Dear all, We are pleased to share our co-editedspecial issue on the theme of ‘Knowing Urban Environments in a DigitallyMediated Age’, for Environment and Planning F: Philosophy, Theory, Models,Methods and Practice. The issue is home to seven papers that offer theoreticaland creative interventions to the question of ‘what constitutes knowledge ofurban environments in the digital age?’ The papers draw from creative andtheoretical projects to collectively propose alternative ways of knowing thecity through participatory, sensory, and more-than-human approaches. Byunsettling dominant methods of measurement, mapping, and representation, weargue that they foreground reflexivity, relationality, and epistemic humility.Despite being increasingly mediated by digital and data-driven technologies,which purport ideas of objectivity, we call for a critical examination of howwe might maintain a healthy scepticism of objectivity in digital systems whilesimultaneously implementing technologies into our modes of enquiry about thecity. Ultimately, the issue opens up possibilities for more plural and criticalforms of urban knowledge in a digitally mediated age. But this is about morethan cities; the issue contributes to wider fields of study that questiondominant knowledge systems and pose the question of how we might think and actotherwise for a better future with technology. Link to full issue here: https://journals.sagepub.com/toc/EPF/currentand you can find our editorial here. Güneş &Mike (Duggan) Dr Güneş Tavmen Lecturer inDigital Infrastructures Department ofDigital Humanities King’s CollegeLondon