By JONAH LEHRER
Published: December 17, 2010
For Geoffrey West, the world is always most compelling at its most abstract. As a theoretical physicist in search of fundamental laws, he likes to compare his work to that of Kepler, Galileo and Newton. “I’ve always wanted to find the rules that govern everything,” he says. “It’s amazing that such rules exist. It’s even more amazing that we can find them.”
West wasn’t ready to retire, and so he began searching for subjects that needed his skill set.
Eventually he settled on cities: the urban jungle looked chaotic — all those taxi horns and traffic jams — but perhaps it might be found to obey a short list of universal rules. “We spend all this time thinking about cities in terms of their local details, their restaurants and museums and weather,” West says. “I had this hunch that there was something more, that every city was also shaped by a set of hidden laws.”
And so West set out to solve the City. As he points out, this is an intellectual problem with immense practical implications. Urban population growth is the great theme of modern life, one that’s unfolding all across the world, from the factory boomtowns of Southern China to the sprawling favelas of Rio de Janeiro. As a result, for the first time in history, the majority of human beings live in urban areas. (The numbers of city dwellers are far higher in developed countries — the United States, for instance, is 82 percent urbanized.) Furthermore, the pace of urbanization is accelerating as people all over the world flee the countryside and flock to the crowded street.
...
West wanted to begin with a blank page, to study cities as if they had never been studied before. He was tired of urban theory — he wanted to invent urban science.
...
After two years of analysis, West and Bettencourt discovered that all of these urban variables could be described by a few exquisitely simple equations.
...
The only way to really understand the city, West says, is to understand its deep structure, its defining patterns, which will show us whether a metropolis will flourish or fall apart. We can’t make our cities work better until we know how they work. And, West says, he knows how they work.
...
West: he saw the metropolis as a sprawling organism, similarly defined by its infrastructure. (The boulevard was like a blood vessel, the back alley a capillary.) This implied that the real purpose of cities, and the reason cities keep on growing, is their ability to create massive economies of scale, just as big animals do. After analyzing the first sets of city data — the physicists began with infrastructure and consumption statistics — they concluded that cities looked a lot like elephants. In city after city, the indicators of urban “metabolism,” like the number of gas stations or the total surface area of roads, showed that when a city doubles in size, it requires an increase in resources of only 85 percent.
This straightforward observation has some surprising implications. It suggests, for instance, that modern cities are the real centers of sustainability. According to the data, people who live in densely populated places require less heat in the winter and need fewer miles of asphalt per capita. (A recent analysis by economists at Harvard and U.C.L.A. demonstrated that the average Manhattanite emits 14,127 fewer pounds of carbon dioxide annually than someone living in the New York suburbs.) Small communities might look green, but they consume a disproportionate amount of everything. As a result, West argues, creating a more sustainable society will require our big cities to get even bigger. We need more megalopolises.
...
Link para o artigo integral:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/19/magazine/19Urban_West-t.html?_r=3&pagewanted=all
22 de julho de 2012
21 de julho de 2012
Esboços da utopia

in:
A Terceira Noite
Publicado por:
Rui Bebiano
em 23 de Maio de 2011
Projecto de «cidade vertical» dos irmãos Vesnine (1934)
O governo soviético da década de 1920 foi o primeiro da História a deter um poder de tal forma pleno e colossal que lhe permitiu conceber de raiz redes de grandes bairros e até cidades inteiras, determinando rigorosamente o número, a dimensão e o desenho dos edifícios e das ruas, bem como a taxa de ocupação em cada área ou estrutura. Podia também escolher sem constrangimentos onde construir, como projectar o crescimento, como articular os novos espaços dentro de um equilíbrio idealizado entre a cidade e o campo, chegando a conceber e tipificar o aspecto, a exacta localização e mesmo o pormenorizado funcionamento das fábricas, dos escritórios, das escolas, dos hospitais, dos armazéns e dos edifícios destinados à habitação. O planeamento urbano num Estado todo ele planificado – que foi aquilo em que a Rússia soviética se transformou a partir de 1928 com a entrada em funcionamento do 1º plano quinquenal – não era uma ocupação menor; tratava-se, de facto, de organizar em larga escala e a partir da base, num esforço de design macro-comunitário, todo um universo que se pretendia radicalmente novo e profundamente dinâmico. Diante de tal projecto, como não compreender o entusiasmo dos quadros políticos, engenheiros, arquitectos, economistas ou geógrafos a quem foi atribuída essa tarefa gigantesca?
A planificação urbana, associada ao design do futuro, requeria entretanto a disseminação de uma mentalidade e de um esforço da imaginação estreitamente ligados à ficção científica e à utopia. Se este padrão de tarefas é já de si exaltante, num escala forçosamente menor, em sociedades não-revolucionárias, durante os anos épicos da Revolução Russa arquitectos e urbanistas puderam dar-se ao luxo de repensar uma nação inteira, fazendo encaixar estruturas e anti-estruturas em planos económicos ávidos e que se exigiam ultra-rápidos, projectando os ambientes dentro dos quais se deveria desenvolver aquilo que, sem a sombra da dúvida, se pensava vir a ser uma humanidade nova e socialista. A diferença em relação ao modelo tradicional da ficção científica ou da especulação artística era, todavia, imposta por um conjunto de circunstâncias: de um lado limitações materiais e constrangimentos políticos impostos pela linha bolchevique, do outro a necessidade de trabalhar para pessoas reais e tendo em vista um futuro iminente. Todavia, durante alguns anos de grande liberdade criadora a contradição não parecia conter qualquer drama.
Assim, por algum tempo, antes do recuo político imposto em meados da década de 1930, na Rússia Soviética o tratamento do espaço no seu relacionamento com a privacidade e a vida comunitária intersectou continuamente os grandes temas da especulação utópica libertos pelas possibilidades criadores projectadas pela Revolução de 1917 considerada na sua fase épica, ainda aberta à ousadia e à possibilidade de materializar o imaginável. Os edifícios fantásticos da arquitectura construtivista soviética projectada por Vladimir Tatlin, por El Lissitzky ou pelos irmãos Leonid, Victor e Alexander Vesnine, tal como os programas «desurbanistas» de Moisei Ginzburg, foram projectados dentro deste conceito simultaneamente revolucionário e utilitário que durou poucos anos.
...
Leitura: Richard Stites (1989), Utopian Vision and Experimental Life in the Russian Revolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
link para o texto integral:
http://aterceiranoite.org/?s=esboços+da+utopia
20 de julho de 2012
Urban Prototyping
Summary
Urban Prototyping is a collaborative research initiative of the School of Design and Environment (SDE) and the School of Computing (SOC) of the National University of Singapore (NUS) with the aim to develop an integrative tool for design, planning and management of the built environment in a sustainable way, based on the application of advanced technologies of Virtual Prototyping.
Objectives
Urban Prototyping intends to harness the growing computing power and network capabilities as well as the increasing availability of urban metabolic data to create a collaborative environment for urban information and simulation modelling. The project focus on the development of a new and integrative platform for computer aided planning and design on urban level that is able:
Urban planning and design in Asia recently has to deal with the fastest urbanisation processes in history of mankind. Besides, the demands of sustainability are confronting planning and design of the built environment with new challenges. The dynamic and complexity of these demands are pushing the methodological boundaries of traditional planning and design approaches, asking for faster procedures, a better integration of data and of more diverse fields of knowledge, a better coordination between different planning institutions, the participation of more specialized experts in different fields, more complex results and a better control of performances. Urban Prototyping will contribute to these challenges by offering an integrative tool for computer aided planning and design on urban level.
Mais informação:
http://sde.nus.edu.sg/rsh/UrbanPrototyping/Home.html
Ver também:
The announcement of 5 PhD scholarships in urban prototyping at the National University of Singapore (NUS)
Urban Prototyping is a collaborative research initiative of the School of Design and Environment (SDE) and the School of Computing (SOC) of the National University of Singapore (NUS) with the aim to develop an integrative tool for design, planning and management of the built environment in a sustainable way, based on the application of advanced technologies of Virtual Prototyping.
Objectives
Urban Prototyping intends to harness the growing computing power and network capabilities as well as the increasing availability of urban metabolic data to create a collaborative environment for urban information and simulation modelling. The project focus on the development of a new and integrative platform for computer aided planning and design on urban level that is able:
- To integrate different knowledge fields and databases on urban level.
- To synchronise simulation models that are developed for different fields of urban planning and design.
- To visualise the impact and performances of planning and design interventions.
- To screen the consistency of planning and design decisions in different fields and on different scales (clash detection).
- To optimise planning and design scenario's with regard to quality and efficiency.
- To enable real time interactions between different planning institutions, experts and other participants.
Urban planning and design in Asia recently has to deal with the fastest urbanisation processes in history of mankind. Besides, the demands of sustainability are confronting planning and design of the built environment with new challenges. The dynamic and complexity of these demands are pushing the methodological boundaries of traditional planning and design approaches, asking for faster procedures, a better integration of data and of more diverse fields of knowledge, a better coordination between different planning institutions, the participation of more specialized experts in different fields, more complex results and a better control of performances. Urban Prototyping will contribute to these challenges by offering an integrative tool for computer aided planning and design on urban level.
Mais informação:
http://sde.nus.edu.sg/rsh/UrbanPrototyping/Home.html
Ver também:
The announcement of 5 PhD scholarships in urban prototyping at the National University of Singapore (NUS)
19 de julho de 2012
Resilient Thinking in Urban Planning
Livro lançado recentemente
- Provides a new perspective for urban planning field to respond to the future transformations.
- Describes and explores resilience concept in urban planning as an applicable term.
There is consensus in literature that urban areas have become increasingly vulnerable to the outcomes of economic restructuring under the neoliberal political economic ideology. The increased frequency and widening diversity of problems offer evidence that the socio-economic and spatial policies, planning and practices introduced under the neoliberal agenda can no longer be sustained. As this shortfall was becoming more evident among urban policymakers, planners, and researchers in different parts of the world, a group of discontent researchers began searching for new approaches to addressing the increasing vulnerabilities of urban systems in the wake of growing socio-economic and ecological problems. This book is the joint effort of those who have long felt that contemporary planning systems and policies are inadequate in preparing cities for the future in an increasingly neoliberalising world. It argues that “resilience thinking” can form the basis of an alternative approach to planning. Drawing upon case studies from five cities in Europe, namely Lisbon, Porto, Istanbul, Stockholm, and Rotterdam, the book makes an exploration of the resilience perspective, raising a number of theoretical debates, and suggesting a new methodological approach based on empirical evidence. This book provides insights for intellectuals exploring alternative perspectives and principles of a new planning approach.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Chapter 1: Introduction: Resilience Thinking in Urban Planning
Ayda Eraydin and Tuna Taşan-Kok.
- Chapter 2: “Resilience Thinking” for Planning
Ayda Eraydin.
- Chapter 3: Conceptual Overview of Resilience: History and Context
Tuna Taşan-Kok, Dominic Stead and Peiwen Lu.
- Chapter 4: Urban Resilience and Spatial Dynamics
Sara Santos Cruz, João Pedro Costa, Silvia Ávila de Sousa and Paulo Pinho.
- Chaper 5: Analysing the Socio-spatial Vulnerability to Drivers of Globalisation in Lisbon, Oporto, Istanbul, Stockholm and Rotterdam
Tuna Taşan-Kok and Dominic Stead.
- Chapter 6: Systems, Cultures, Styles: Spatial Planning in Portugal, Turkey, Sweden and the Netherlands
Sofia Morgado and Luís Dias.
- Chapter 7: Managing Urban Change in Five European Urban Agglomerations: Key Policy Documents and Institutional Frameworks
Peter Schmitt.
- Chapter 8: Evaluating Resilience in Planning
Paulo Pinho, Vítor Oliveira and Ana Martins.
- Chapter 9: Assessing Urban Resilience in the Metropolitan Area of Lisbon: the Case of Alcântara
Luís Dias, Sofia Morgado and João Pedro Costa.
- Chapter 10: Evaluating Urban Policies from a Resilient Perspective: The Case of Oporto
Vítor Oliveira, Ana Martins and Sara Santos Cruz.
