The Infrastructure Show - Podcasts
The Infrastructure Show - Podcasts
Professor Joseph Schofer, Thomas Herman, and Marion Sours·Hosted by Joseph Schofer, Thomas Herman and Marion Sours·10 episodes
The Infrastructure Show consists of monthly podcasts in which some of the nation’s top infrastructure experts discuss with host Professor Joseph Schofer of Northwestern University specific infrastructure projects, technologies, processes, financing arrangements, and the condition of our infrastructure today, and what can be done about it.
Why listen
The Infrastructure Show turns roads, rail tunnels, water systems, bridges, sidewalks, disaster response, and public works finance into clear conversations with the people who build and manage them. Host Professor Joseph Schofer of Northwestern University brings a calm, expert-guided style that works especially well for listeners interested in cities, transportation, engineering, government, and how everyday systems actually function.
Episodes
Data centers are being built rapidly to meet the exploding computational demands of artificial intelligence and cloud computing. As they proliferate, data centers are stressing the supply of electric power, water, and land, and as a result, they are meeting local resistance. To understand the resource demands of data centers, we talk with Shaolei Ren,
Tunnel boring machines (TBMs) are large, integrated machines that make tunneling faster, safer, and more efficient. To dig into the details of how TBMs work, we talk with Mike Mooney, Grewcock Distinguished Chair Professor of Underground Construction and Tunneling, and Professor of both Civil and Environmental Engineering and Mechanical Engineering, at the Colorado School of
Chicago, the center of North American railroading, is also the center of rail congestion, in part because it has so many level crossings. Among the busiest was on 75th Street, on the Southwest Side of the city where trains from four railroads meet at a 90-degree grade crossing. In 2025, this junction was converted to
Sidewalks are important links in almost every passenger trip. When they fall into disrepair, or where they are incomplete, they create hazards and barriers for pedestrians. Denver, like many cities, left sidewalk maintenance and funding to adjacent property owners, leading to condition problems and continuity gaps. To address this situation, the city recently established its
In September 2024, Hurricane Helene played havoc with North Carolina’s highway system, striking the western part of the state which has rarely seen hurricanes. The NC Department of Transportation worked aggressively to protect both physical assets and people during the storm and in restoration efforts after Helene passed. The agency earned several industry awards for
A major role of the U.S. Coast Guard is responding to waterborne disasters. Managing large scale disasters usually calls for multi-agency collaboration based on shared information. In such situations, the Coast Guard relies on Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to provide a common operating picture to all collaborators. To learn how the Coast Guard uses GIS
Orange County, California has been treating wastewater and injecting it into its groundwater supply system since 2008. This is the largest indirect – cycled through the aquifer – potable water reuse system in the world. The treated recycled water has properties close to distilled water. To explore this process in detail, we talk with Mehul
Motor fuel taxes have long been the primary source of both federal and state funds for U.S. highways. In recent decades, the sufficiency of fuel taxes has come into question as vehicles have gained in fuel efficiency and electric vehicles have become more common. As the time nears for the US Congress to re-authorize the
Decades in the making, the Hudson River Tunnel Project is adding two railway tunnels between New Jersey and New York to serve Amtrak and New Jersey Transit riders. These tunnels will increase rail capacity and add critical redundancy to the network. To learn about this project, we’re talking with Thomas Prendergast, CEO of the Gateway
Irving, Texas, a city of about 255,000 people near Dallas, is growing fast, and its water supply and wastewater systems must be upgraded to support rapidly increasing demands. To do this, Irving has created a multi-year, citywide program to maintain and expand its water management systems. To learn more about this large-scale municipal infrastructure program,
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