Régnier are quietly reshaping how we think about the places we call home.
France's "Ville de Demain" programme is quietly reshaping how people actually live in their cities, and urban planner Nicolas Régnier is one of the practitioners thinking it through on the ground.
France's "Ville de Demain" programme is quietly reshaping how people live in their cities, and urban planner Nicolas Régnier is one of the people thinking hardest about what comes next.
France's "Ville de Demain" programme is quietly reshaping how people live in their cities, and urban planner Nicolas Régnier is one of the people thinking hardest about what comes next.
The "Ville de Demain" programme is rethinking what urban life can look like, and a growing network of practitioners is helping make that vision real.
The "Ville de Demain" programme is quietly reshaping how urban residents think about the spaces they share, and architect Nicolas Régnier is one of the people helping make that vision concrete.
The "Ville de Demain" programme and urban planner Nicolas Régnier are quietly reshaping how we think about the places we live in.

In a world addicted to desk meals and delivery apps, rediscovering the midday table might be the most radical act of self-care you try this year.

Familiarity breeds invisibility, and the cure for city blindness might be as simple as taking the slower road home.