- Chapter 11: The Evaluation of Different Processes of Spatial Development from a Resilience Perspective in Istanbul
Ayda Eraydin, Ali Türel and Deniz Altay Kaya.
- Chapter 12: Urban Resilience and Polycentricity – the Case of the Stockholm Urban Agglomeration
Peter Schmitt, Lisbeth Greve Harbo, Asli Tepecik Diş and Anu Henriksson.
- Chapter 13: Urban Resilience, Climate Change and Land-Use Planning in Rotterdam
Dominic Stead and Tuna Taşan-Kok.
- Chapter 14: The Evaluation of Findings and Future of Resilience Thinking in Planning
Ayda Eraydin and Tuna Taşan-Kok.
- Index.
In: http://www.springer.com/social+sciences/population+studies/book/978-94-007-5475-1
enviado por:
Luís Dias
- Provides a new perspective for urban planning field to respond to the future transformations.
- Describes and explores resilience concept in urban planning as an applicable term.
There is consensus in literature that urban areas have become increasingly vulnerable to the outcomes of economic restructuring under the neoliberal political economic ideology. The increased frequency and widening diversity of problems offer evidence that the socio-economic and spatial policies, planning and practices introduced under the neoliberal agenda can no longer be sustained. As this shortfall was becoming more evident among urban policymakers, planners, and researchers in different parts of the world, a group of discontent researchers began searching for new approaches to addressing the increasing vulnerabilities of urban systems in the wake of growing socio-economic and ecological problems. This book is the joint effort of those who have long felt that contemporary planning systems and policies are inadequate in preparing cities for the future in an increasingly neoliberalising world. It argues that “resilience thinking” can form the basis of an alternative approach to planning. Drawing upon case studies from five cities in Europe, namely Lisbon, Porto, Istanbul, Stockholm, and Rotterdam, the book makes an exploration of the resilience perspective, raising a number of theoretical debates, and suggesting a new methodological approach based on empirical evidence. This book provides insights for intellectuals exploring alternative perspectives and principles of a new planning approach.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Chapter 1: Introduction: Resilience Thinking in Urban Planning
Ayda Eraydin and Tuna Taşan-Kok.
- Chapter 2: “Resilience Thinking” for Planning
Ayda Eraydin.
- Chapter 3: Conceptual Overview of Resilience: History and Context
Tuna Taşan-Kok, Dominic Stead and Peiwen Lu.
- Chapter 4: Urban Resilience and Spatial Dynamics
Sara Santos Cruz, João Pedro Costa, Silvia Ávila de Sousa and Paulo Pinho.
- Chaper 5: Analysing the Socio-spatial Vulnerability to Drivers of Globalisation in Lisbon, Oporto, Istanbul, Stockholm and Rotterdam
Tuna Taşan-Kok and Dominic Stead.
- Chapter 6: Systems, Cultures, Styles: Spatial Planning in Portugal, Turkey, Sweden and the Netherlands
Sofia Morgado and Luís Dias.
- Chapter 7: Managing Urban Change in Five European Urban Agglomerations: Key Policy Documents and Institutional Frameworks
Peter Schmitt.
- Chapter 8: Evaluating Resilience in Planning
Paulo Pinho, Vítor Oliveira and Ana Martins.
- Chapter 9: Assessing Urban Resilience in the Metropolitan Area of Lisbon: the Case of Alcântara
Luís Dias, Sofia Morgado and João Pedro Costa.
- Chapter 10: Evaluating Urban Policies from a Resilient Perspective: The Case of Oporto
Vítor Oliveira, Ana Martins and Sara Santos Cruz.
- Chapter 11: The Evaluation of Different Processes of Spatial Development from a Resilience Perspective in Istanbul
Ayda Eraydin, Ali Türel and Deniz Altay Kaya.
- Chapter 12: Urban Resilience and Polycentricity – the Case of the Stockholm Urban Agglomeration
Peter Schmitt, Lisbeth Greve Harbo, Asli Tepecik Diş and Anu Henriksson.
- Chapter 13: Urban Resilience, Climate Change and Land-Use Planning in Rotterdam
Dominic Stead and Tuna Taşan-Kok.
- Chapter 14: The Evaluation of Findings and Future of Resilience Thinking in Planning
Ayda Eraydin and Tuna Taşan-Kok.
- Index.
In: http://www.springer.com/social+sciences/population+studies/book/978-94-007-5475-1
enviado por:
Luís Dias
The Ten Essentials for Making Cities Resilient Checklist
1. Put in place organisation and coordination to understand and reduce disaster risk, based on participation of citizen groups and civil society. Build local alliances. Ensure that all departments understand their role in disaster risk reduction and preparedness.
2. Assign a budget for disaster risk reduction and provide incentives for homeowners, low income families, communities, businesses and the public sector to invest in reducing the risks they face.
3. Maintain up to date data on hazards and vulnerabilities. Prepare risk assessments and use these as the basis for urban development plans and decisions, ensure that this information and the plans for your city’s resilience are readily available to the public and fully discussed with them.
4. Invest in and maintain critical infrastructure that reduces risk, such as flood drainage, adjusted where needed to cope with climate change.
5. Assess the safety of all schools and health facilities and upgrade these as necessary.
6. Apply and enforce realistic, risk compliant building regulations and land use planning principles. Identify safe land for low income citizens and upgrade informal settlements, wherever feasible.
7. Ensure that education programmes and training on disaster risk reduction are in place in schools and local communities.
8. Protect ecosystems and natural buffers to mitigate floods, storm surges and other hazards to which your city may be vulnerable. Adapt to climate change by building on good risk reduction practices.
9. Install early warning systems and emergency management capacities in your city and hold regular public preparedness drills.
10. After any disaster, ensure that the needs of the affected population are placed at the centre of reconstruction, with support for them and their community organisations to design and help implement responses, including rebuilding homes and livelihoods.
in:
http://www.unisdr.org/files/26462_4.chapitre2.pdf
2. Assign a budget for disaster risk reduction and provide incentives for homeowners, low income families, communities, businesses and the public sector to invest in reducing the risks they face.
3. Maintain up to date data on hazards and vulnerabilities. Prepare risk assessments and use these as the basis for urban development plans and decisions, ensure that this information and the plans for your city’s resilience are readily available to the public and fully discussed with them.
4. Invest in and maintain critical infrastructure that reduces risk, such as flood drainage, adjusted where needed to cope with climate change.
5. Assess the safety of all schools and health facilities and upgrade these as necessary.
6. Apply and enforce realistic, risk compliant building regulations and land use planning principles. Identify safe land for low income citizens and upgrade informal settlements, wherever feasible.
7. Ensure that education programmes and training on disaster risk reduction are in place in schools and local communities.
8. Protect ecosystems and natural buffers to mitigate floods, storm surges and other hazards to which your city may be vulnerable. Adapt to climate change by building on good risk reduction practices.
9. Install early warning systems and emergency management capacities in your city and hold regular public preparedness drills.
10. After any disaster, ensure that the needs of the affected population are placed at the centre of reconstruction, with support for them and their community organisations to design and help implement responses, including rebuilding homes and livelihoods.
in:
http://www.unisdr.org/files/26462_4.chapitre2.pdf
Mais informação:
18 de julho de 2012
Cidades do Futuro
Carlos Leite
Artigo publicado na Revista AU, agosto, 2010
...
As cidades inteligentes estão chegando
Pensemos nos carros. Fundamentalmente, eles não mudaram muito desde o pioneiro modelo T de Ford há 100 anos. São peças de design projetadas para transportar várias pessoas, atingir altas velocidades e cobrir grandes distâncias. Um típico SUV, por exemplo, chega a ter massa 44 vezes maior do que a do seu motorista. Imaginem a pegada ecológica necessária para a sua construção, além do uso e consumo e de um superado design de ciclo de vida único.
Agora pensemos nas necessidades usuais de um verdadeiro carro urbano. Nas grandes cidades do século 21, a absoluta maioria das viagens é realizada por uma pessoa ou duas. A velocidade média é de menos de 20 km/h. As distâncias são curtas, a necessidade de autonomia de percursos, pequena. O grande problema não se refere ao desempenho automobilístico e sim à falta de lugar para deixá-lo uma vez que 75% do tempo ele está...parado.
Ou seja, as cidades do século 21 precisam de carros smart: pequenos, leves, de baixíssimo consumo, movidos a matriz energética limpa e de ciclo de vida contínuo (cradle-to-cradle design). Mais que isso: a tendência para o transporte individual nas grandes cidades do futuro (imediato) são carros compartilhados, mobility-on-demand como os que já vêm sendo desenvolvidos pelo Smart Cities Lab do MIT – no Brasil, Jaime Lerner desenvolve um modelo que busca os mesmos parâmetros.
O sistema resolve uma imensa demanda atual: espaço. Teremos, em situações ideais, as ruas liberadas apenas para fluxo, sem espaços urbanos desperdiçados com estacionamento. Com isso, ganham todos, pois as cidades poderão resgatar seus espaços mais essenciais e nobres, os de uso coletivo públicos e privados – onde a vida urbana ocorre com maior vitalidade.
Começou em Lyon, logo chegou a Paris, Barcelona e Nova York. Na verdade, é tendência para as grandes cidades do século 21: compartilhamento de bicicletas. Deixa-se de ser proprietário de bicicletas para ser usuário.
Ken Levingstone, ex-prefeito de Londres, quase conseguiu implementar o uso exclusivo do carro compartilhado na City londrina, o lugar mais congestionado do planeta atualmente. Só circulariam no centro de Londres carros compartilhados.
São tendências irreversíveis e, naturalmente, o sistema capitalista se reinventa oportunamente. As cidades do futuro serão inteligentes em diversos aspectos. Uma gestão inteligente do território será capaz de propiciar maior agilidade na gestão integrada on line das diversas mobilidades urbanas. Essencialmente, transporte público multimodal ágil e competente, como já há em diversas cidades desenvolvidas, mas também sistemas inteligentes de uso compartilhado de transporte individual, de bicicletas motorizadas aos smart city cars.
Na verdade, as cidades inteligentes atuarão como um sistema de redes inteligentes conectadas. É natural que as contínuas inovações em tecnologia da informação e comunicação propiciem inúmeras revoluções urbanas. Empresas como a IBM (Smarter Cities), Cisco (Connected Urban Development), Siemens e outras já estão desenvolvendo programas e os ofertando às cidades.
Não há mistério. O século 21 mostra, cada vez mais, a substituição da economia fordista industrial pela nova economia: de serviços. É óbvio que as cidades do futuro se pautarão assim também, serão pólos numa imensa rede global de conexões inteligentes.
As pessoas serão usuárias dos diversos sistemas e terão, cada vez mais, acesso on line a todos os serviços urbanos, do consumo de água à escolha do posto de saúde. Do compartilhamento de smart cars à execução de trabalho em lugares flexíveis, espaços sem dono fixo, compartilháveis.
Resta saber como tudo isso será acessível, democrático, inclusivo.
Novamente, olhemos a história das cidades e lembremos que elas sempre foram o espaço das contradições e conflitos de suas sociedades. Seria inocente pensar que as inovações tecnológicas do século 21 propiciarão maior inclusão social e cidades mais democráticas por si só.
Link para o texto integral:
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_4A_0aD_eHy0/TG8JliIbaVI/AAAAAAAAAGo/n_CV-JY5YFc/s1600/i215045.jpg
Artigo publicado na Revista AU, agosto, 2010
...As cidades inteligentes estão chegando
Pensemos nos carros. Fundamentalmente, eles não mudaram muito desde o pioneiro modelo T de Ford há 100 anos. São peças de design projetadas para transportar várias pessoas, atingir altas velocidades e cobrir grandes distâncias. Um típico SUV, por exemplo, chega a ter massa 44 vezes maior do que a do seu motorista. Imaginem a pegada ecológica necessária para a sua construção, além do uso e consumo e de um superado design de ciclo de vida único.
Agora pensemos nas necessidades usuais de um verdadeiro carro urbano. Nas grandes cidades do século 21, a absoluta maioria das viagens é realizada por uma pessoa ou duas. A velocidade média é de menos de 20 km/h. As distâncias são curtas, a necessidade de autonomia de percursos, pequena. O grande problema não se refere ao desempenho automobilístico e sim à falta de lugar para deixá-lo uma vez que 75% do tempo ele está...parado.
