Archive for the ‘Urbanism’ Category

Urban quality rising – cities are improving

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

Several cities in the world are now becoming good at creating fine environments for all.

An example of urban development and renewal is Hamburg, Germany. The old shipping and transit town by the river and water is making part of the old harbour areas into a modern city. Some of the old quays are changing into modern urban areas, and the thinking behind it is good and deep. Some say it has to do with crazyness what they do – especially with reference to the new concert hall.

Hamburg already has Elbe, Alster, Port City (13.000 seagoing ships arrive every year), Storehouse City, Fish Market, Reeperbahn, cultural activity of all kinds, and the special attitude to life is the most characteristic – you have to find out for yourself.

New developments are under way, and people love what they see and are moving in. It may be that culture is the engine of creation, and the Bilbao effect is also mentioned.

Hamburg now get several spectactular buildings like the new concert house Elbphilharmonie, a tower for viewing the harbour, big office buildings with a temporary architecture. Landmark buildings like the science museum and other museums are also there. The public areas are spacious, the thinking is about sustainability and community living.

The aim is to make this a city of short distances, so that walking and cycling is possible, all supported by a good public transport system. Underground parking is ample so that visitors, both business and tourists, have easy access. Other functions like eating, shopping, cultural activity are also rich. A cultural melting pot is considered by inviting individual participation into activities. The conscious city is what it is about.

There are many new homes on the waterfront, and people become more outgoing and participative, with good neighborhoods. There are meetings, community web-sites for information and opinion, and home offices are common.

The thinking is about balancing work, life, leisure by mingling residential and working areas including sport so that they are side by side.

So a grand city is in the making.

Your personal deep choices

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

In the future world of deep ecology we need education to understand what this is about. It has been likened to a life philosophy  and it will affect our western lifestyle profoundly. It is not about going back to nature, it is about understanding the place of man in the ecological system – an equal among equals. There is a living system all around us that we are part of, that is constantly developing, and we are developing with it. We must all find out what this is all about, and make it a personal choice to be part of it.

Some points to consider as this is not only about plants and fish, but ethics and systems too:

  • We must make less self centered choices about economic growth, even thinking of stopping economic growth or production in some areas. This thinking is completely new, but it should not mean having less, but distributing what there is fairly. A lot of what we make and is part of “economic growth” should be stopped. An obvious example are bombs. A lot of products should be recycled completely – e.g. metallic products. When we produce “enough” of a product it should become a commodity that everybody can have via the public domain at a fixed cost, and it becomes a common pool resource.
  • The system we have for health care should be for all, it is a public good. There are choices to be made, difficult ones about priorities. Our methods for developing cures are grossly inefficient, and people are dying because of it. Research into new ways and methods should be free and open and publicly funded. The drug companies are not the ones to do this.
  • Protecting the environment must become priority number one. This also have wide health implications.
  • We must use progressive technologies that are already out there and develop new ones – societal influence on development and use must dominate.
  • The understanding of human health must improve so that we know how our bodies work, including our brains, so that we can live well, eat and train sensibly based on knowledge.
  • Issues like abortion, gay rights, drinks and drugs and a million others should be either part of research programs where we find solutions, or less regulated or left to your private sphere.
  • Natural resources are a common pool for all and should be handled through common pool resource management. This is a prime area for corrupted practices, and must be stopped.
  • Political processes should be re-engineered to remove lobbying and forcing by special interest groups, many questions like roads, water, hospitals, schools should be run as a common pool resource and removed from politics. Corporate lobbying is a disease. Only individuals can take part in politics. Political influence on personal choice should be cut or removed.
  • Local politics and engagement should be rebuilt, participation should be increased, political principles should be renewed.
  • Corporations should not be allowed to become enormous so that they can threaten society in various ways. Small, agile, innovative enterprizes should be the norm.
  • Free trade is the normal system, but there is cooperation and coordination on selected products.
  • Product design, construction, distribution should all be ecologically founded, with a view to long life, use of resources, recirculation, practicality.
  • All decisions should be measured against an ecological yardstick: cost/benefit analysis
  • All communities, both urban/rural should be in a state of permanent renewal and development, or closed down as part of a willed process. Ghost cities are bad.
  • Excesses should be eliminated because people as ecological beings do not want them, as all products are measured ecologically.
  • Local culture must prevail – Americanization of the world is not desirable, and the same goes for Chinesifaction.
  • Education must be free up to and including university level, it must be broadened, travel to other parts of the world must be included to learn about foreign culture and philosophy, the exclusivity of intellectual training must be changed so that emotional, creative, intuitive abilities are recognised and trained. This way we can find our place in the world.
  • The monetary system and the system of markets must be changed profoundly – it’s basis must be broadened – now it is for the few that are running us around.
  • Forget politics – do not wait for something, it will never happen. World decisions will never materialize. All good systems are bottom-up: you decide for yourself, become an ecological being, express ecological views, see that it is good, others will join in, and you have an improved situation where you are. Do not think about everything, but stop thinking and get on with your life. You are the only one who can do it. “Obama” does not know about you and never will.

