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Wikipedia

Urban design

Urban design is an approach to the design of buildings and the spaces between them that focuses on specific design processes and outcomes. In addition to designing and shaping the physical features of towns, cities, and regional spaces, urban design considers 'bigger picture' issues of economic, social and environmental value and social design. The scope of a project can range from a local street or public space to an entire city and surrounding areas. Urban designers connect the fields of architecture, landscape architecture and urban planning to better organize physical space and community environments.[1]

Monumental Axis, Brasília designed by Oscar Niemeyer and Lúcio Costa

Some important focuses of urban design on this page include its historical impact, paradigm shifts, its interdisciplinary nature, and issues related to urban design.

Theory edit

 
A Christmas-lit Alexander Street in Helsinki, Finland

Urban design deals with the larger scale of groups of buildings, infrastructure, streets, and public spaces, entire neighbourhoods and districts, and entire cities, with the goal of making urban environments that are equitable, beautiful, performative, and sustainable.[2][3][4]

Urban design is an interdisciplinary field that utilizes the procedures and the elements of architecture and other related professions, including landscape design, urban planning, civil engineering, and municipal engineering.[5][6] It borrows substantive and procedural knowledge from public administration, sociology, law, urban geography, urban economics and other related disciplines from the social and behavioral sciences, as well as from the natural sciences.[7] In more recent times different sub-subfields of urban design have emerged such as strategic urban design, landscape urbanism, water-sensitive urban design, and sustainable urbanism. Urban design demands an understanding of a wide range of subjects from physical geography to social science, and an appreciation for disciplines, such as real estate development, urban economics, political economy, and social theory.

 
Model of Dubai Sports City in Dubai, United Arab Emirates

Urban design theory deals primarily with the design and management of public space (i.e. the 'public environment', 'public realm' or 'public domain'), and the way public places are used and experienced. Public space includes the totality of spaces used freely on a day-to-day basis by the general public, such as streets, plazas, parks, and public infrastructure. Some aspects of privately owned spaces, such as building facades or domestic gardens, also contribute to public space and are therefore also considered by urban design theory. Important writers on urban design theory include Christopher Alexander, Peter Calthorpe, Gordon Cullen, Andrés Duany, Jane Jacobs, Jan Gehl, Allan B. Jacobs, Kevin Lynch, Aldo Rossi, Colin Rowe, Robert Venturi, William H. Whyte, Camillo Sitte, Bill Hillier (space syntax), and Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk.

History edit

Although contemporary professional use of the term 'urban design' dates from the mid-20th century, urban design as such has been practiced throughout history. Ancient examples of carefully planned and designed cities exist in Asia, Africa, Europe, and the Americas, and are particularly well known within Classical Chinese, Roman, and Greek cultures. Specifically, Hippodamus of Miletus was a famous ancient Greek architect and urban planner, and all around academic that is often considered to be a "father of European urban planning", and the namesake of the "Hippodamian plan", also known as the grid plan of a city layout.[8]

European Medieval cities are often, and often erroneously, regarded as exemplars of undesigned or 'organic' city development. There are many examples of considered urban design in the Middle Ages.[9] In England, many of the towns listed in the 9th-century Burghal Hidage were designed on a grid, examples including Southampton, Wareham, Dorset and Wallingford, Oxfordshire, having been rapidly created to provide a defensive network against Danish invaders.[10] 12th century western Europe brought renewed focus on urbanisation as a means of stimulating economic growth and generating revenue.[11] The burgage system dating from that time and its associated burgage plots brought a form of self-organising design to medieval towns.[12]

Throughout history, the design of streets and deliberate configuration of public spaces with buildings have reflected contemporaneous social norms or philosophical and religious beliefs.[13] Yet the link between designed urban space and the human mind appears to be bidirectional. Indeed, the reverse impact of urban structure upon human behaviour and upon thought is evidenced by both observational study and historical records. There are clear indications of impact through Renaissance urban design on the thought of Johannes Kepler and Galileo Galilei.[14] Already René Descartes in his Discourse on the Method had attested to the impact Renaissance planned new towns had upon his own thought, and much evidence exists that the Renaissance streetscape was also the perceptual stimulus that had led to the development of coordinate geometry.[15]