Ou seja, as cidades do século 21 precisam de carros smart: pequenos, leves, de baixíssimo consumo, movidos a matriz energética limpa e de ciclo de vida contínuo (cradle-to-cradle design). Mais que isso: a tendência para o transporte individual nas grandes cidades do futuro (imediato) são carros compartilhados, mobility-on-demand como os que já vêm sendo desenvolvidos pelo Smart Cities Lab do MIT – no Brasil, Jaime Lerner desenvolve um modelo que busca os mesmos parâmetros.
O sistema resolve uma imensa demanda atual: espaço. Teremos, em situações ideais, as ruas liberadas apenas para fluxo, sem espaços urbanos desperdiçados com estacionamento. Com isso, ganham todos, pois as cidades poderão resgatar seus espaços mais essenciais e nobres, os de uso coletivo públicos e privados – onde a vida urbana ocorre com maior vitalidade.
Começou em Lyon, logo chegou a Paris, Barcelona e Nova York. Na verdade, é tendência para as grandes cidades do século 21: compartilhamento de bicicletas. Deixa-se de ser proprietário de bicicletas para ser usuário.
Ken Levingstone, ex-prefeito de Londres, quase conseguiu implementar o uso exclusivo do carro compartilhado na City londrina, o lugar mais congestionado do planeta atualmente. Só circulariam no centro de Londres carros compartilhados.
São tendências irreversíveis e, naturalmente, o sistema capitalista se reinventa oportunamente. As cidades do futuro serão inteligentes em diversos aspectos. Uma gestão inteligente do território será capaz de propiciar maior agilidade na gestão integrada on line das diversas mobilidades urbanas. Essencialmente, transporte público multimodal ágil e competente, como já há em diversas cidades desenvolvidas, mas também sistemas inteligentes de uso compartilhado de transporte individual, de bicicletas motorizadas aos smart city cars.
Na verdade, as cidades inteligentes atuarão como um sistema de redes inteligentes conectadas. É natural que as contínuas inovações em tecnologia da informação e comunicação propiciem inúmeras revoluções urbanas. Empresas como a IBM (Smarter Cities), Cisco (Connected Urban Development), Siemens e outras já estão desenvolvendo programas e os ofertando às cidades.
Não há mistério. O século 21 mostra, cada vez mais, a substituição da economia fordista industrial pela nova economia: de serviços. É óbvio que as cidades do futuro se pautarão assim também, serão pólos numa imensa rede global de conexões inteligentes.
As pessoas serão usuárias dos diversos sistemas e terão, cada vez mais, acesso on line a todos os serviços urbanos, do consumo de água à escolha do posto de saúde. Do compartilhamento de smart cars à execução de trabalho em lugares flexíveis, espaços sem dono fixo, compartilháveis.
Resta saber como tudo isso será acessível, democrático, inclusivo.
Novamente, olhemos a história das cidades e lembremos que elas sempre foram o espaço das contradições e conflitos de suas sociedades. Seria inocente pensar que as inovações tecnológicas do século 21 propiciarão maior inclusão social e cidades mais democráticas por si só.
Link para o texto integral:
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_4A_0aD_eHy0/TG8JliIbaVI/AAAAAAAAAGo/n_CV-JY5YFc/s1600/i215045.jpg
17 de julho de 2012
Ciudades Lab: ¿Qué són y por qué tendrían que existir?
Los centros tradicionales de investigación e innovación como las Universidades o los departamentos de I+D de las empresas ya no son los únicos espacios de generación de conocimiento. Hoy en día, en muchas ciudades han nacido espacios innovadores no formales, laboratorios ciudadanos que crean y desarrollan proyectos de investigación al margen de los circuitos convencionales.
Nos preguntamos como se tienen que ordenar (si es que se tienen que ordenar) estos espacios-laboratorio, si hay que potenciar las ciudades-laboratorio y qué papel juegan la administración pública y el sector privado en la configuración de redes de investigación e innovación ciudadana.
Responden nuestras dudas Ramón Sangüesa, miembro de CoCreating Cultures y professor de la UPC y Antoni Nicolau, director de l’Institut d’Arquitectura Avançada de Catalunya. Sangüesa y Nicolau participaron en el debate I+C+i “Ciudadanía y acción en la ciudad laboratorio” junto con Inés Garriga, responsable de innovación y creatividad del ICUB y Laura Forlano, profesora de diseño en el Design Institute adscrito al Illinois Institute of Technology de Chicago.
Podéis leer un resumen del debate aquí.
Mais informação:
http://www.cccb.org/lab/es/category/ici/
Nos preguntamos como se tienen que ordenar (si es que se tienen que ordenar) estos espacios-laboratorio, si hay que potenciar las ciudades-laboratorio y qué papel juegan la administración pública y el sector privado en la configuración de redes de investigación e innovación ciudadana.
Responden nuestras dudas Ramón Sangüesa, miembro de CoCreating Cultures y professor de la UPC y Antoni Nicolau, director de l’Institut d’Arquitectura Avançada de Catalunya. Sangüesa y Nicolau participaron en el debate I+C+i “Ciudadanía y acción en la ciudad laboratorio” junto con Inés Garriga, responsable de innovación y creatividad del ICUB y Laura Forlano, profesora de diseño en el Design Institute adscrito al Illinois Institute of Technology de Chicago.
Podéis leer un resumen del debate aquí.
Mais informação:
http://www.cccb.org/lab/es/category/ici/
16 de julho de 2012
Estrategias de presente y de futuro para los gobiernos locales
Quando:
del 16 julio 2012 al 17 julio 2012
Onde:
Barcelona - CCCB
Quem organiza:
Universidad Internacional Menéndez Pelayo de Barcelona - Centre Ernest Lluch
El curso afronta la situación actual de los gobiernos locales en Catalunya, España y Europa, en el contexto actual de crisis económica y de procesos de renovación institucional.
En Europa hay varias reformas en las estructuras institucionales de los gobiernos locales, en España se plantean medidas para hacer frente al déficit y desbloquear el pago a proveedores de los ayuntamientos, en Catalunya se presenta la ocasión de disponer de nueva ley de gobierno y la administración local y nueva ley de financiación local.
Mais informação:
http://www.cccb.org/es/curs_o_conferencia-estrategias_de_presente_y_de_futuro_para_los_gobiernos_locales-41258
del 16 julio 2012 al 17 julio 2012
Onde:
Barcelona - CCCB
Quem organiza:
Universidad Internacional Menéndez Pelayo de Barcelona - Centre Ernest Lluch
El curso afronta la situación actual de los gobiernos locales en Catalunya, España y Europa, en el contexto actual de crisis económica y de procesos de renovación institucional.
En Europa hay varias reformas en las estructuras institucionales de los gobiernos locales, en España se plantean medidas para hacer frente al déficit y desbloquear el pago a proveedores de los ayuntamientos, en Catalunya se presenta la ocasión de disponer de nueva ley de gobierno y la administración local y nueva ley de financiación local.
Mais informação:
http://www.cccb.org/es/curs_o_conferencia-estrategias_de_presente_y_de_futuro_para_los_gobiernos_locales-41258
Fundamentos em Planeamento dos Transportes e Gestão da Mobilidade
Geo Summer School ULHT 2012
Quando: 16 a 21 de julho (de segunda-feira a sábado, 4:00 horas por sessão)
Onde: Universidade Lusófona de Humanidades e Tecnologias
Quem organiza: Departamento de Geografia
Quando: 16 a 21 de julho (de segunda-feira a sábado, 4:00 horas por sessão)
Onde: Universidade Lusófona de Humanidades e Tecnologias
Quem organiza: Departamento de Geografia
15 de julho de 2012
EXPOSITION "MIX(CITÉ), VILLES EN PARTAGE"
Quando:
du 16 mai au 15 juillet 2012
Onde:
Paris - Cité de l’architecture & du patrimoine Palais de Chaillot – Hall du pavillon d’about
À travers des initiatives exemplaires et innovantes, conduites en France et à l’étranger, l’exposition « Mix(cité), Villes en partage » brosse un panorama analytique et prospectif sur la mixité urbaine, sous toutes ses formes. Elle est l’aboutissement des travaux d’analyse et de réflexion menés sur la mix(cité) par l’Observatoire de la Ville...
Considérée comme un des fondamentaux des politiques urbaines, la recherche de mixité sociale s’est traduite en France depuis des années par une évolution significative de la ville. La mixité des fonctions et la mixité générationnelle sont aussi devenues des aspirations consensuelles dans une société confrontée à la spécialisation des territoires et à l’individualisme des comportements humains. La recherche de variété dans les formes et les typologies du bâti apparait également comme incontournable pour rendre le cadre de vie plus attractif. Dans les quartiers neufs ou en rénovation, nombre d’expériences et de projets innovants ont vu le jour en France, en Europe, outre Atlantique et en Asie. Ces exemples illustrent le mouvement inéluctable qui est en train de se dessiner vers la construction d’un nouvel art de vivre dans la cité.
L’exposition intitulée « Mix(cité), Villes en partage » révèlera les diverses facettes de la ville mixte. Elle traitera les quatre formes de mixité : sociale, des fonctions, générationnelle et des formes urbaines. On y découvrira également un espace dédié à la mixité dans la ville du futur, un exercice de prospective confié à l’agence PeclersParis.
À partir d’écrans vidéos, les visiteurs pourront visionner les meilleurs extraits des auditions à Paris et des interventions filmées lors des conférences publiques réalisées par l’Observatoire de la Ville à Lyon et à Bordeaux. Ils pourront aussi découvrir, selon une scénographie qui reproduit la diversité des formes urbaines de la ville, près d’une vingtaine de grandes réalisations et de chantiers en cours en France et à l’étranger.
L’exposition comprendra 6 séquences :
- Mix(cité) social,
- Mix(cité) générationnelle,
- Mix(cité) des fonctions,
- Mix(cité) des formes urbaines,
- Multiplicité des mix(cités),
- Exposition dans l’exposition : la mix(cité) dans la ville de demain.
« De découverte en découverte, le visiteur aura matière à se projeter dans la ville du futur… Cette exposition a vocation à illustrer, à travers des expériences concrètes, les différentes déclinaisons de la mixité dans le modèle urbain de demain. Elle a aussi vocation à susciter une réflexion critique et des débats prospectifs » a précisé Frédéric Mialet, commissaire de l’exposition.
Mixité : un mouvement vertueux en faveur d’un nouvel art de vivre dans la cité
Si l’observation des comportements récents montre une spécialisation du territoire en zones commerciales, logistiques, quartiers d’affaires, centres administratifs… et l’enfermement dans un habitat compartimenté sur le plan social, la mixité urbaine, bien qu’elle ne soit pas naturelle, fait aujourd’hui l’objet d’un consensus politique pour des raisons sociales et environnementales.
C’est sur ce thème stratégique, rebaptisé Mix(Cité), que l’Observatoire de la Ville a choisi de mener ses travaux de réflexion, avec l’appui éclairé de son Comité éditorial, composé de deux architectes-urbanistes – Christian Devillers, Françoise-Hélène Jourda –, deux sociologues – Alain Bourdin et Julien Damon –, et un économiste – Alain Sallez –. Outre les sessions de réflexion conduites au sein de son Comité éditorial, l’Observatoire de la Ville a auditionné en privé et filmé en conférences publiques experts scientifiques, élus, urbanistes, architectes, représentants d’associations et militants de la solidarité.
S’appuyant sur les observations et les expériences de ces experts, l’Observatoire de la Ville a formulé 12 propositions qui portent à la fois sur l’urbanisme et sur la gestion et l’entretien de la mixité urbaine.
Mais informação:
http://www.observatoire-de-la-ville.com/actualites/2012-03/exposition-mixite-villes-en-partage.html
http://www.observatoire-de-la-ville.com/
du 16 mai au 15 juillet 2012
Onde:
Paris - Cité de l’architecture & du patrimoine Palais de Chaillot – Hall du pavillon d’about
À travers des initiatives exemplaires et innovantes, conduites en France et à l’étranger, l’exposition « Mix(cité), Villes en partage » brosse un panorama analytique et prospectif sur la mixité urbaine, sous toutes ses formes. Elle est l’aboutissement des travaux d’analyse et de réflexion menés sur la mix(cité) par l’Observatoire de la Ville...
