Data and Maps Can Keep Urbanism Claims Honest
A practical note on using datasets, maps and methods before repeating a city claim.

Urbanism claims often sound plausible until they are mapped. A useful newsroom checks boundaries, time periods, definitions, missing data and who collected the numbers.
Why it matters
Urbanism stories become useful when they connect design language to daily life: homes, commutes, street safety, public space, cost, climate resilience and the official process behind a decision.
What to check next
| Question | Useful source |
|---|---|
| What stage is this at? | Planning application, committee agenda, consultation page or official project update. |
| Who is affected? | Residents, commuters, renters, local businesses, disabled users and nearby public services. |
| What can still change? | Funding, design conditions, delivery date, appeal risk, traffic orders and public comments. |
Source trail
Use London Datastore, TfL open data, ONS releases, planning data and clear methodology notes.
Autor
London Urbanism Desk
Colaborador editorial.