Think deeply and make a personal choice about deep ecology – it surely is a good idea.

So you think this is naive and far too wide – just start working on deep ecological principles and you will see that it is profound and much deeper and wider than these points.

City thinking – city doing – city living

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

For the first time in human history, more than half the world population is living in urban environments. Globalization has strengthened the important role of large cities as the preferred environment for the political, economical,  cultural work and social contact point of the world. Such contact is also increasing as world income is rising – in spite of the crises. Cities must handle sustainability, mobility and socio-diversity, and challenging infrastructure issues.

Socio-diversity is about all kind of people coming together having different backgrounds, nationalities, varying income levels, ages, religions, races, ways of life. We must create community feeling, build safety, find the willingness to use the streets, squares, parks, markets, buildings, facilities, malls.

Streets must not be lifeless – a certain degree of life and bustle must be there. We must stimulate the city. People must be seen, move, do things, throngs are sometimes what is wanted. Street mass and vibrant energy is also wanted.

Democratic participation in sustaining and forming the city must also be considered. Socio-diversity makes this difficult, but the users of the city should increasingly take part in making the city: new forms of democracy and consensus may be needed.

So half of us live in cities and we therefore must make sure it is good to be there. Surely there are many good cities – or partly good – but it is early days for many cities. But planners have seen the light and are at work putting theory into practice – the work – live – play towns are emerging. The city must also be felt to buzz and vibrate.

Pressure on city centers are increasing: find the best land, buy it, develop it so that you are in the thick of serving the needs of businesses and consumers throughout the day. Very often old parts of cities are pulled down, thereby losing some qualities. Commercial and community interests must be balanced.

Urban communities must now be sustainable communities, and 24/7 communities.

A city can not be a completely new place, it needs a history, a memory, a recognizable feel and touch. So planning should be a permanent process, do it all the time, but slowly to make time to think, gain experience and see what is good. We must take care of heritage, make the city grow, forming it, creating new and great activity spaces.

People of all ages must be accommodated and cared for so that they find the city a good place.

Working and leisure habits of city folk and travellers/tourists must be in the works. With increasing world travel taking place we must take into account that many people in the town does not know it very well and need assistanse and facilities to get on: advicing offices, marked paths, good signs….

Cars are a pain for the cities now, and car traffic must be changed. Many cities now have car-free zones, speed restrictions, traffic in tunnels. Car are also dynamic and create bustle and often convenience, so a broad thinking must be applied.

Communal areas areas and commercial areas within cities will offer, eating, walking, sport, rest and recuperation areas, and the division of labour between official and commercial interest may change – maybe into symbiosis.

Cultural activities like theatre, cinema, the arts, concerts of many kinds are also part of an urban community. This makes it relaxing and entertaining to be part of city life.

Innovative retail concepts will continue to grow, with more services added and a good connection to the experience scene. Performance, installation, sculpture will fill the urban retail space.

Street markets will increasingly return to urban areas and will be a method for local producers to develop a connection with the locals, and a way for office workers to develop a second stream of income by selling wares in the market.

Conversation will again become the best way to communicate: face to face is best.

Urban areas with access to meditation, yoga, stillness and quiet spaces will be able to attract a premium for their product offerings.

Artists will move into urban spaces to perform: more informal, performance, low-key, improvise, jugglers, illusionists, street artists.

Comprehensive long-term planning will be required, and the word comprehensive will take on a new meaning – it must include most things and be open to innovation and incompleteness: Energy, water, land, activities and much more.

Cities will increasingly be planned as walkable high-density compact towns, varied housing,  good ubiqutous mass public transport. Parks – including miniparks – , shops, schools, libraries, etc. must be located to reduce travel, with covered walkways, separate bikeways,  good pedestrian links. Planning of community events must also be integrated in the setup.

Sports areas and stadiums, facilities must be placed sensibly.

The character of each district should be taken care of: history, people, character, scenery, charm.  Also evaluate shopping areas, food places, plazas.