Considérée comme un des fondamentaux des politiques urbaines, la recherche de mixité sociale s’est traduite en France depuis des années par une évolution significative de la ville. La mixité des fonctions et la mixité générationnelle sont aussi devenues des aspirations consensuelles dans une société confrontée à la spécialisation des territoires et à l’individualisme des comportements humains. La recherche de variété dans les formes et les typologies du bâti apparait également comme incontournable pour rendre le cadre de vie plus attractif. Dans les quartiers neufs ou en rénovation, nombre d’expériences et de projets innovants ont vu le jour en France, en Europe, outre Atlantique et en Asie. Ces exemples illustrent le mouvement inéluctable qui est en train de se dessiner vers la construction d’un nouvel art de vivre dans la cité.
L’exposition intitulée « Mix(cité), Villes en partage » révèlera les diverses facettes de la ville mixte. Elle traitera les quatre formes de mixité : sociale, des fonctions, générationnelle et des formes urbaines. On y découvrira également un espace dédié à la mixité dans la ville du futur, un exercice de prospective confié à l’agence PeclersParis.
À partir d’écrans vidéos, les visiteurs pourront visionner les meilleurs extraits des auditions à Paris et des interventions filmées lors des conférences publiques réalisées par l’Observatoire de la Ville à Lyon et à Bordeaux. Ils pourront aussi découvrir, selon une scénographie qui reproduit la diversité des formes urbaines de la ville, près d’une vingtaine de grandes réalisations et de chantiers en cours en France et à l’étranger.
L’exposition comprendra 6 séquences :
- Mix(cité) social,
- Mix(cité) générationnelle,
- Mix(cité) des fonctions,
- Mix(cité) des formes urbaines,
- Multiplicité des mix(cités),
- Exposition dans l’exposition : la mix(cité) dans la ville de demain.
« De découverte en découverte, le visiteur aura matière à se projeter dans la ville du futur… Cette exposition a vocation à illustrer, à travers des expériences concrètes, les différentes déclinaisons de la mixité dans le modèle urbain de demain. Elle a aussi vocation à susciter une réflexion critique et des débats prospectifs » a précisé Frédéric Mialet, commissaire de l’exposition.
Mixité : un mouvement vertueux en faveur d’un nouvel art de vivre dans la cité
Si l’observation des comportements récents montre une spécialisation du territoire en zones commerciales, logistiques, quartiers d’affaires, centres administratifs… et l’enfermement dans un habitat compartimenté sur le plan social, la mixité urbaine, bien qu’elle ne soit pas naturelle, fait aujourd’hui l’objet d’un consensus politique pour des raisons sociales et environnementales.
C’est sur ce thème stratégique, rebaptisé Mix(Cité), que l’Observatoire de la Ville a choisi de mener ses travaux de réflexion, avec l’appui éclairé de son Comité éditorial, composé de deux architectes-urbanistes – Christian Devillers, Françoise-Hélène Jourda –, deux sociologues – Alain Bourdin et Julien Damon –, et un économiste – Alain Sallez –. Outre les sessions de réflexion conduites au sein de son Comité éditorial, l’Observatoire de la Ville a auditionné en privé et filmé en conférences publiques experts scientifiques, élus, urbanistes, architectes, représentants d’associations et militants de la solidarité.
S’appuyant sur les observations et les expériences de ces experts, l’Observatoire de la Ville a formulé 12 propositions qui portent à la fois sur l’urbanisme et sur la gestion et l’entretien de la mixité urbaine.
Mais informação:
http://www.observatoire-de-la-ville.com/actualites/2012-03/exposition-mixite-villes-en-partage.html
http://www.observatoire-de-la-ville.com/
20º Curtas Vila do Conde - A RUA DA ESTRADA
A RUA DA ESTRADA
- REALIZAÇÃO
Graça Castanheira, 2012
- ARGUMENTO
Álvaro Domingues, Graça Castanheira
Em “A Rua da Estrada” percorrem-se as estradas nacionais, com a sua muito peculiar paisagem – sismógrafo do tempo que passa.
Lida pelo olhar avisado do geógrafo Álvaro Domingues, uma viagem por Portugal, tal qual é.
- PRODUÇÃO
Curtas Metragens CRL CONTACTO DE CÓPIA Salette Ramalho, Agência da Curta Metragem; +351252646683, agencia@curtas.pt, www.curtas.pt/agencia
- FOTOGRAFIA Miguel da Santa
- EDIÇÃO Rafaela Morgado
- SOM Dinis Henriques
- ACTORES Manuel Araújo, Maria do Carmo Ribeiro, Rafela Morgado, António Lima Moreira, José Ribeiro, Paula Sales, César Sousa, Luis, Pedro
- Portugal, DOC, 00:35:00, Video, COL
In:
http://festival.curtas.pt/programa/2012/estaleiro/1/?id=2012064
http://estaleiro.curtas.pt/campus/noticias/
- REALIZAÇÃO
Graça Castanheira, 2012
- ARGUMENTO
Álvaro Domingues, Graça Castanheira
Em “A Rua da Estrada” percorrem-se as estradas nacionais, com a sua muito peculiar paisagem – sismógrafo do tempo que passa.
Lida pelo olhar avisado do geógrafo Álvaro Domingues, uma viagem por Portugal, tal qual é.
- PRODUÇÃO
Curtas Metragens CRL CONTACTO DE CÓPIA Salette Ramalho, Agência da Curta Metragem; +351252646683, agencia@curtas.pt, www.curtas.pt/agencia
- FOTOGRAFIA Miguel da Santa
- EDIÇÃO Rafaela Morgado
- SOM Dinis Henriques
- ACTORES Manuel Araújo, Maria do Carmo Ribeiro, Rafela Morgado, António Lima Moreira, José Ribeiro, Paula Sales, César Sousa, Luis, Pedro
- Portugal, DOC, 00:35:00, Video, COL
In:
http://festival.curtas.pt/programa/2012/estaleiro/1/?id=2012064
http://estaleiro.curtas.pt/campus/noticias/
Exposición “Ciudad Total”
Onde: Valencia - IVAM - Centre Julio González
Quem Organiza: Institut Valencià d’Art Modern (IVAM)
La fisonomía urbanística y la estructura social de las ciudades han cambiado considerablemente en las últimas décadas. En todo el mundo se ha acelerado el proceso de concentración de población en grandes metrópolis que no pueden ser consideradas como meras ciudades en el sentido convencional del término. El último informe de las Naciones Unidas sobre el "Estado de la Población Mundial" señala que actualmente más del cincuenta por ciento de la población mundial vive en ciudades, muchas de ellas habitadas por varias decenas de millones de habitantes, especialmente en el denominado “tercer mundo”. Así, vemos que se está desarrollando un archipiélago de ciudades-regiones de elevada capacidad tecnológica con una influencia absolutamente determinante en la escena mundial.
Estamos hablando de enormes aglomeraciones de personas en espacios físicos, denominados ciudades, que ya no poseen ninguna estructura centralizada ni concentrada, pero que están intensamente interconectadas en un complejo poliedro que constituye la vida metropolitana de este inicio de milenio. Muchas de estas nuevas metrópolis se van a ir articulando como núcleos diseminados a lo largo de vías de transporte y servicios (tales como aeropuertos, centros comerciales, parques temáticos, centros de negocios…), en grandes aglomeraciones desigualmente repartidas y difusamente organizadas por toda la geografía mundial.Estamos inmersos en un proceso de globalización económica y de revolución informacional permanente en el que el planeta tiende a una urbanización generalizada (articulada territorialmente en torno a redes de ciudades) que va a modificar radicalmente la estructura espacial y social. Bajo este punto de vista podemos asegurar que las ciudades han dejado de ser un lugar estable o una forma claramente determinada, para convertirse en espacios de estructuras complejas donde la movilidad y la mutación son algunos de sus rasgos más significativos. Las grandes urbes se han transformado en inmensas concentraciones urbanas que se adscriben no sólo a un territorio (cada día son más importantes las ciudades en la red o virtuales) sino a un enrevesado conjunto de relaciones económicas y sociales que demandan nuevas maneras de acercarse a ellas.
Por ello, el proyecto de CIUDAD TOTAL trata de provocar una reflexión sobre estos cambios trascendentales a través de cinco áreas que están íntimamente interrelacionadas, y que modifican fundamentalmente nuestra manera de entender y vivir en las ciudades:
...
Mais informação e link para texto integral:
http://www.ivam.es/exposiciones/2905-ciudad-total
12 de julho de 2012
Curso de Formação em Estruturas Ecológicas Municipais
Estruturas Ecológicas Municipais - metodologias de delimitação e integração nos PDM, PU e PP
Quando:
12 e 13 de Julho de 2012
Onde:
Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia da Universidade Nova de Lisboa - Edifício Departamental – sala 105 - Campus da Caparica


Mais informação: http://www.csm-aml.net/#!ums/vstc5=cursos-de-forma%E7%E3o
Quando:12 e 13 de Julho de 2012
Onde:
Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia da Universidade Nova de Lisboa - Edifício Departamental – sala 105 - Campus da Caparica


Mais informação: http://www.csm-aml.net/#!ums/vstc5=cursos-de-forma%E7%E3o
9 de julho de 2012
“Las ciudades y el sistema urbano: una reflexión en tiempos de crisis”
XI Congreso del Grupo de Urbana de la AGE
“Las ciudades y el sistema urbano: una reflexión en tiempos de crisis”
El Grupo Ante, a través del Departamento de Xeografía de la Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, está organizando el XI Congreso del Grupo de Urbana de la Asociación de Geógrafos Españoles.
Quando: entre el 9 y el 14 de julio del año 2012
Onde: jornadas, de carácter itinerante entre Galicia y el Norte de Portugal
El eje temático del Congreso se estructura en tres epígrafes:
1. Las nuevas realidades urbanas en España y Portugal
2. Centros y periferias urbanas: estrategias de ordenación y gobernanza
3. Tendencias recientes en el proceso de conformación de la ciudad: el policentrismo
más información:
http://www.usc.es/ante/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/XI-Congreso-Grupo-Urbana-AGE.pdf
e
in:
http://www.usc.es/ante/?cat=1&langswitch_lang=es
“Las ciudades y el sistema urbano: una reflexión en tiempos de crisis”
El Grupo Ante, a través del Departamento de Xeografía de la Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, está organizando el XI Congreso del Grupo de Urbana de la Asociación de Geógrafos Españoles.
Quando: entre el 9 y el 14 de julio del año 2012
Onde: jornadas, de carácter itinerante entre Galicia y el Norte de Portugal
El eje temático del Congreso se estructura en tres epígrafes:
1. Las nuevas realidades urbanas en España y Portugal
2. Centros y periferias urbanas: estrategias de ordenación y gobernanza
3. Tendencias recientes en el proceso de conformación de la ciudad: el policentrismo
más información:
http://www.usc.es/ante/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/XI-Congreso-Grupo-Urbana-AGE.pdf
e
http://www.usc.es/ante/?cat=1&langswitch_lang=es
5 de julho de 2012
Morfologia Urbana nos Países Lusófonos
PNUM 2012
Quando:
5 e 6 de Julho de 2012
Onde:
Instituto Universitário de Lisboa - ISCTE-IUL
Quem organiza:
Portuguese Network on Urban Morphology (Rede Portuguesa de Morfologia Urbana) e DINAMIA'CET-IUL
O PNUM 2012 promove em Portugal uma oportunidade de debate e de reflexão sobre um conjunto de temas da morfologia urbana. Pretende ainda estabelecer um espaço primordial para a articulação entre as questões chave do International Seminar on Urban Form / ISUF e temas específicos da forma urbana no espaço Lusófono. Nomeadamente, no que se refere às diferentes teorias, conceitos e técnicas morfológicas; à história da forma urbana; aos diferentes elementos da forma urbana; às diferentes escalas de análise e de intervenção; à interdisciplinaridade; às relações entre teoria e prática profissional; bem como às diferentes abordagens desenvolvidas no espaço Lusófono.
