As water rationing enters its third month across Nairobi, key stakeholders reveal starkly different timelines for fixing the capital's infrastructure collapse.
As crises mount worldwide, Nairobi's neighbourhood organisations are proving more nimble and locally rooted than their counterparts in larger global cities.
As construction intensifies on the Ngong Road elevated expressway, businesses and commuters share mixed feelings about disruption, opportunity, and the city's racing against time.
A decade of mounting waste, water scarcity and air pollution forced Kenya's capital to reimagine its relationship with the environment—here's the journey that brought us here.
With regional instability intensifying across the Horn of Africa and beyond, Nairobi's growing expatriate and refugee populations must navigate unprecedented policy decisions that will determine their future in the city.
New data reveals stark disparities in school completion rates, teacher-to-student ratios, and university accessibility across the capital's neighbourhoods.
As Nairobi absorbs record numbers of migrants and refugees, the city's decentralised approach offers lessons—and warnings—for cities from Cape Town to Toronto.
New analysis of incident reports and emergency response metrics exposes patterns in security challenges facing the capital's fastest-growing neighbourhoods.
Fresh statistics on classroom overcrowding, dropout rates, and infrastructure gaps paint a sobering picture of learning conditions across Kenya's capital.
As the City County rolls out revised zoning policies, residents worry that Westlands, Kilimani, and emerging estates could become playgrounds for investors rather than homes for ordinary Nairobians.
As the capital's environmental initiatives reach a critical juncture, city leaders must decide between scaling up or scaling back costly sustainability programmes.
As the capital grapples with aging water systems and traffic gridlock, senior administrators and policy analysts outline competing visions for tackling the metropolis's most pressing governance challenges.
As the city grapples with plastic waste, water scarcity, and air pollution, stakeholders face critical decisions on funding and enforcement that will determine whether sustainability pledges become reality.
What started as neighbours sharing food during the 2008 post-election crisis has evolved into a sophisticated network of community-led welfare programmes that now serve over 40,000 residents across Nairobi's largest informal settlement.
While cities like Singapore and Barcelona embrace integrated transit-oriented development, Nairobi's ad-hoc approach to urban sprawl leaves millions in informal settlements searching for sustainable solutions.