Cities That Think: Reasoning AI for the Urban Century
Zoning is where optimism goes to meet the municipal code. A proposed housing site may look perfect on a dashboard: good transport access, strong demand, reasonable land cost, favourable development projections. Then the real planning work begins. Height restrictions appear. Environmental buffers interfere. Community priorities conflict. A flood-risk layer changes the cost-benefit story. A transport engineer likes the site. A housing officer likes the urgency. A neighbourhood group likes neither the density nor the traffic. The question is no longer “what is likely to happen?” It is “what should be allowed, under which constraints, with what trade-offs, and who can justify that decision in public?” ...