As the metropolitan region grapples with congestion affecting millions daily, infrastructure leaders outline competing visions for metros, buses and cycling networks.
A deep dive into municipal expenditure figures shows how São Paulo is allocating resources across transport, housing and public services—and where the gaps are widening.
After a decade of grassroots activism, residents face crucial decisions about the future of the neighbourhood's gathering space as property developers circle and city resources dwindle.
As São Paulo pushes forward with its ambitious Line 6 extension into the suburbs, local voices from Taboão da Serra reveal the daily trade-offs communities face in the city's transport modernisation.
As the Metropolitan Transit Company struggles with aging infrastructure, São Paulo looks to London and Singapore for lessons in modernizing a sprawling urban network.
Community members in one of São Paulo's oldest neighbourhoods share concerns about construction timelines and displacement risks as the city pursues infrastructure modernisation.
While other major cities struggle with housing and employment gaps, São Paulo's pragmatic approach to welcoming migrants is drawing international attention.
As the Metropolitan Transport Company prepares major upgrades to metro lines and bus networks, key figures outline competing visions for the city's mobility future.
Chronic understaffing and budget cuts are stretching response times across the city, leaving residents in Zona Leste, Zona Sul and beyond vulnerable when seconds count.
As the city grapples with mounting landfill pressure, voices from Grajaú to Vila Mariana reveal what sustainability means when your neighbourhood bears the burden.
Residents of Bom Retiro and Brás neighbourhoods speak out about economic pressures, family separation, and hopes for reform amid shifting migration landscape.
As funding cuts threaten to close campus services across USP and UNICAMP, working-class residents in the periphery face an impossible decision about their children's futures.
Three decades of neglected favelas, speculative real estate, and failed municipal planning have trapped millions in a system that no single policy can easily fix.