Mais informação:
https://www.sites.google.com/site/pnum2012/
Quando:
5 e 6 de Julho de 2012
Onde:
Instituto Universitário de Lisboa - ISCTE-IUL
Quem organiza:
Portuguese Network on Urban Morphology (Rede Portuguesa de Morfologia Urbana) e DINAMIA'CET-IUL
O PNUM 2012 promove em Portugal uma oportunidade de debate e de reflexão sobre um conjunto de temas da morfologia urbana. Pretende ainda estabelecer um espaço primordial para a articulação entre as questões chave do International Seminar on Urban Form / ISUF e temas específicos da forma urbana no espaço Lusófono. Nomeadamente, no que se refere às diferentes teorias, conceitos e técnicas morfológicas; à história da forma urbana; aos diferentes elementos da forma urbana; às diferentes escalas de análise e de intervenção; à interdisciplinaridade; às relações entre teoria e prática profissional; bem como às diferentes abordagens desenvolvidas no espaço Lusófono.
Mais informação:
https://www.sites.google.com/site/pnum2012/
Vida Transgénica : Apresentação de dois livros em Lisboa - Álvaro Domingues
Quando:
quinta-feira, dia 5 de Julho, pelas 18h30
Onde:
teatro Aurélio Quintanilha, do Museu Nacional de História Natural e da Ciência
"Vida no Campo", de Álvaro Domingues
. apresentado por:
Alexandre Pomar e Catarina Portas
seguido de
"Missão Fotográfica Paisagem Transgénica"
. apresentado por:
Álvaro Domingues
Um livro de fotografias de Katalin Deér, Filip Dujardin, JH Engstrom e Guido Guidi, com textos de Paulo Catrica, Pedro Bandeira, Álvaro Domingues, Gabriela Vaz Pinheiro, Paula Pinto e Joaquim Moreno.
Editado pela Imprensa Nacional Casa da Moeda & Guimarães 2012 Capital Europeia da Cultura
quinta-feira, dia 5 de Julho, pelas 18h30
Onde:
teatro Aurélio Quintanilha, do Museu Nacional de História Natural e da Ciência
"Vida no Campo", de Álvaro Domingues
. apresentado por:
Alexandre Pomar e Catarina Portas
seguido de
"Missão Fotográfica Paisagem Transgénica"
. apresentado por:
Álvaro Domingues
Um livro de fotografias de Katalin Deér, Filip Dujardin, JH Engstrom e Guido Guidi, com textos de Paulo Catrica, Pedro Bandeira, Álvaro Domingues, Gabriela Vaz Pinheiro, Paula Pinto e Joaquim Moreno.
Editado pela Imprensa Nacional Casa da Moeda & Guimarães 2012 Capital Europeia da Cultura
4 de julho de 2012
REVISTA DE GEOGRAFIA E ORDENAMENTO DO TERRITÓRIO - N. 1 (2012)
Acaba de ser editado o nº 1 da GOT (Revista de Geografia e Ordenamento do Território)
Pode ser consultado em:
http://cegot.org/ojs/index.php/GOT/issue/current
ARTIGOS
Editorial
José Alberto Rio Fernandes
- Governança e regeneração nas políticas urbanas de França, Holanda e Inglaterra
Pedro Miguel Chamusca
- Territórios e paisagens culturais na emigração lusa
Helder Diogo
- Estrutura espacial e processos ecológicos: o estudo da fragmentação dos habitats
Maria Manuela Laranjeira
- Análise da variação do tempo dedicado ás viagens urbanas da população de Manaus – AM, em função do modo de transporte utilizado
Aline Damaceno Leite, Geraldo Alves Souza
- Espaços turísticos e as novas formas de alojamento
Jorge Marques, Norberto Santos
- A formação de professores de História e Geografia na Faculdade de Letras da Universidade do Porto. O percurso à luz do processo de Bolonha (2008-2012)
Felisbela Sousa Martins, Luís Grosso Correia
- O lazer, o erotismo e a sociedade contemporânea
Catarina Duarte Fontoura Nadais, Norberto Santos
- Pegada ecológica de uma instituição do ensino superior portuguesa
Susana Marinho Paixão, Nelson Leite Sá, Joana Simões, Inês Gaminha
- O Norte do Paraná: do café à cana do açucar
Messias Modesto dos Passos, Lucas César Frediani Sant' Ana, Marina Brandt Bueno
- “Aldeias-Jardim” no Concelho de Montalegre – O projecto da Junta de Colonização interna para os baldios do Barroso
João Rapazote
- Le dessalement de l’eau de mer est-il une voie d’avenir?
Jean-Noël Salomon
SCiRN™ - The Shrinking Cities International Research Network
The Shrinking Cities International Research Network (SCiRN™) is a worldwide research consortium of scholars and experts from various institutions pursuing research on shrinking cities in a global context. SCiRN’s mission is to advance international understanding and promote scholarship about population decrease in urban regions and urban decline, causes, manifestations, spatial variations, and effectiveness of policies and planning interventions to stave off decline.
SCiRN™ was founded 2004 under the aegis of the Institute of Urban and Regional Development at the University of California, Berkeley. Here, scholars from various countries realised that although the decline of cities and urban regions was a common issue for urban planners in different local contexts, there was little comparative research on this topic.
Today SCiRN™ comprises 30 members from 14 countries (Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, Japan, Korea, Mexico, Poland, Russia, Spain, Taiwan, UK, and the USA) and a PhD Academy constituted of 14 young researchers (from Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Poland, Spain, UK and Taiwan).
The work being developed by the network since 2004 includes case studies of suburbs, cities, towns, and regions that are investigated through a common comparative framework. It aims to produce both theoretical and methodological tools for analysing Shrinking Cities in different national contexts. In the long run an important repository of data will be gathered through the development of an observatory of shrinking cities. The first results of the SCiRN™ have been presented every year to international conferences such as those organised by planning disciplines (AESOP in Vienna 2005; WPSC in Mexico 2006; ASCP-AESOP in Chicago 2008) or at specialised conferences organised by the network (Dresden in 2006; UC Berkeley in 2007). Internal workshops have been organized every year and research results have been published.
SCiRN™ activities include:
- exchange ideas, methods, resources and develop a strategic framework for discussion of the shrinking cities phenomenon,
- disseminate research findings through publications, conferences, workshops,
- network with institutions and other groups focused on similar topics,
- provide policy analysis and advice on shrinking cities and regions.
Link:
http://www.shrinkingcities.org/
SCiRN™ was founded 2004 under the aegis of the Institute of Urban and Regional Development at the University of California, Berkeley. Here, scholars from various countries realised that although the decline of cities and urban regions was a common issue for urban planners in different local contexts, there was little comparative research on this topic.
Today SCiRN™ comprises 30 members from 14 countries (Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, Japan, Korea, Mexico, Poland, Russia, Spain, Taiwan, UK, and the USA) and a PhD Academy constituted of 14 young researchers (from Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Poland, Spain, UK and Taiwan).
The work being developed by the network since 2004 includes case studies of suburbs, cities, towns, and regions that are investigated through a common comparative framework. It aims to produce both theoretical and methodological tools for analysing Shrinking Cities in different national contexts. In the long run an important repository of data will be gathered through the development of an observatory of shrinking cities. The first results of the SCiRN™ have been presented every year to international conferences such as those organised by planning disciplines (AESOP in Vienna 2005; WPSC in Mexico 2006; ASCP-AESOP in Chicago 2008) or at specialised conferences organised by the network (Dresden in 2006; UC Berkeley in 2007). Internal workshops have been organized every year and research results have been published.
SCiRN™ activities include:
- exchange ideas, methods, resources and develop a strategic framework for discussion of the shrinking cities phenomenon,
- disseminate research findings through publications, conferences, workshops,
- network with institutions and other groups focused on similar topics,
- provide policy analysis and advice on shrinking cities and regions.
Link:
http://www.shrinkingcities.org/
Cities Regrowing Smaller (CIRES)
Fostering Knowledge on Regeneration Strategies in Shrinking Cities across Europe
Urban Shrinkage in Europe
At the beginning of the 21st century, the shrinking cities phenomenon is widespread in Europe. To deal with the results of demographic, economic and physical contraction processes and to plan for the future of considerably smaller but nevertheless livable cities is one of the most challenging tasks for urban Europe in the near future. Against this background, the Action aims at fostering knowledge on regeneration strategies in shrinking cities across Europe. By promoting the exchange of scientific knowledge and the stimulation of new ideas in selected reference cities, the gender-balanced network with proposers from ten countries will act as a catalyst for new solutions to deal with demographic changes and to design the restructuring of shrinking cities in Europe.
Significant benefits at the European level are envisaged, resulting in a common framework of terminology and synopsis of published research in this field, exemplary regeneration strategies and a best practice database.
Link:
http://www.shrinkingcities.eu/index.php?id=14
Urban Shrinkage in Europe
At the beginning of the 21st century, the shrinking cities phenomenon is widespread in Europe. To deal with the results of demographic, economic and physical contraction processes and to plan for the future of considerably smaller but nevertheless livable cities is one of the most challenging tasks for urban Europe in the near future. Against this background, the Action aims at fostering knowledge on regeneration strategies in shrinking cities across Europe. By promoting the exchange of scientific knowledge and the stimulation of new ideas in selected reference cities, the gender-balanced network with proposers from ten countries will act as a catalyst for new solutions to deal with demographic changes and to design the restructuring of shrinking cities in Europe.
Significant benefits at the European level are envisaged, resulting in a common framework of terminology and synopsis of published research in this field, exemplary regeneration strategies and a best practice database.
Link:
http://www.shrinkingcities.eu/index.php?id=14
PLANNING FOR SHRINKING CITIES IN PORTUGAL
Sílvia Ávila de Sousa
RESUMO
Esta dissertação de doutoramento é sobre as cidades em contracção e o planeamento. O crescimento urbano tem sido considerado sinónimo de sucesso em todo o mundo, e até mesmo como a verdadeira e única razão de ser do planeamento. Mesmo sendo tão antiga como o crescimento, a contracção tornou-se mais visível desde que factos inquestionáveis começaram a desafiar os paradigmas do planeamento tradicional e estabelecido. Consequentemente, a teoria da contracção ainda está em desenvolvimento, construindo- se gradualmente. Portugal não é uma excepção a essa regra. Isto representa uma oportunidade para contribuir para a teoria da contracção, para obter provas originais sobre a contracção em Portugal e investigar como o planeamento lida com esta questão.
A primeira parte da dissertação corresponde a uma revisão da literatura para criar um quadro teórico para a contracção e sua relação com o planeamento regional e urbano. A segunda parte da investigação concentra-se no caso Português, em primeiro lugar a uma escala macro e, em seguida, materializando a dimensão da cidade em contracção. Na terceira parte, a análise de clusters é utilizada para classificar as cidades Portuguesas em contracção. Finalmente, a análise de conteúdo é aplicada a instrumentos de gestão territorial nacionais, regionais e locais, para determinar a sua resposta à contracção.
O estudo é completado revisitando as questões mais importantes, tanto na discussão teórica como na investigação empírica. Juntamente com a análise teórica, os resultados incluem, em primeiro lugar, um quadro amplo da retracção; em segundo lugar, uma tipologia de cidades em contracção; e, em terceiro lugar, um diagnóstico da consciência e da abordagem à contracção em Portugal. A investigação conclui que, apesar do carácter embrionário da contracção em Portugal, há provas da sua existência, embora a resposta do planeamento não corresponda às evidências encontradas. Com base nas conclusões, são propostas recomendações para a política de cidades, para os profissionais de planeamento e para investigação futura sobre este tema.