Air quality, noise levels should be monitored and kept acceptable. Too little noise makes a dead city?
Access to digital, online information is now found everywhere and urban information systems can be developed that can give you all that is happening in the city via screens in many places: only fantasy can tell what to include.

Towns should also have production facilities: growing and production of food, energy generation, light manufacturing – to see how things are done. Variety will come with that, making the city more buzzworthy.

There will be open spaces for recreation, wide sidewalks, small mini parks with play areas, others with quieter places where people can meet to play chess, domino, urban sport.

Parking is controlled and preferably located outside city centers, charging facilities for electric or hydrogen cars are found. Shared places for bikes, trams or low carbon buses are separated from the sidewalk by greenery like trees, bushes, green walls. Bikes, electric mopeds and stackable electric cars are allowed.

Intelligent transport systems with video surveillance will provide real-time updates and optimisation of traffic signals, demand management measures will be used.

Mobility is important. Road and rail systems are integrated using hubs and nodes with feeders. Wheelchairs are also part of the system. Public transport via trains, trams, rail systems, buses must be the preferred mode of travel – because it is the best: Good coverage, seamless connectivity, high reliability, comfort, low travel time, cheap fares.

A planning structure seems important, with zoning of functions, layers of planning, time horizons, some principles.

It seems cities are improving – we are getting better at fixing them up!

Keep the water in the city

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

Many cities have trouble getting rid of surface water collecting during heavy rains and flooding. New thinking is being developed – and practiced: the natural habitat has ways of doing this that are sustainable.

Plants, the soil and water have natural characteristics that can help clean the air, lower temperatures by cooling, remove particles,  suck up carbon dioxide by photosynthesis, make plants grow and so suck water. Plants and soil can absorb emissions, clean water and keep water in place for a long time.

The trick is to increase the number of plants, use permeable surfaces, cleaning ponds, open up rivers/streams or build rainbeds for plants. Making roofs green will absorb water  and make it use longer time to reach the drains. The amount of water flowing into the drainage system can be dramatically reduced in this way,  20-70 % depending on conditions.

Water cycle landscaping is a term used for large scale planning and integration of resources, including evaluation of energyuse in buildings.

The cities are ecological systems and must be treated as such. Broad systems/ecological urban planning will get us there and natural processes will be part of the design.

Growing food: What would nature do?

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Food production in the western world – and increasingly in other parts of the world – is industrialized. We use chemicals on a massive scale to produce food, industrial techniques are the norm. We rely heavily on chemicals to get the job done. The saying is that yield is high, prices are low. But the drawbacks are becoming obvious and some major qualities are obviously left out. Chemical agriculture has failed and must be replaced by better solutions.

The drawbacks are there for all to see: local communities are destroyed, plant diversity is reduced, the environment suffers, food quality is questioned, transport costs are high, human health is not so good, GM plants with unknown qualities, chemicals are entering the environment, the soil is damaged.

We must rebuild respect for the land and natural processes. The natural rhytms of the world – birds, fish, the growing season.

We want a healthy harvest from environmently friendly agriculture. This means natural fertilizers and disease and bug control methods, composting, no chemicals, rich biodiversity, good rich soil, equipment that do not harm the environment. A low maintenance landscape should also be the norm. The underground ecosystem and soil should be tested and kept in good order. We should invite helpful plants, insects and organisms to obtain organic pest control and good growth. Composting could produce methane for production of energy.

Plants should be chosen wisely so that they fit the environment, they should be rich in nutrients and taste, keep their freshness and look good.

These principles should be applied to farms, gardens, backyards, rooftops, verandas, urban areas and all.

The percentage of local organic produce is low in most countries, but encouraging signs are present. Interest is growing as the understanding of the problem grows.

A basic local supply is desirable for many reasons: local control, knowledge of what you eat, less transport, fresher food…. Use of local wisdom and experience should be encouraged, so that local conditions and plants are well taken care of.

Plants could also be used to feed animals in a small scale production.

Yield and cost are important factors, and evaluation of these factors will enter into the broad picture. The negative factors of chemical production must be measured.

Authorities must find their place in this new picture as new and more modern methods are introduced. These principles mean small scale  production, but the advantages could far outweigh possible increased costs.

Education must find its place: courses, books, DVDs, seminars, articles, organizations…..

No need to destroy the environment and make people ill – the solutions can be worked out when the principles are right.

Urban agriculture

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

Good cities often have much greenery. Large plants like trees and bushes are used for decorative purposes and to give a sense of natural habitat to city dwellers.

The planting is traditionally done on the street level, but is also now found on many levels in all kinds of building. The aim is to soften the image, make the building seem ecological. Architects increasingly use “greening” as a tool in their work – often as part of landscaping and developing sustainable cities.

