Housing & Infrastructure are the bones and arteries of everyday life — the systems that determine where people live, how they move, what they can access, and how stable their communities can become.
Yet these foundations are too often shaped less by human need than by profit, neglect, speculation, political priorities, and uneven investment.
Housing becomes unaffordable, roads and utilities decay, public transit lags, and essential systems are repaired only after failure becomes impossible to ignore.
This section examines how the built world reflects deeper choices about value, power, and responsibility — and how the structures people rely on most are often the ones most quietly taken for granted.