Link para o text integral:
http://repositorio-aberto.up.pt/bitstream/10216/59821/1/000143660.pdf
RESUMO
Esta dissertação de doutoramento é sobre as cidades em contracção e o planeamento. O crescimento urbano tem sido considerado sinónimo de sucesso em todo o mundo, e até mesmo como a verdadeira e única razão de ser do planeamento. Mesmo sendo tão antiga como o crescimento, a contracção tornou-se mais visível desde que factos inquestionáveis começaram a desafiar os paradigmas do planeamento tradicional e estabelecido. Consequentemente, a teoria da contracção ainda está em desenvolvimento, construindo- se gradualmente. Portugal não é uma excepção a essa regra. Isto representa uma oportunidade para contribuir para a teoria da contracção, para obter provas originais sobre a contracção em Portugal e investigar como o planeamento lida com esta questão.
A primeira parte da dissertação corresponde a uma revisão da literatura para criar um quadro teórico para a contracção e sua relação com o planeamento regional e urbano. A segunda parte da investigação concentra-se no caso Português, em primeiro lugar a uma escala macro e, em seguida, materializando a dimensão da cidade em contracção. Na terceira parte, a análise de clusters é utilizada para classificar as cidades Portuguesas em contracção. Finalmente, a análise de conteúdo é aplicada a instrumentos de gestão territorial nacionais, regionais e locais, para determinar a sua resposta à contracção.
O estudo é completado revisitando as questões mais importantes, tanto na discussão teórica como na investigação empírica. Juntamente com a análise teórica, os resultados incluem, em primeiro lugar, um quadro amplo da retracção; em segundo lugar, uma tipologia de cidades em contracção; e, em terceiro lugar, um diagnóstico da consciência e da abordagem à contracção em Portugal. A investigação conclui que, apesar do carácter embrionário da contracção em Portugal, há provas da sua existência, embora a resposta do planeamento não corresponda às evidências encontradas. Com base nas conclusões, são propostas recomendações para a política de cidades, para os profissionais de planeamento e para investigação futura sobre este tema.
Link para o text integral:
http://repositorio-aberto.up.pt/bitstream/10216/59821/1/000143660.pdf
2 de julho de 2012
Planning in America: Perceptions and Priorities
Results from APA's 2012 National Poll
With the U.S. economy struggling, Americans believe community planners should play a major role in helping the nation get back on its feet, according to a national poll released by APA on June 14, 2012.
Two-thirds of Americans believe their community needs more planning to promote economic recovery.
The poll found that Americans want planners to focus most on creating jobs — followed by safety, schools, protecting neighborhoods, and water quality.
"Not only do Americans strongly believe community planning is critical to jump starting our nation's economy," said APA Chief Executive Officer Paul Farmer, FAICP, "but a majority want to be personally involved with community planning efforts, whether they live in a city, a suburb, a small town, or rural America."
Mais informação:
http://www.planning.org/newsreleases/2012/jun14.htm http://www.planning.org/policy/economicrecovery/index.htm http://www.planning.org/policy/economicrecovery/pdf/planninginamerica.pdf
With the U.S. economy struggling, Americans believe community planners should play a major role in helping the nation get back on its feet, according to a national poll released by APA on June 14, 2012.
Two-thirds of Americans believe their community needs more planning to promote economic recovery.
The poll found that Americans want planners to focus most on creating jobs — followed by safety, schools, protecting neighborhoods, and water quality.
"Not only do Americans strongly believe community planning is critical to jump starting our nation's economy," said APA Chief Executive Officer Paul Farmer, FAICP, "but a majority want to be personally involved with community planning efforts, whether they live in a city, a suburb, a small town, or rural America."
Mais informação:
http://www.planning.org/newsreleases/2012/jun14.htm http://www.planning.org/policy/economicrecovery/index.htm http://www.planning.org/policy/economicrecovery/pdf/planninginamerica.pdf
Reinventing the City @ MIT
During 2011-2012, the Department of Urban Studies & Planning will host a series of high-profile speakers and panels on a wide-range of topics related to the future of cities, planning, participation, economies, technology, design, and development.
This series is part of a multi-year initiative in the department to raise cutting-edge questions about the field in an era of rapid change. All events are open to the public.
Ver mais:
http://dusp.mit.edu/p.lasso?t=7:6:0
http://dusp.mit.edu/p.lasso?t=7:3:0
This series is part of a multi-year initiative in the department to raise cutting-edge questions about the field in an era of rapid change. All events are open to the public.
Ver mais:
http://dusp.mit.edu/p.lasso?t=7:6:0
http://dusp.mit.edu/p.lasso?t=7:3:0
Lançamento do livro: Cidades sustentáveis, Cidades inteligentes
Autor: Carlos Leite
Prefácio: Jaime Lerner
Apresentação: Brian McGrath, Enrique Peñalosa, Elisabete França e Saskia Sassen
A obra oferece um panorama da sustentabilidade das cidades, abordando seus maiores desafios atuais: questões ambientais, moradia, mobilidade, inclusão e segurança, oportunidades, governança. O autor debate como tornar as nossas cidades mais sustentáveis, criativas e "inteligentes", apresentando os conceitos mais importantes do urbanismo sustentável, os indicadores e exemplificando as iniciativas bem-sucedidas com casos reais, fruto de suas inúmeras visitas internacionais às cidades que se têm reinventado, através de boxes de projetos e depoimentos.
Leia o 1º capítulo:
http://issuu.com/grupoa/docs/cidades_sustentaveis_cidades_inteligentes/2?mode=mobile
Mais informação:
http://downloads.artmed.com.br/public/marketing/convite/leite/release.html
Prefácio: Jaime Lerner
Apresentação: Brian McGrath, Enrique Peñalosa, Elisabete França e Saskia Sassen
A obra oferece um panorama da sustentabilidade das cidades, abordando seus maiores desafios atuais: questões ambientais, moradia, mobilidade, inclusão e segurança, oportunidades, governança. O autor debate como tornar as nossas cidades mais sustentáveis, criativas e "inteligentes", apresentando os conceitos mais importantes do urbanismo sustentável, os indicadores e exemplificando as iniciativas bem-sucedidas com casos reais, fruto de suas inúmeras visitas internacionais às cidades que se têm reinventado, através de boxes de projetos e depoimentos.
Leia o 1º capítulo:
http://issuu.com/grupoa/docs/cidades_sustentaveis_cidades_inteligentes/2?mode=mobile
Mais informação:
http://downloads.artmed.com.br/public/marketing/convite/leite/release.html
Lush Walls Rise to Fight a Blanket of Pollution
By DAMIEN CAVE
MEXICO CITY JOURNAL
Published: April 9, 2012
MEXICO CITY — “We must cultivate our garden,” Voltaire famously wrote at the end of “Candide,” but even he could not have imagined this: a towering arch of 50,000 plants rising over a traffic-clogged avenue in a metropolis once called “Mexsicko City” because of its pollution.
The vertical garden aims to scrub away both the filth and the image. One of three eco-sculptures installed across the city by a nonprofit called VerdMX, the arch is both art and oxygenator. It catches the eye. And it also helps clean the air.
“The main priority for vertical gardens is to transform the city,” said Fernando Ortiz Monasterio, 30, the architect who designed the sculptures. “It’s a way to intervene in the environment.”
Many cities have green reputations — Portland, Ore., even has its own vertical gardens. But in the developing world, where middle classes are growing along with consumption, waste and energy use, Mexico City is a brave new world. The laughingstock has become the leader as the air has gone from legendarily bad to much improved. Ozone levels and other pollution measures now place it on roughly the same level as the (also cleaner) air above Los Angeles.
Ver mais:
http://www.proximofuturo.gulbenkian.pt/blog/lush-walls-rise-to-fight-a-blanket-of-pollution
Link para o texto integral:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/10/world/americas/vertical-gardens-in-mexico-a-symbol-of-progress.html?ref=americas
In:
The New York Times
MEXICO CITY JOURNAL
Published: April 9, 2012
MEXICO CITY — “We must cultivate our garden,” Voltaire famously wrote at the end of “Candide,” but even he could not have imagined this: a towering arch of 50,000 plants rising over a traffic-clogged avenue in a metropolis once called “Mexsicko City” because of its pollution.The vertical garden aims to scrub away both the filth and the image. One of three eco-sculptures installed across the city by a nonprofit called VerdMX, the arch is both art and oxygenator. It catches the eye. And it also helps clean the air.
“The main priority for vertical gardens is to transform the city,” said Fernando Ortiz Monasterio, 30, the architect who designed the sculptures. “It’s a way to intervene in the environment.”Many cities have green reputations — Portland, Ore., even has its own vertical gardens. But in the developing world, where middle classes are growing along with consumption, waste and energy use, Mexico City is a brave new world. The laughingstock has become the leader as the air has gone from legendarily bad to much improved. Ozone levels and other pollution measures now place it on roughly the same level as the (also cleaner) air above Los Angeles.
Ver mais:
http://www.proximofuturo.gulbenkian.pt/blog/lush-walls-rise-to-fight-a-blanket-of-pollution
Link para o texto integral:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/10/world/americas/vertical-gardens-in-mexico-a-symbol-of-progress.html?ref=americas
In:
The New York Times
Quantitative analysis of urban form: a multidisciplinary review
In:
Journal of Urbanism: International Research on Placemaking and Urban Sustainability
Volume 1, Issue 1, 2008
Kelly Clifton, Reid Ewing, Gerrit‐Jan Knaap & Yan Song
Abstract
This paper characterizes and reviews multidisciplinary approaches to urban form. It begins by classifying quantitative approaches to analyzing urban form into five classes: landscape ecology, economic structure, surface transportation, community design, and urban design. It then reviews quantitative measures in each class. Based on the review, four conclusions are drawn. First, over the last two decades substantial progress has been made in the ability to measure and analyze spatial patterns that help characterize urban form. Second, at multiples scales and for a variety of reasons, there are advantages to development that is mixed and compact. Third, normative principles and policies for addressing urban form need to be crafted at multiple scales and carefully designed to address the disparate issues that arise at each scale. Fourth, with so many disparate measures now used to operationalize the same constructs, it would advance urban form research to have some standardization in operational definitions and measurement protocols.
• Abstract
• Introduction
• Landscape ecology
o Patch characteristics
o Landscape composition
o Configuration and diversity
o Research on urban form based on measures of landscape ecology
• Economic structure
o Metropolitan size, density, and diversity
o Metropolitan structure
o Polycentricity
o Research on form at the metropolitan scale
• Transportation planning
o Network configuration
o Density and diversity
o Accessibility
o Research on sprawl at the sub metropolitan scale
• Community design
o Composition and arrangement
o Transportation networks and accessibility
o Categorical and composite distinctions
o Research on sprawl based on community design
• Urban design
o Physical features
o Accessibility
o Perceptions
o Integrated measures of urban design and urban perceptions
o Research on sprawl at the urban design scale
• Conclusions
• Notes
• References
Conclusions
Although interest in urban form is not new, this review suggests that scholars have made considerable progress in developing and computing measures of urban form. These measures capture spatial arrangements at varying scales, use data from a variety of sources, and address concerns that confront multiple disciplines. Efforts to conceive and compute these measures, however, are not solely for academic interest. Quantitative analyses that use these measures have and will continue to inform public policy from the landscape to the urban design scale. But getting the policy right requires a thorough understanding of what is being measured, how that measurement affects social welfare, how what kind of policy response is required.
Interest in urban form – or urban sprawl – is strong among scholars trained in multiple disciplines. Further, the issues of concern to the various disciplines often dictate the scale of analysis, the specific phenomena of interest, and often the source of data. These systematic differences between disciplines, it is argued, define distinct perspectives on urban form and approaches to measurement and quantitative analysis. Too often, it is believed, principles of urban form are proposed without due consideration of multidisciplinary perspectives and the scales at which such perspective might be most pertinent.
Research on urban form at the regional scale, often conducted by landscape ecologists and other natural scientists, is generally concerned with species habitat and ecological processes. The evidence suggests that urban sprawl indeed disrupts habitat and, due to the expansion of impervious surfaces, degrades water quality in streams, lakes, and rivers. To minimize these effects, it is clearly desirable for the urban footprint to remain as small as possible. Thus, from a landscape perspective, and holding other things constant, preferable urban forms are compact, contiguous, and generally circular. Such development patterns minimize not only imperviousness and habitat conversion, but also habitat and watershed fragmentation. Appropriate public policies from this perspective include urban containment instruments – such as urban growth boundaries – and surrounded by green spaces, critical habitats, and ecologically sensitive land with special protections.
