
Opener: Top of the world
We've been around the globe putting cities to the Monocle metrics test.
Quality of life: The World's top 25 most liveable cities
Monocle's researchers have spent the past months putting the world's leading cities to the test to find the best places for you to make your base.
Quality of life: Nice restaurants, but...
For a third year running, Italian cities failed to make our list.
Quality of life: 01 Zurich
Zürich leaps into the winning spot with its extraordinary urban plans.
Quality of life: 02 Copenhagen
Our 2008 winner is pipped at the post but is a city we still admire Metropolitan life coupled with intimacy, Scandinavian welfare, low crime rates and a relaxed atmosphere - an ideal combination, right?
Quality of life: 03 Tokyo
Tokyo runs like clockwork and its service culture beats any competition
Quality of life: Getting interactive
Increasingly, how cities are run is evolving to include grass roots organisations - particularly when elected officials fail in their civic mission.
Quality of life: 04 Munich
Our 2007 winner slips as others up their game.
Quality of life: 05 Helsinki
Defying its small size, Helsinki continues to advance eastwards
Quality of life: 06 Stockholm
Living in the European Green Capital of 2010 has its major plus points
Quality of life: 07 Vienna
A city with big ambitions, Vienna has high hopes for its hub status.
Quality of life: 08 Paris
If Paris improves its suburbs, it's on its way to offering the full package.
Quality of life: 09 Melbourne
Melbourne holds its position but must do more about its urban sprawl.
Quality of life: 10 Berlin
Berlin is the home of start-ups. Shame it's not more connected.
Quality of life: 11 Honolulu
Honolulu is more than a pretty face, and is our top (and only) US city.
Quality of life: We can make it
City halls need a new focus on helping small businesses.
Quality of life: 12 Madrid
Its strength is its adaptability, which is why Madrid's risen up the ranks.
Quality of life: 13 Sydney
Progress is a little unforthcoming but the Sydney lifestyle is enviable.
Quality of life: 14 Vancouver
Canada's sharp-looking outpost gets ready to take its Olympic bow.
Quality of life: 15 Barcelona
So far, changes have been cosmetic and the routine is getting tired.
Quality of life: 16 Fukuoka
Fukuoka edges ahead because of its great connections and easy living.
Quality of life: 17 Oslo
Oslo bursts in this year thanks to the wise use of its oil wealth.
Quality of life: 18 Singapore
Singapore is adding a softer side to its reputation as a business city.
Quality of life: 20 Auckland
Re-formed Auckland re-enters our Top 25 after a year's absence.
Quality of life: 19 Montreal
Quality of life is uneven in Montréal but its liberalism is admirable.
Quality of life: 21 Amsterdam
Amsterdam is green-thinking but may be a bit too relaxed.
Quality of life: 22 Kyoto
Kyoto has a sense of its own identity and a commitment to craftsmanship.
Quality of life: 23 Hamburg
Hamburg's economic and educational reforms get top marks.
Quality of life: 24 Geneva
Geneva lacks the oomph of a big city but that's also its beauty.
Quality of life: 25 Lisbon
Lisbon comes last but we're looking forward to seeing how plans develop.
Affairs Report: Please turn off the lights
Do cities have a sell-by date?
Americas Briefing: Changing Chattanooga
Chattanooga, Tennessee, was known in the 1960s as "the dirtiest city in America".
Americas Briefing: It's catching
How do you find out how sick a city is?
Q&A: Q&A - Gilberto Kassab
Monocle talks to Sao Paulo's mayor on his views on quality of life.
Americas Briefing: Zero hero
A new zero-emissions car could soon be joining the ranks of Mexico City's already colourful taxi fleet.
Africa/Middle East Briefing: Mr Motivator
Moïse Katumbi, the first democratically elected governor of Congo's mineral-rich Katanga province, has begun to turn the place round since he took over in 2007.
Q&A: Q&A - Nir Barkat
Jerusalem's mayor - Nir Barket tells us his plans for improving quality of life in his hometown.
Africa/Middle East Briefing: On the rails
Abu Dhabi has decided it needs a public transport network.