Early modern era edit

The beginnings of modern urban design in Europe are associated with the Renaissance but, especially, with the Age of Enlightenment.[16] Spanish colonial cities were often planned, as were some towns settled by other imperial cultures.[17] These sometimes embodied utopian ambitions as well as aims for functionality and good governance, as with James Oglethorpe's plan for Savannah, Georgia.[18] In the Baroque period the design approaches developed in French formal gardens such as Versailles were extended into urban development and redevelopment. In this period, when modern professional specializations did not exist, urban design was undertaken by people with skills in areas as diverse as sculpture, architecture, garden design, surveying, astronomy, and military engineering. In the 18th and 19th centuries, urban design was perhaps most closely linked with surveyors engineers and architects. The increase in urban populations brought with it problems of epidemic disease, the response to which was a focus on public health, the rise in the UK of municipal engineering and the inclusion in British legislation of provisions such as minimum widths of street in relation to heights of buildings in order to ensure adequate light and ventilation.[citation needed]

Much of Frederick Law Olmsted's work was concerned with urban design, and the newly formed profession of landscape architecture also began to play a significant role in the late 19th century.[19]

Modern urban design edit

 
Ebenezer Howard's influential 1902 diagram, illustrating urban growth through garden city "off-shoots"

In the 19th century, cities were industrializing and expanding at a tremendous rate. Private businesses largely dictated the pace and style of this development. The expansion created many hardships for the working poor and concern for public health increased. However, the laissez-faire style of government, in fashion for most of the Victorian era, was starting to give way to a New Liberalism. This gave more power to the public. The public wanted the government to provide citizens, especially factory workers, with healthier environments. Around 1900, modern urban design emerged from developing theories on how to mitigate the consequences of the industrial age.

The first modern urban planning theorist was Sir Ebenezer Howard. His ideas, although utopian, were adopted around the world because they were highly practical. He initiated the garden city movement.[20] in 1898. His garden cities were intended to be planned, self-contained communities surrounded by parks. Howard wanted the cities to be proportional with separate areas of residences, industry, and agriculture. Inspired by the Utopian novel Looking Backward and Henry George's work Progress and Poverty, Howard published his book Garden Cities of To-morrow in 1898. His work is an important reference in the history of urban planning.[21] He envisioned the self-sufficient garden city to house 32,000 people on a site of 6,000 acres (2,428 ha). He planned on a concentric pattern with open spaces, public parks, and six radial boulevards, 120 ft (37 m) wide, extending from the center. When it reached full population, Howard wanted another garden city to be developed nearby. He envisaged a cluster of several garden cities as satellites of a central city of 50,000 people, linked by road and rail.[22] His model for a garden city was first created at Letchworth[23] and Welwyn Garden City in Hertfordshire. Howard's movement was extended by Sir Frederic Osborn to regional planning.[23]

20th century edit

In the early 1900s, urban planning became professionalized. With input from utopian visionaries, civil engineers, and local councilors, new approaches to city design were developed for consideration by decision-makers such as elected officials. In 1899, the Town and Country Planning Association was founded. In 1909, the first academic course on urban planning was offered by the University of Liverpool.[24] Urban planning was first officially embodied in the Housing and Town Planning Act of 1909 Howard's 'garden city' compelled local authorities to introduce a system where all housing construction conformed to specific building standards.[25] In the United Kingdom following this Act, surveyor, civil engineers, architects, and lawyers began working together within local authorities. In 1910, Thomas Adams became the first Town Planning Inspector at the Local Government Board and began meeting with practitioners. In 1914, The Town Planning Institute was established. The first urban planning course in America wasn't established until 1924 at Harvard University. Professionals developed schemes for the development of land, transforming town planning into a new area of expertise.

In the 20th century, urban planning was changed by the automobile industry. Car-oriented design impacted the rise of 'urban design'. City layouts now revolved around roadways and traffic patterns.

In June 1928, the International Congresses of Modern Architecture (CIAM) was founded at the Chateau de la Sarraz in Switzerland, by a group of 28 European architects organized by Le Corbusier, Hélène de Mandrot, and Sigfried Giedion. The CIAM was one of many 20th century manifestos meant to advance the cause of "architecture as a social art".

Postwar edit

Team X was a group of architects and other invited participants who assembled starting in July 1953 at the 9th Congress of the International Congresses of Modern Architecture (CIAM) and created a schism within CIAM by challenging its doctrinaire approach to urbanism.