Research at the metropolitan scale, largely by economists, focuses on city size and structure. The evidence suggests that economic benefits accrue to urban size and diversity. Even after adjusting for differences in the cost of living, incomes tend to be higher in cities that are large and diverse. These findings support economic development strategies that favor attracting a diverse set of industries to existing cities. The evidence also strongly suggests that land uses and development intensities vary systematically with land prices. In a monocentric model this implies downward sloping density and intensity gradients from a single, central node; in a polycentric model, this implies the same for multiple nodes. Economists define good urban form as that which maximizes social welfare. Economists, therefore, tend to favor policies that change relative prices and incentives to internalize externalities yet allow the market to work without regulatory distortion – like priority funding areas, impact fees, and taxation.
Research on urban sprawl at the submetropolitan level, generally conducted by transportation planners, focuses on accessibility. Urban sprawl from this perspective increases the distance between origins and destinations. To maximize access, it is clearly preferable for urban growth to be compact and contiguous. Further, within urban areas, transportation planners prefer that subregions are well connected and contain mixed uses both to minimize the impedance between submetropolitan zones and to promote travel within such zones. Policies favored by transportation planners thus include those that increase the connectivity of the network, channel growth in highway and transit corridors, and concentrate mixed‐use developments within those corridors.
Research on sprawl at the community level, generally by urban planners, addresses a variety of concerns. Like landscape ecologists and transportation planners, urban planners care about environmental quality and accessibility; thus, for similar reasons, urban planners tend to view compact, contiguous, connected, and mixed‐urban forms to have desirable features. Concern about the efficient configuration of other forms of urban infrastructure, such as wastewater services, schools, police, and fire, also tend to reinforce these preferences. But urban planners must balance concerns over the environment and accessibility against the concerns for social cohesion, equity, and property values. And there is little empirical evidence that these qualities are greater in communities that are compact, connected, and mixed. Whether or not all indicators favor compact, mixed‐use development, there is general agreement that local regulatory barriers to this type of development should be removed and more lifestyle choices should be made available to the changing population.
Research on sprawl at the street level, generally by urban designers, is shaped by principles of good urban form. Urban designers are trained to value coherence, imageability, transparency, etc. The evidence suggests that the general population values these features as well and that such features also tend to promote physical activity, personal safety, and perhaps social interaction. Perhaps the most important finding at this scale is that quality design can substitute for personal space and thus make high‐density development as, or even more, attractive than low‐density development. Public policies that achieve these results include form‐based codes and design review processes.
In sum, substantial work by researchers trained in various disciplines has made considerable progress measuring urban form and assessing its impacts on economic, social, and environmental factors. A large body of evidence suggests there are advantages to development that is dense and diverse. But in the abstract such normative principles of urban form have little meaning. To provide more concrete principles of urban form, Talen (2003) carefully describes and combines measures that correspond with the submetropolitan and community design scales of analysis. The present authors believe, however, that principles of urban form must consider landscape, metropolitan, and urban design perspectives as well. Only when these principles are applied at multiple scales and contexts do they have any real value for public policy.
Link para texto integral
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17549170801903496
Journal of Urbanism: International Research on Placemaking and Urban Sustainability
Volume 1, Issue 1, 2008
Kelly Clifton, Reid Ewing, Gerrit‐Jan Knaap & Yan Song
Abstract
This paper characterizes and reviews multidisciplinary approaches to urban form. It begins by classifying quantitative approaches to analyzing urban form into five classes: landscape ecology, economic structure, surface transportation, community design, and urban design. It then reviews quantitative measures in each class. Based on the review, four conclusions are drawn. First, over the last two decades substantial progress has been made in the ability to measure and analyze spatial patterns that help characterize urban form. Second, at multiples scales and for a variety of reasons, there are advantages to development that is mixed and compact. Third, normative principles and policies for addressing urban form need to be crafted at multiple scales and carefully designed to address the disparate issues that arise at each scale. Fourth, with so many disparate measures now used to operationalize the same constructs, it would advance urban form research to have some standardization in operational definitions and measurement protocols.
• Abstract
• Introduction
• Landscape ecology
o Patch characteristics
o Landscape composition
o Configuration and diversity
o Research on urban form based on measures of landscape ecology
• Economic structure
o Metropolitan size, density, and diversity
o Metropolitan structure
o Polycentricity
o Research on form at the metropolitan scale
• Transportation planning
o Network configuration
o Density and diversity
o Accessibility
o Research on sprawl at the sub metropolitan scale
• Community design
o Composition and arrangement
o Transportation networks and accessibility
o Categorical and composite distinctions
o Research on sprawl based on community design
• Urban design
o Physical features
o Accessibility
o Perceptions
o Integrated measures of urban design and urban perceptions
o Research on sprawl at the urban design scale
• Conclusions
• Notes
• References
Conclusions
Although interest in urban form is not new, this review suggests that scholars have made considerable progress in developing and computing measures of urban form. These measures capture spatial arrangements at varying scales, use data from a variety of sources, and address concerns that confront multiple disciplines. Efforts to conceive and compute these measures, however, are not solely for academic interest. Quantitative analyses that use these measures have and will continue to inform public policy from the landscape to the urban design scale. But getting the policy right requires a thorough understanding of what is being measured, how that measurement affects social welfare, how what kind of policy response is required.
Interest in urban form – or urban sprawl – is strong among scholars trained in multiple disciplines. Further, the issues of concern to the various disciplines often dictate the scale of analysis, the specific phenomena of interest, and often the source of data. These systematic differences between disciplines, it is argued, define distinct perspectives on urban form and approaches to measurement and quantitative analysis. Too often, it is believed, principles of urban form are proposed without due consideration of multidisciplinary perspectives and the scales at which such perspective might be most pertinent.
Research on urban form at the regional scale, often conducted by landscape ecologists and other natural scientists, is generally concerned with species habitat and ecological processes. The evidence suggests that urban sprawl indeed disrupts habitat and, due to the expansion of impervious surfaces, degrades water quality in streams, lakes, and rivers. To minimize these effects, it is clearly desirable for the urban footprint to remain as small as possible. Thus, from a landscape perspective, and holding other things constant, preferable urban forms are compact, contiguous, and generally circular. Such development patterns minimize not only imperviousness and habitat conversion, but also habitat and watershed fragmentation. Appropriate public policies from this perspective include urban containment instruments – such as urban growth boundaries – and surrounded by green spaces, critical habitats, and ecologically sensitive land with special protections.
Research at the metropolitan scale, largely by economists, focuses on city size and structure. The evidence suggests that economic benefits accrue to urban size and diversity. Even after adjusting for differences in the cost of living, incomes tend to be higher in cities that are large and diverse. These findings support economic development strategies that favor attracting a diverse set of industries to existing cities. The evidence also strongly suggests that land uses and development intensities vary systematically with land prices. In a monocentric model this implies downward sloping density and intensity gradients from a single, central node; in a polycentric model, this implies the same for multiple nodes. Economists define good urban form as that which maximizes social welfare. Economists, therefore, tend to favor policies that change relative prices and incentives to internalize externalities yet allow the market to work without regulatory distortion – like priority funding areas, impact fees, and taxation.
Research on urban sprawl at the submetropolitan level, generally conducted by transportation planners, focuses on accessibility. Urban sprawl from this perspective increases the distance between origins and destinations. To maximize access, it is clearly preferable for urban growth to be compact and contiguous. Further, within urban areas, transportation planners prefer that subregions are well connected and contain mixed uses both to minimize the impedance between submetropolitan zones and to promote travel within such zones. Policies favored by transportation planners thus include those that increase the connectivity of the network, channel growth in highway and transit corridors, and concentrate mixed‐use developments within those corridors.
Research on sprawl at the community level, generally by urban planners, addresses a variety of concerns. Like landscape ecologists and transportation planners, urban planners care about environmental quality and accessibility; thus, for similar reasons, urban planners tend to view compact, contiguous, connected, and mixed‐urban forms to have desirable features. Concern about the efficient configuration of other forms of urban infrastructure, such as wastewater services, schools, police, and fire, also tend to reinforce these preferences. But urban planners must balance concerns over the environment and accessibility against the concerns for social cohesion, equity, and property values. And there is little empirical evidence that these qualities are greater in communities that are compact, connected, and mixed. Whether or not all indicators favor compact, mixed‐use development, there is general agreement that local regulatory barriers to this type of development should be removed and more lifestyle choices should be made available to the changing population.
Research on sprawl at the street level, generally by urban designers, is shaped by principles of good urban form. Urban designers are trained to value coherence, imageability, transparency, etc. The evidence suggests that the general population values these features as well and that such features also tend to promote physical activity, personal safety, and perhaps social interaction. Perhaps the most important finding at this scale is that quality design can substitute for personal space and thus make high‐density development as, or even more, attractive than low‐density development. Public policies that achieve these results include form‐based codes and design review processes.
In sum, substantial work by researchers trained in various disciplines has made considerable progress measuring urban form and assessing its impacts on economic, social, and environmental factors. A large body of evidence suggests there are advantages to development that is dense and diverse. But in the abstract such normative principles of urban form have little meaning. To provide more concrete principles of urban form, Talen (2003) carefully describes and combines measures that correspond with the submetropolitan and community design scales of analysis. The present authors believe, however, that principles of urban form must consider landscape, metropolitan, and urban design perspectives as well. Only when these principles are applied at multiple scales and contexts do they have any real value for public policy.
Link para texto integral
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17549170801903496
The laws of the city
Publicado por:
Paulo Batista
no grupo “Cidades pela Retoma e Transição”
PARA PENSAR...
A deluge of data makes cities laboratories for those seeking to run them better
In:
The Economist (Urban research)
Jun 23rd 2012 | from the print edition
NO FACE looks alike, but human bodies and their genetic make-up are almost identical. Cities too have distinctive charms—but are surprisingly alike behind their façades. Regardless of size, their populations grow at the same average rate everywhere in the world. A city twice as large as its neighbour is likely to be 15% richer. The mix of green space and built-up areas tends to be equal everywhere.
Such findings reflect a recent shift in urban research. Better technology has turned cities into fountains of data that confirm known regularities and reveal striking new patterns. This could transform how cities are regarded, built and managed. Attempts to contain urban sprawl, long the prevailing paradigm of urban planning, for instance, could fall out of favour. Cities could be run with the sort of finely tuned mix of technology and performance associated with Formula 1 racing cars.
Back in the 1940s, George Zipf, an American researcher, noted that a city’s population is inversely proportional to its rank in a country. His law holds that the largest city is always about twice as big as the second largest, three times as big as the third largest, and so on. Other regularities have emerged since. Big cities decentralise as they grow, creating more jobs outside the centre. Urban population density in all industrialised countries declines slowly as you move away from the centre. (Moscow, exceptionally, is the other way round.)
The lack of good numbers used to limit such studies. Now data abound. The United Nations and other organisations make most of their statistics freely available. Data have also become more comparable between cities and even between countries. Most important, transport and telecoms networks, and social media, are spawning new data as a free by-product.
This has triggered new research. For instance Geoffrey West and Luis Bettencourt, both of the Santa Fe Institute, found that cities scale much like organisms. Just as an elephant is, roughly speaking, a larger but more energy-efficient version of a gorilla, big cities are thrifty versions of small ones. For a metropolis twice the size of another, the length of electric cables, number of gas stations and other bits of infrastructure decrease by about 15% per inhabitant. But beasts do not enjoy the cities’ rising returns to scale. Income, patents, savings and other signs of wealth rise by around 15% when a city’s size doubles. In short, urbanites consume less but produce more.
Shlomo Angel, an urban planning expert at New York University, gathered historical and census data from hundreds of cities, digitised thousands of maps and had computers count millions of pixels on satellite pictures. Between 1990 and 2000 the surfaces of each of the 120 cities he and his team studied grew on average more than twice as fast as their populations. These rates, he says, are unlikely to change. That means that the amount of urban land will double in only 19 years, whereas the urban population will double in 43 years.