Africa/Middle East Briefing: Clean sweep
Unlike most other cities in West Africa, Ouagadougou impresses by its orderliness.
Oceania Briefing: Pixel perfect
Work begins this July on Australia’s first carbon-zero office building.
Oceania Briefing: Place to stay
Christchurch, the largest city on New Zealand’s South Island, has decided to give itself a revamp in a bid to stop its young generation moving away.
Oceania Briefing: Long lunch
New Zealanders have got their priorities right.
Oceania Briefing: Q&A - Lisa Scaffidi
Lisa Scadffidi defines true quality of life
Europe Briefing: Benchmark for kids
Imagine being a kid in a world built for adults, having to sit on gigantic sofas, climb up towering staircases and open huge doors.
Q&A: Q&A - Corine Mauch
Corine Mauch lays down her views on quality of life in Zürich.
Europe Briefing: Smoke screen
Turkey is promoting a healthier lifestyle: from 19 July, smoking will be banned in restaurants, cafés and bars.
Europe Briefing: Talking rubbish
Would you be more likely to throw rubbish in a bin if it told you a joke as a thank you?
Asia Briefing: Q&A - Takashi Kawamura
Nagoya's mayor explains his ideal quality of life.
Asia Briefing: Happy shoppers
In China's impoverished countryside, the route to prosperity is to head to the city, where even dangerous or menial work holds the promise of money to send home to the family.
Asia Briefing: Perfect alibi
The vast numbers of empty steel-and-glass towers on Beijing's skyline are a developer's night-mare -but a relief to owners of the remaining traditional alleyway houses in their shadows.
Asia Briefing: Old timers
Women in Japan can now expect to live to 86, according to the latest WHO figures.
Affairs Essays: Reclaim the street
What’s the future of the city?
Affairs Essays: Art and soul
When it comes to artful administration and passionate planning, museums and their directors have a lot to teach the cities they sit in.
Affairs Essays: Austerity aesthetics
Last autumn's financial meltdown means there's less money available for public buildings.
Affairs Essays: Dense and sensibility
After Israel was founded in 1948, the speed at which it built towns for the influx of refugees meant that town planning was often rushed.
Affairs Essays: Turkish lessons
If it ain't broke, don't fix it... Some of the best ideas for improving a neighbourhood are surprisingly old-fashioned.
Affairs Essays: Dirty London
London has once again topped an internet poll as Europe's dirtiest city, an epithet it has born since the 17th century.
Affairs Essays: Can African cities work?
Faced by a failure of civic government, many African cities rely on private firms and individuals to carry out basic services such as collecting rubbish.
Affairs Essays: Scale watching
Why do some streets just seem wrong or shops leave us feeling uncomfortable?
Affairs Essays: The Ancient Greeks were streets ahead
The cities of the Ancient Greeks, with their wide, straight streets and simple grid patterns, were not just the result of a desire for order but also the offspring of necessity.
Affairs Essays: Make some noise
City streets need to be pleasant places to live but also home to small businesses, craft makers and even the odd car mechanic.
Affairs Essays: Secret treasures
These outposts may not score highly on the Monocle city metrics - they're not very well connected for starters.
Affairs Report: Full-speed ahead
Obama is allocating $8bn for high-speed rail - but much of the expertise will come from Europe.
Affairs Report: Talk of the town
From a Beijing air-quality expert to an Italian architect, these urban planning visionaries have ideas with the potential to transform our urban world - and soon.
Affairs Essays: Vive le flâneur!
If many modern urban planners had their way, the city would be divided into strictly designated zones for living and working with little opportunity for chance encounters, surprise and, above all, sauntering.

Business Report: Korea moves
Global property markets may be undergoing a brutal shakedown but big corporations and sovereign wealth funds have not stopped shopping.
Q&A: Ask the boss
What makes a city a great place to do business in?
Business Report: Hearts of the city
Identikit suburban projects and architects without imagination have sullied the reputation of property development but Monocle has tracked down five firms putting passion, innovation and social conscience back into the world.

Culture Report: Reel Estates
If your town needs a tourism boost, there is nothing more likely to bring in the punters than a blockbusting film set on your street.