In 1956, the term "Urban design" was first used at a series of conferences hosted by Harvard University. The event provided a platform for Harvard's Urban Design program. The program also utilized the writings of famous urban planning thinkers: Gordon Cullen, Jane Jacobs, Kevin Lynch, and Christopher Alexander.

In 1961, Gordon Cullen published The Concise Townscape. He examined the traditional artistic approach to city design of theorists including Camillo Sitte, Barry Parker, and Raymond Unwin. Cullen also created the concept of 'serial vision'. It defined the urban landscape as a series of related spaces.

 
Jane Jacobs, urban design activist and author of The Death and Life of Great American Cities.

Also in 1961, Jane Jacobs published The Death and Life of Great American Cities. She critiqued the modernism of CIAM (International Congresses of Modern Architecture). Jacobs also claimed crime rates in publicly owned spaces were rising because of the Modernist approach of 'city in the park'. She argued instead for an 'eyes on the street' approach to town planning through the resurrection of main public space precedents (e.g. streets, squares).

In the same year, Kevin Lynch published The Image of the City. He was seminal to urban design, particularly with regards to the concept of legibility. He reduced urban design theory to five basic elements: paths, districts, edges, nodes, landmarks. He also made the use of mental maps to understand the city popular, rather than the two-dimensional physical master plans of the previous 50 years.

Other notable works:

The popularity of these works resulted in terms that become everyday language in the field of urban planning. Aldo Rossi introduced 'historicism' and 'collective memory' to urban design. Rossi also proposed a 'collage metaphor' to understand the collection of new and old forms within the same urban space. Peter Calthorpe developed a manifesto for sustainable urban living via medium-density living. He also designed a manual for building new settlements in his concept of Transit Oriented Development (TOD). Bill Hillier and Julienne Hanson introduced Space Syntax to predict how movement patterns in cities would contribute to urban vitality, anti-social behaviour, and economic success. 'Sustainability', 'livability', and 'high quality of urban components' also became commonplace in the field.

Current trends edit

 
Jakriborg, in Sweden, started in the late 1990s as a new urbanist eco-friendly new town near Malmö

Today, urban design seeks to create sustainable urban environments with long-lasting structures, buildings, and overall livability. Walkable urbanism is another approach to practice that is defined within the Charter of New Urbanism. It aims to reduce environmental impacts by altering the built environment to create smart cities that support sustainable transport. Compact urban neighborhoods encourage residents to drive less. These neighborhoods have significantly lower environmental impacts when compared to sprawling suburbs.[26] To prevent urban sprawl, Circular flow land use management was introduced in Europe to promote sustainable land use patterns.

As a result of the recent New Classical Architecture movement, sustainable construction aims to develop smart growth, walkability, architectural tradition, and classical design.[27][28] It contrasts with modernist and globally uniform architecture. In the 1980s, urban design began to oppose the increasing solitary housing estates and suburban sprawl.[29] Managed Urbanisation with the view to making the urbanising process completely culturally and economically, and environmentally sustainable, and as a possible solution to the urban sprawl, Frank Reale has submitted an interesting concept of Expanding Nodular Development (E.N.D.) that integrates many urban designs and ecological principles, to design and build smaller rural hubs with high-grade connecting freeways, rather than adding more expensive infrastructure to existing big cities and the resulting congestion.

Paradigm shifts edit

Throughout the young existence of the Urban Design discipline, many paradigm shifts have occurred that have affected the trajectory of the field regarding theory and practice. These paradigm shifts cover multiple subject areas outside of the traditional design disciplines.