Now another force is coming up: Growing plants for food in cities, distributing and consuming them locally. This is small scale agriculture aiming to be ecological and fully sustainable. It is now being developed through projects in several cities.

This is called community based agriculture, and is utilizing new concepts of thinking and technology. Among these are criticism of the unsound global economic food production system, edible landscape thinking, grow food where people are, create pretty neighbourhoods, hydroponics.

The places used are rooftops, greenhouses, allotments, community gardens, roadsides, parks, hydroponic installations.

On a larger scale this becomes quite complex – the physical environment, landscaping, economics, social considerations, the ecology. City regulation and educating people must be part of it. Schools often find a special place in these developments.

Agriculture is also animals, so rearing animals for food is part of the plans.

The ecological side weighs heavy – no pesticides, organic growth, water and waste management.

The aim is both to employ people and feed them, make products locally available so that little transport is needed.

The choice of produce is important – products must suit the urban conditions and restrictions – so fruits require trees, vegetables can be harvested, flowers, herbs etc. Animals must be small – chickens for eggs – but milk production can be possible, rearing and slaughtering big and many animals may be difficult.

These processes have started – we are learning and progressing.

And what about beekeping in the city: non-aggressive bees that is?  See New York Times

Developing a sense of nature

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

Environmental thinking is developing nicely, although good environmetal practices are somewhat lacking in many places.

The look of a landscape should be part of environmentalism – especially where humans have made changes.

Landscapes could be opened up for transport, building, viewing, business, leisure but increasing care must be taken to ensure that nature is part of our considerations – that we develop a sense of nature.

Beautiful scenery can be combined with human activity, landscaping can add new dimensions to roads, bridges, tunnels etc. to make an integrated solution as regards what nature made and what man made.

Agricultural areas, waterways, roads, railroads could all be designed so that they are in harmony with forests, mountains, rivers etc. in a holistic picture.

The next ambition could be to design urban spaces, agricultural areas and even industrial areas with a view to beauty and integration with nature.

Landscaping can add new dimensions to nature, nature can enhance manmade structures.

See also: ” MAD is a Beijing-based design office dedicated to innovation in architectural practice, landscape design and urban planning. MAD develops its unique concept of futurism through a persistent investigation of the symbiotic potentials amid nature and technology. MAD aspires to design in close harmony with nature, offering people the freedom to develop independent urban experiences.”

Noisy environment is polluted environment

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Lots of people are bothered by noise: in cities, from planes, factories, railways, traffic – there are quite a few sources. Road traffic is the main culprit.

Most countries now have regulations so that noise levels are supposed to be kept acceptable. Noise level is measured by Lekv which is the average noise level measured over one half hour. The WHO has recommendations. A noise level of 50 Lekv gives health risks, 60 Lekv and above is increasingly dangerous to public health. The consequences of noise are reduced sleep and risk of heart conditions. Researchers in the EU has found increased deaths from heart diseases when noise levels are above 58 Lekv. Death numbers of 60-100 per year have been estimated in little Norway alone.

The work to reduce noise is slipping up in most places. Noise reduction is very expensive, and cities and munis are avoiding these costs.

Cars are noise machines – also when they are standing still.

Noise control is part of environmental policy and can not be forgotten. People are dying from it, many are unhappy because of it. So let us not forget – global warming is not the sole environmental cause.

http://www.minus10db.dk/ufiles/Image/211358_holstdisc.jpg

Noise thinking – the Holst disk

Sustainable architecture for the future

Friday, February 19th, 2010

Louisiana Museum of Modern Art has shown some new ideas in architecture – a green pavilion

Restoring the natural environment

Friday, February 19th, 2010

An opencast gold mine in Nevada is a huge pit, an iron ore production facility in the Australian West where mountains are removed, a weapons testing and shooting range in Norway, producing oil from tar sands in Canada, chopping down rain-forests in many places: We do massive damage to nature resulting in problems of many kinds – visual catastrophes and environmental scandals.

Restoring what is destroyed is now a requirement – a wider view is needed.

And we go further: Now an extended view is advocated. Research and management should also cover free areas of nature, regulate them, look at limits to the spread of urbanity, coordinate animal husbandry and hunting, make sure rivers are clean, forests grow, take old cultures and thinking into account, see to it that biodiversity exists, old local plants are used and ask people to moving about to respect nature.

See links:

http://www.dirnat.no/multimedia.ap?id=44232

Mountain Fox – part of a project to reestablish the fox in Southern Norway.

Best of all – do not disturb nature in the first place.