Diary: Music
Monocle's summer arts calendar creams off the pick of the albums to line up, the books to take to the beach, the shows to saunter round and the movies to get to grips with in the evening - preferably in an open-air cinema in Melbourne.
Diary: Film
Monocle picks the key movies for the summer and looks ahead at the Cannes hits coming our way.
Diary: Visual arts
From Tokyo to Tuymans, here are six of the best in a crowded summer art calendar.
Diary: Books and media
Some to sling in your beach bag, others to savour at home, our literary pick encompasses fiction, travel, politics, media and e-books.
Culture Report: British Council, UK
Culture Report: Botton publishing - London
Culture Report: Sale 01: Paris
This month Phillips de Pury adds four new thematic sales to their annual calendar, beginning with Now: Art of the 21st Century on 26 September in London.
Culture Report: Well hung
Just over a year old, Iain Dawson's contemporary art space in Sydney presents the best of emerging Australian and Asian painters, sculptors, photographers and video-makers.
Culture Report: Film
Faced with the recession and competition from retail giants and online sellers, small bookshops have been disappearing fast from our high streets. But there's one London gem that's a textbook example of how to buck the trend.
Culture Report: Music
Faced with the recession and competition from retail giants and online sellers, small bookshops have been disappearing fast from our high streets. But there's one London gem that's a textbook example of how to buck the trend.

Design Report: Building the dream
Engineering company Arup is the name that connects the Sydney Opera House to the proposed Guggenheim museum in Abu Dhabi.
Fashion Briefing: Florentine export
Beginning his career with a degree in architecture, Elio Ferraro soon made the transition into fashion.
Fashion Briefing: Big chief
"We make the type of tie you can put on without having your shirt tucked in," says Emil Corsillo, who, with his brother Sandy, founded The Hill-Side, a new casual neckwear and handkerchief label.
Fashion Briefing: Cycle therapy
A year ago, Tyler Clemens and Abe Burmeister founded Outlier, which makes bike-to-boardroom clothing in quick-dry, Swiss-made Schoeller and New Zealand merino wool.
Fashion Briefing: Arch nemesis
When the soles of your Visvim Foley GY FOLK degenerate, you can now have the soles replaced while you wait at the new "footwear laboratory" at F.I.L. Tokyo.
Fashion Briefing: Master stroke
It takes more than a bit of sun, sand and salt water for the Swiss to sacrifice looking sophisticated, and since 1922 they have largely been keeping native swimwear brand Lahco secret.
Fashion Briefing: At your leisure
Korean-born womenswear designer Jean Yu has unveiled a simple dressing gown collection.
Fashion Briefing: Silky way
Kimono-inspired prints and Swiss silk, finished off with a Made-in-Switzerland label, are the secrets behind Kazu Huggler's couture and ready-to-wear lines.
Fashion Briefing: Weaving magic
Ryoko Tanabe launched accessories brand Iroe almost five years ago, following an education in weaving at Bunka Women's University and working at various textile producers in Tokyo.
Fashion Briefing: Foxy feet
With work experience for Zac Posen and Manolo Blahnik under her belt, Texan shoe designer Nicole Brundage moved to Milan from the US five years ago.
Fashion Briefing: Hats on
A hat from Borsalino usually guarantees you'll turn a few heads.
Q&A: Q&A - James Perse
How important is quality of life when choosing a base?
Design Report: Power block
We have fallen for elements of urban living in many different cities and have often dreamed of being given a city block where we could bring them together.
Design Report: Air time
Cities are combating urban sprawl by adding another layer -on their roofs.
Design Report: City revival
In New York, Tobruk, Foshan, Beirut and Stockholm there are pioneering architectural projects that will transform their cities.
Fashion: Short story
Urban beach clubs call for clothing that doesn’t sacrifice elegance in the pursuit of sun worship.

Edits: Shop idols
Sometimes it takes just one retailer to unite an entire neighbourhood and restore a sense of old-fashioned community between residents and other shop owners, restaurateurs and civil servants.
End Point: Observation - Issue 25
What would win your heart - an alluring first impression or a tempting parting glance?