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World Bank blogs

Dan Hoornweg headshot

Dan Hoornweg worked for the World Bank on city infrastructure development for over 20 years. In that time, he worked in hundreds of cities in dozens of countries. In his last several years at the bank, Dan shared his experience through a blog about urban resilience and adaptation, including on topics like climate change mitigation, waste management and sustainable infrastructure.

Read Dan’s blog posts for Ontario Tech University here.

Lorne Turner headshot

Lorne Turner: Remembering a city worker who made a difference

September 9, 2015

People wandering through the labyrinth of booths of yet another UN urban conference in Nanjing (2008) or Rio de Janeiro (2010) may have stumbled across a friendly, unassuming man, looking somewhat out of place at the Global Cities Institute – Cities Alliance stand. These types of conferences were not the typical work venue for Lorne Turner, Toronto’s manager of city performance.

People observe garbage being deposited in a dump

Peak Waste and Poverty – A Powerful Paradox

November 4, 2013

Urbanization is the most powerful force shaping the planet today. This can be good news as urbanization is the best bet we have to meet our global poverty reduction targets. Cities generate our wealth, our culture, and our innovation. This is also bad news since cities generate the lion’s share of the world’s GHG emissions, and cities are responsible for most of the planet’s current decline in biodiversity. Cities also generate solid waste; lots of it and the amount is growing fast.

Red fox

What Does the Fox Say? Top Ten Ideas From City Fox

September 18, 2013

Chances are by now you’ve seen the video ‘What Does the Fox Say?’ The Ylvis brothers developed a catchy music video starting in Norway and spreading like a wild fire across the planet, jumping from city to city. In less than a week 15 million people watched the fox dance and try to make his case.

Many of us may think of the more urban mammals like a cow or two, raccoons, squirrels, rats, feral dogs and cats, but when it comes to cities, the fox has a lot to say. Here are a few of his likely comments on cities…

Merganser on the water with her ducklings

Why a City’s Not a Duck

August 27, 2013

Up north on the lake, every year near our cabin, we see a pair of nesting ducks. We call her Mrs. Merganser as she leads her 8 to 16 ducklings around the lake. There’s a Mr. Merganser too, but truth be told, he seems a bit of a slacker in the childcare department.

The ducks make an annual migration of a few thousand kilometers, splitting their time between the northern lake, southern retreat, and a couple months on the road. The birds are transient.

While pursuing ‘world class’ status or trying to attract the latest knowledge workers, a city might walk like a duck and quack like a duck. But a city is not a duck. A city is anchored — immobile.

People and a bus on a flooded city street

The Old Man is Snoring

July 19, 2013

‘It’s raining, it’s pouring. The old man is snoring.’ Truth be told, I apparently snore, and I suppose I’m not that young anymore. But hard to believe, I’m sure this nursery rhyme is not about me. And despite the recent Noah-like floods in Europe, Bangkok, Calgary, Dhaka, Jakarta, New York and Toronto, it’s not really about any one city, or any one country, or even any one continent. But, ‘went to bed and bumped his head. And won’t get up in the morning,’ aptly describes our current political paralysis.

Two people paddle a canoe through white water

Why Running a City is Like Paddling a Canoe

June 18, 2013

Canadians are supposed to be good in a few things: skating, painting trees and rocks, welcoming newcomers, writing engaging stories that surely must have a meaning in there somewhere, and paddling a canoe. The canoe—a bit like the moose—holds an almost mythic place in the Canadian psyche. Anything and everything can be compared to canoeing. This metaphor is apt when applied to city administration.

Blooming lily pads on water

Urban Careers and the Twenty Ninth Day

April 30, 2013

A helpful way for young math students to grasp the concept of exponential growth is to look at water lilies growing on a pond. They grow exponentially and double in area each day. If they will fully cover the pond by the 30th day, on what day is the lake half covered? The twenty-ninth day.

This year I had the honor of teaching 4th year energy systems students who will graduate later this month (their blogs on energy issues will be presented on this site over the summer). These graduates are particularly essential. During their careers they will be part of the world’s largest ever city-building spree. Their task will be to again double the world’s cities.

Bee on a white background

The Buzz of Cities

April 11, 2013

For bees, bigger hives are better. Last week researchers at the University of Arizona published their findings: bees of bigger hives have more information and forage better. With improved communications, bees from the bigger hives sent new foragers to known resources up to four hours earlier than bees from smaller hives. This better communications also seems to work in bigger cities.

