My Weird Prompts

How Singapore Solved High-Rise Child Falls

24 min · 24 jun 2026
aflevering How Singapore Solved High-Rise Child Falls artwork

Beschrijving

When your front door opens onto a balcony 150 feet up, baby gates won't save you. In Hong Kong and Singapore, where 90% of the population lives in towers, child falls from high-rises aren't treated as inevitable tragedy—they're treated as a solved engineering problem. This episode explores the surprisingly cheap, boring mechanical fixes that cut window fall incidents by 60% in Singapore, from $15 window restrictors to vertical balcony railings that eliminate footholds. We dig into why these solutions haven't been imported by cities building upward worldwide, and what the gap between where families actually live and what safety infrastructure assumes says about the future of urban childproofing.

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aflevering Loving Skyscrapers Without Selling Out Your City artwork

Loving Skyscrapers Without Selling Out Your City

A listener in Jerusalem named Daniel wrestles with a deeply personal urban dilemma: he finds genuine comfort and wonder in skyscrapers, but his architect wife Hannah argues they're resource nightmares, and he sees firsthand how luxury towers sit empty while half the city lives in poverty. This episode takes both sides seriously—the emotional truth of loving tall buildings and the physical, social, and economic costs of how they're actually built. We quantify the ghost tower phenomenon in Jerusalem, explore counter-examples from Tokyo and Singapore, and ask whether there's a version of high-rise urbanism that actually serves people rather than just capital. If you've ever looked up at a skyline and felt conflicted, this one's for you.

24 jun 202626 min