Carlo Ratti, who heads the Senseable City Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was one of the first to sift through the data produced by telecoms networks. One aim was to find out how a country’s internal borders reflect human connections. In Britain the English and the Scots hardly talk, at least on landlines; west of London, where many of Britain’s high-tech firms are based, a new region is developing. American states such as Georgia and Alabama belong together, whereas California splits three ways. In Portugal, if a city is twice the size of another, people make 12% more phone calls per head. This gives weight to what urban theorists such as the late Jane Jacobs have long argued: that cities foster the exchange of ideas.
The Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis (CASA) at University College London, another research hotbed, uses data from London’s Oyster cards—used to pay for public transport—and Twitter messages. Tube-travel patterns are regular: entering the system at one station tends to mean leaving it at a particular other one. Twitter messages reveal a city’s structure and its activity. London has one centre, near Piccadilly Circus; New York has several, including near Times Square, City Hall and in Brooklyn. Tweeting correlates negatively with greenery, particularly in Central Park.
Some in the field are ambivalent about such research. Practitioners of urban planning don’t quite know what to do with the results—particularly regularities of the sort found by Mr West. Others worry that urban research could, just like other fields of study, start to put number-crunching ahead of other important questions. “A green pixel on a satellite image doesn’t tell you whether it’s a park or a private garden,” argues Philipp Rode, of LSE Cities, a research centre at the London School of Economics.
Still, the deluge of urban data is likely to have a big impact. Some academics such as Michael Batty, the director of CASA, see a real prospect of synthesising these patterns and regularities into a “science of the city”, much like physics or biology. That will be the subject of a conference at the Santa Fe Institute in July.
City planners, too, may have to rethink their work. If cities indeed develop organically along certain lines, pushing them onto another track may be futile. Instead of trying to limit growth, planners should “make room”, says Mr Angel: be realistic when projecting urban land needs, set generous metropolitan limits, protect some open space and provide an arterial grid of roads. This is pretty much what New York did in the early 18th century. It is what some Chinese cities are doing now.
Yet the most immediate impact of urban data will be on how cities are managed. In a second research lab in Singapore, Mr Ratti and his colleagues are developing software to turn cities into what he calls “real-time control systems”. These combine all kinds of data feeds, including information about the location of taxis and rainfall. The city state’s transport system would benefit from being better able to match the demand and supply of taxis, particularly when it rains, which tends to happen suddenly in Singapore.
Such examples raise one question: how will data change cities? To get an idea, look at how racing cars have changed. Mechanics used to do all the fine-tuning on their vehicle before a race. Now they sit in front of big screens, monitoring the data that comes in from the hundreds of sensors attached to the car—and make adjustments in real-time. One day city hall may be as packed with screens as a Formula 1 pit.
Link para o texto integral:
http://www.economist.com/node/21557313
Paulo Batista
no grupo “Cidades pela Retoma e Transição”
PARA PENSAR...
A deluge of data makes cities laboratories for those seeking to run them better
In:
The Economist (Urban research)
Jun 23rd 2012 | from the print edition
NO FACE looks alike, but human bodies and their genetic make-up are almost identical. Cities too have distinctive charms—but are surprisingly alike behind their façades. Regardless of size, their populations grow at the same average rate everywhere in the world. A city twice as large as its neighbour is likely to be 15% richer. The mix of green space and built-up areas tends to be equal everywhere.
Such findings reflect a recent shift in urban research. Better technology has turned cities into fountains of data that confirm known regularities and reveal striking new patterns. This could transform how cities are regarded, built and managed. Attempts to contain urban sprawl, long the prevailing paradigm of urban planning, for instance, could fall out of favour. Cities could be run with the sort of finely tuned mix of technology and performance associated with Formula 1 racing cars.
Back in the 1940s, George Zipf, an American researcher, noted that a city’s population is inversely proportional to its rank in a country. His law holds that the largest city is always about twice as big as the second largest, three times as big as the third largest, and so on. Other regularities have emerged since. Big cities decentralise as they grow, creating more jobs outside the centre. Urban population density in all industrialised countries declines slowly as you move away from the centre. (Moscow, exceptionally, is the other way round.)
The lack of good numbers used to limit such studies. Now data abound. The United Nations and other organisations make most of their statistics freely available. Data have also become more comparable between cities and even between countries. Most important, transport and telecoms networks, and social media, are spawning new data as a free by-product.
This has triggered new research. For instance Geoffrey West and Luis Bettencourt, both of the Santa Fe Institute, found that cities scale much like organisms. Just as an elephant is, roughly speaking, a larger but more energy-efficient version of a gorilla, big cities are thrifty versions of small ones. For a metropolis twice the size of another, the length of electric cables, number of gas stations and other bits of infrastructure decrease by about 15% per inhabitant. But beasts do not enjoy the cities’ rising returns to scale. Income, patents, savings and other signs of wealth rise by around 15% when a city’s size doubles. In short, urbanites consume less but produce more.
Shlomo Angel, an urban planning expert at New York University, gathered historical and census data from hundreds of cities, digitised thousands of maps and had computers count millions of pixels on satellite pictures. Between 1990 and 2000 the surfaces of each of the 120 cities he and his team studied grew on average more than twice as fast as their populations. These rates, he says, are unlikely to change. That means that the amount of urban land will double in only 19 years, whereas the urban population will double in 43 years.
Carlo Ratti, who heads the Senseable City Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was one of the first to sift through the data produced by telecoms networks. One aim was to find out how a country’s internal borders reflect human connections. In Britain the English and the Scots hardly talk, at least on landlines; west of London, where many of Britain’s high-tech firms are based, a new region is developing. American states such as Georgia and Alabama belong together, whereas California splits three ways. In Portugal, if a city is twice the size of another, people make 12% more phone calls per head. This gives weight to what urban theorists such as the late Jane Jacobs have long argued: that cities foster the exchange of ideas.
The Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis (CASA) at University College London, another research hotbed, uses data from London’s Oyster cards—used to pay for public transport—and Twitter messages. Tube-travel patterns are regular: entering the system at one station tends to mean leaving it at a particular other one. Twitter messages reveal a city’s structure and its activity. London has one centre, near Piccadilly Circus; New York has several, including near Times Square, City Hall and in Brooklyn. Tweeting correlates negatively with greenery, particularly in Central Park.
Some in the field are ambivalent about such research. Practitioners of urban planning don’t quite know what to do with the results—particularly regularities of the sort found by Mr West. Others worry that urban research could, just like other fields of study, start to put number-crunching ahead of other important questions. “A green pixel on a satellite image doesn’t tell you whether it’s a park or a private garden,” argues Philipp Rode, of LSE Cities, a research centre at the London School of Economics.
Still, the deluge of urban data is likely to have a big impact. Some academics such as Michael Batty, the director of CASA, see a real prospect of synthesising these patterns and regularities into a “science of the city”, much like physics or biology. That will be the subject of a conference at the Santa Fe Institute in July.
City planners, too, may have to rethink their work. If cities indeed develop organically along certain lines, pushing them onto another track may be futile. Instead of trying to limit growth, planners should “make room”, says Mr Angel: be realistic when projecting urban land needs, set generous metropolitan limits, protect some open space and provide an arterial grid of roads. This is pretty much what New York did in the early 18th century. It is what some Chinese cities are doing now.
Yet the most immediate impact of urban data will be on how cities are managed. In a second research lab in Singapore, Mr Ratti and his colleagues are developing software to turn cities into what he calls “real-time control systems”. These combine all kinds of data feeds, including information about the location of taxis and rainfall. The city state’s transport system would benefit from being better able to match the demand and supply of taxis, particularly when it rains, which tends to happen suddenly in Singapore.
Such examples raise one question: how will data change cities? To get an idea, look at how racing cars have changed. Mechanics used to do all the fine-tuning on their vehicle before a race. Now they sit in front of big screens, monitoring the data that comes in from the hundreds of sensors attached to the car—and make adjustments in real-time. One day city hall may be as packed with screens as a Formula 1 pit.
Link para o texto integral:
http://www.economist.com/node/21557313
29 de junho de 2012
Entrega del Premio Europeo del Espacio Público Urbano 2012
Quando:
29 de junio de 2012
Onde:
Barcelona - en el CCCB
Premios ex aequo:
Reordenación de las orillas del rio Ljubljanica en Liubliana, Eslovenia
Janez Koželj, Teniente de Alcalde y Director de Urbanismo del Ayuntamiento de Liubliana, promotor
Rok Žnidaršič, estudio Medprostor, uno de los ocho estudios autores de la obra colectiva
Restauración de las cimas del Turó de la Rovira en Barcelona
Francina Vila i Valls, Regidora del Districto de Horta-Guinardó y Vicepresidenta de la Agencia de promoción del Carmelo y alrededores, promotor
Imma Jansana, estudio Jansana, de la Villa, de Paauw, Arquitectes, y Jordi Romero, estudio AAUP, Jordi Romero i associats, autores
Menciones especiales:
Exhibition Road en Londres, Reino Unido
Mahmood Siddiqi, director de los Servicios de Movilidad de los districtos de Kensington y Chelsea de Londres
Memorial de la abolición de la esclavitud en Nantes, Francia
Julian Bonder, estudio Wodiczko+Bonder, Architecture, Art & Design, autor
Annorstädes/Elswhere/Ailleurs en Mälmo, Suecia
Tania Ruiz, autora
Categoria especial:
Acampada en la Puerta del Sol en Madrid
http://www.publicspace.org/es
27 de junho de 2012
Metodologias de investigação urbana
Ciclo de Conferências no âmbito do Doutoramento em Estudos Urbanos 2011/2012
Quando:
27 de Junho - 18h
Onde:
Lisboa - FCSH‐UNL, Av. Berna 26 - (Ed. Id. ID, sala a definir)
Com quem:
Joan Pujadas (U. Rovira i Virgili, Tarragona)
Mais informação:
"Planning 2012: Making it work!"
Quando:
27 de Junho de 2012
Onde:
Londres
"Planning 2012: Making it work!" is a one day event aimed at addressing the planning issues that matter to you. Whatever your role in spatial planning the Planning Convention is this year’s most important planning event!
The brand new one day format brings together big picture plenaries and special interests sessions to ensure you focus your specific professional needs. Leading edge speakers will tackle some of the most grappling issues including, the new planning agenda in England, cities in the UK, national infrastructure planning and RTPI’s new “Map for England”.
This event will change your perspective, refresh your knowledge, extend your contacts and equip you with the tools you need to make it work in 2012. Why attend?
Over the course of the day you will:
- Take away practical tools and techniques to address planning issues that matter to you
- Understand the strategies to make yourself more effective in difficult times
- Listen to industry leading speakers share their knowledge you won’t receive at any other event this year
- Be inspired with opportunities to network and share experiences with your peers
- Look at the world of planning from a different perspective and learn how to make it work!
Mais informação:
http://www.theplanningconvention.co.uk/
CIUTATS LAB
La metáfora de la ciudad como laboratorio está haciendo fortuna por el componente de experimentación urbana y cultural que incorpora, estratégia que parece que se plantea también Barcelona.
¿Qué forma adoptan estas nuevas ciudades-laboratorio?
¿Qué relación tienen con la cultura digital?
¿Són crecimientos orgánicos y planificados?
¿Cómo puede una ciudad orquestrar de forma inclusiva para sus ciudadanos, su transformación hacia una ciudad-laboratorio?
¿Será Barcelona una ciudad-laboratorio?
¿Será una red de laboratorios o se apostará de nuevo por una gran instalación-laboratorio?
Mais informação:
http://www.cccb.org/icionline/barcelona-lab/
http://www.cccb.org/lab/es/category/ici/
¿Qué forma adoptan estas nuevas ciudades-laboratorio?
¿Qué relación tienen con la cultura digital?
¿Són crecimientos orgánicos y planificados?
¿Cómo puede una ciudad orquestrar de forma inclusiva para sus ciudadanos, su transformación hacia una ciudad-laboratorio?
¿Será Barcelona una ciudad-laboratorio?
¿Será una red de laboratorios o se apostará de nuevo por una gran instalación-laboratorio?
Mais informação:
http://www.cccb.org/icionline/barcelona-lab/
http://www.cccb.org/lab/es/category/ici/
Subscrever:
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