Dr Seuss character

One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish*

Feburary 13, 2013

‘From there to here, from here to there, funny things are everywhere!’
That one blue fish cost a million plus, that one blue fish and all the fuss.

In cities here and cities there, you’d think by now we’d be aware.
That we’d take some care for what is rare. But here’s another to make you stare:

Soup can come with a shark’s fin; yes, so strange a fin that’s mixed right in.
So much money is being spent, just how far can we go, and to what extent?

Brass statues of turtle and hare

Hey Cities, Slow Down

February 6, 2013

‘Lord give me patience, but please hurry.’ Everyone working with cities has probably felt this sentiment. We see the new buildings, read the reports, and know that the hurly burley rush to urbanize across the world is picking up speed – we are about to repeat the amount of city-building we did in the last 200 years, but this time we will do it in just 40 years. Surely we have no time to slow down.

Man in top hat holds up groundhog

Controvery Continues to Hound Groundhog Day Celebrations

February 4, 2013

Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania: Saturday around 7:00 am, Punxsutawney Phil (PA, USA) emerged from his burrow, did not see his shadow and predicted an early end to winter. A few minutes later and a few hundred miles north, Wiarton Willie (ON, Canada) surfaced, didn’t see his (or is it her) shadow and also predicted an early spring.

Once again, like last year, immediately after the groundhogs issued their prognostications, the Houston and Calgary based ‘Committee for Climate Certainty’ rebutted the groundhogs’ findings, claiming the science was uncertain. 

Year of the Snake (with snake illustration)

Snakes and Dragons in the Year of the Mayor

January 18, 2013

First the good news: Earlier this month, Mayor Iñaki Azkuna of Bilbao, Spain was awarded the prestigious World Mayor Prize for 2012. Mayor Azkuna was in good company. Other finalists included the mayors of: Perth, Australia; Surakarta, Indonesia; El Paso, USA; Changwon City, Korea; Auckland, NZ; Angeles City, Philippines; Zeralda, Algeria; Matamoras, Mexico; and somewhat surprisingly, Mayor Regis Lebeaume of Quebec City, Canada.

World Bank building

You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave

January 7, 2013

As of January 1st, I’m officially ‘retired’ from the World Bank. This is a dozen years before I had to retire, but I wanted to move back to Ontario for love and opportunity. However, I’ve already come to the conclusion that if you care about sustainable development and cities, you can never fully leave the World Bank.

Gift wrapped office building

Cities: The Gift that Keeps on Giving

January 2, 2013

Jesus and Muhammad traveled to the wilderness to develop their teachings. Even Gautama Buddha is said to have sat quietly beneath the rural Bohdi tree while he waited for enlightenment. But once they knew what needed to be said, all three men travelled to the closest city to convey the message.

Surfer rides a wave

Cities Now on the Third Wave

December 17, 2012

Cities grew at a modest pace until about 1800 when the Industrial Revolution took off in the UK and cities developed at staggering rates. Manchester, for example experienced a six-fold population increase from 1771 to 1831. London went from about one-fifth of Britain’s population at the start of the 19th Century to about half the country’s population in 1851. This rate of urbanization has not let up for the last two hundred years; in fact it is still accelerating. The growth of cities seen over the last two hundred years will now be repeated, but this time in just forty years.

Blog post archive

2012

2011

2010

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Contact: Jacquie Hoornweg

TORONTO

Querencia Partners respectfully acknowledges that we are on the traditional territory of the Anishnabeg, the Mississaugas of the Credit, the Haudenosaunee, the Wendat peoples, the Chippewa, as well as the new homes of many additional Indigenous Peoples from across Turtle Island.

 

PARRY SOUND

In Parry Sound, Querencia Partners resides on the traditional territory of the Anishinaabek (Ojibwe, Pottowattami, and Odawa). Mohawk people from the Haudenosaunee Confederacy also reside in the area. Parry Sound area is now home to many diverse First Nations, Inuit and Métis Peoples. We are fortunate to be located near the Wasauksing First Nation community and benefit from their cultural contributions to our community.

At Querencia Partners, we are committed to reconciliation and reaffirm our commitment to our relationship with these communities and deepening our understanding of Indigenous cultures.