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Peter Furth in the Press

Peter Furth for Northeastern Global News

Dozens are cars in standstill traffic in a city on a sunny day.

Congestion pricing approved in New York City. Expect it elsewhere soon, traffic expert says

“I don’t know of any movement to do it, but Boston needs it,” Northeastern University professor Peter Furth says of congestion pricing.
A crowd of pedestrians crossing a street.

Why are pedestrian traffic fatalities climbing in the US and not the rest of the world?

Northeastern expert says more pedestrian traffic and car-focused urban planning has increased encounters between pedestrians and vehicles.

How to develop a successful Dialogue of Civilizations program

Professors spend countless days, weeks, and months preparing to run Dialogue of Civilizations programs in countries around the world. But, they say, the work they put into preparing for a dialogue pales in comparison to what the students gain from the global experience.

Bold ideas take flight at TEDxNortheasternU

Commercial space flight. Empowering foster children. Human emotion and social resilence. These were among the many topics and initiatives speakers explored Saturday at TEDxNortheasternU, attended by 100 Northeastern students and designed to share bold ideas in the community.

Northeastern hosts NSF engineering conference

The College of Engineering is hosting the National Science Foundation’s annual Engineering Research and Innovation Conference, which will focus on transforming the field through the formation of robust partnerships.

Safe city biking: It can happen

Civil and environmental engineering professor Peter Furth has developed a way to map the traffic stress of city streets to visualize the safest biking routes.

3Qs: Light at the end of the traffic tunnel

With a new National Science Foundation grant, engineering professor Peter Furth will study traffic signals that communicate with each other in order to make traffic patterns more efficient.

Spotlight on sustainability

Student fair brings home the lessons of what makes greener living a global priority

Pedal pusher

Engineering professor, students plan citywide bike paths An earthy mobile of cyclists hangs above Peter Furth’s office computer. A gift from his children, the dangling artifact originates from an African country where bikes are a primary mode of transportation, and is a manifestation of the civil and environmental engineering professor’s passion: bicycles as transport. “I […]