Global trade tensions are reshaping supply chains—and your wallet. Here's what residents need to know about tariffs, reshoring, and the hidden costs heading your way.
A wave of legal mural projects and grassroots design initiatives is transforming industrial neighbourhoods, sparking debate about who gets to shape the city's visual identity.
From intimate cinema experiences in Wiedikon to world-class theatre on Bahnhofstrasse, here's where to catch the city's most vital cultural offerings this summer.
As tech entrepreneurs transform districts like Wiedikon and the lower Limmat Valley, everyday residents face a familiar tradeoff: vibrant new services or soaring living costs.
As vacancy rates plummet and rents soar, city councillors face pivotal decisions on zoning reform, affordable housing mandates, and transport infrastructure that could reshape neighbourhoods from Wiedikon to Oerlikon.
As world-class universities and vocational schools attract talent globally, Switzerland's largest city grapples with digital equity and affordability challenges that mirror struggles in London, Singapore, and Toronto.
Geopolitical tensions and economic uncertainty are forcing Switzerland's largest employers to rethink hiring strategies, with ripple effects already visible across the city's financial and pharmaceutical sectors.
A century of transformation has taken the city's food culture from traditional Swiss inns to a cosmopolitan landscape where Michelin stars sit alongside immigrant-owned family restaurants.
As Zurich's small business owners grapple with rising costs and shifting consumer habits, what happens at the corner shop tells you everything about the city's economic health.
Rising vacancy rates, hybrid work persistence, and geopolitical uncertainty are forcing property owners and investors to rethink their strategies across the city's prime commercial districts.
Petra Keller's innovative concierge service is transforming how high-net-worth visitors experience the city, blending Swiss precision with personalized storytelling.
Decades of economic opportunity, political upheaval abroad, and shifting Swiss attitudes have transformed the city from a homogeneous banking hub into a global crossroads.
As living expenses soar across the city, major employers are shifting recruitment strategies and losing mid-career talent to cheaper Swiss alternatives.
From the 1990s expansion vision to today's €2.8 billion Durchmesserlinie project, the city's infrastructure evolution reveals hard choices, shifting priorities, and a population that has tripled its daily commuter demands.
As international travel rebounds faster than predicted, savvy operators in the city's dining and accommodation sectors are already reaping rewards—while newcomers spot untapped pockets of opportunity.