  • Team 10 - The first major paradigm shift was the formation of Team 10 out of CIAM, or the Congres Internationaux d’Architecture Moderne. They believed that Urban Design should introduce ideas of 'Human Association', which pivots the design focus from the individual patron to concentrating on the collective urban population.
  • The Brundtland Report and Silent Spring - Another paradigm shift was the publication of the Brundtland Report and the book Silent Spring by Rachel Carson. These writings introduced the idea that human settlements could have detrimental impacts on ecological processes, as well as human health, which spurred a new era of environmental awareness in the field.
  • The Planner's Triangle - The Planner's Triangle, created by Scott Cambell, emphasized three main conflicts in the planning process. This diagram exposed the complex relationships between Economic Development, Environmental Protection, and Equity and Social Justice. For the first time, the concept of Equity and Social Justice was considered as equally important as Economic Development and Environmental Protection within the design process.
  • Death of Modernism (Demolition of Pruitt Igoe) - Pruitt Igoe was a spatial symbol and representation of Modernist theory regarding social housing. In its failure and demolition, these theories were put into question and many within the design field considered the era of Modernism to be dead.
  • Neoliberalism & the election of Reagan - The election of President Reagan and the rise of Neoliberalism affected the Urban Design discipline because it shifted the planning process to emphasize capitalistic gains and spatial privatization. Inspired by the trickle-down approach of Reaganomics, it was believed that the benefits of a capitalist emphasis within design would positively impact everyone. Conversely, this led to exclusionary design practices and to what many consider as "the death of public space".
  • Right to the City - The spatial and political battle over our citizens' rights to the city has been an ongoing one. David Harvey, along with Dan Mitchell and Edward Soja, discussed rights to the city as a matter of shifting the historical thinking of how spatial matter was determined in a critical form. This change of thinking occurred in three forms: ontologically, sociologically, and the combination of this socio-spatial dialect. Together the aim shifted to be able to measure what matters in a socio-spatial context.
  • Black Lives Matter (Ferguson) - The Black Lives Matter movement challenged design thinking because it emphasized the injustices and inequities suffered by people of color in urban space, as well as emphasized their right to public space without discrimination and brutality. It claims that minority groups lack certain spatial privileges and that this deficiency can result in matters of life and death. In order to reach an equitable state of urbanism, there needs to be equal identification of socio-economic lives within our urbanscapes.

New approaches edit

There have been many different theories and approaches applied to the practice of urban design.

New Urbanism is an approach that began in the 1980s as a place-making initiative to combat suburban sprawl. Its goal is to increase density by creating compact and complete towns and neighborhoods. The 10 principles of new urbanism are walkability, connectivity, mixed-use and diversity, mixed housing, quality architecture and urban design, traditional neighborhood structure, increased density, smart transportation, sustainability, and quality of life. New urbanism and the developments that it has created are sources of debates within the discipline, primarily with the landscape urbanist approach but also due to its reproduction of idyllic architectural tropes that do not respond to the context. Andres Duany, Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk, Peter Calthorpe, and Jeff Speck are all strongly associated with New Urbanism and its evolution over the years.

Landscape Urbanism is a theory that first surfaced in the 1990s, arguing that the city is constructed of interconnected and ecologically rich horizontal field conditions, rather than the arrangement of objects and buildings. Charles Waldheim, Mohsen Mostafavi, James Corner, and Richard Weller are closely associated with this theory. Landscape urbanism theorises sites, territories, ecosystems, networks, and infrastructures through landscape practice according to Corner,[30] while applying a dynamic concept to cities as ecosystems that grow, shrink or change phases of development according to Waldheim.[31]

Everyday Urbanism is a concept introduced by Margaret Crawford and influenced by Henry Lefebvre that describes the everyday lived experience shared by urban residents including commuting, working, relaxing, moving through city streets and sidewalks, shopping, buying, eating food, and running errands. Everyday urbanism is not concerned with aesthetic value. Instead, it introduces the idea of eliminating the distance between experts and ordinary users and forces designers and planners to contemplate a 'shift of power' and address social life from a direct and ordinary perspective.

Tactical Urbanism (also known as DIY Urbanism, Planning-by-Doing, Urban Acupuncture, or Urban Prototyping) is a city, organizational, or citizen-led approach to neighborhood-building that uses short-term, low-cost, and scalable interventions and policies to catalyze long term change.

Top-up Urbanism is the theory and implementation of two techniques in urban design: top-down and bottom-up. Top-down urbanism is when the design is implemented from the top of the hierarchy - normally the government or planning department. Bottom-up or grassroots urbanism begins with the people or the bottom of the hierarchy. Top-up means that both methods are used together to make a more participatory design, so it is sure to be comprehensive and well regarded in order to be as successful as possible.

Infrastructural Urbanism is the study of how the major investments that go into making infrastructural systems can be leveraged to be more sustainable for communities. Instead of the systems being solely about efficiency in both cost and production, infrastructural urbanism strives to utilize these investments to be more equitable for social and environmental issues as well. Linda Samuels is a designer investigating how to accomplish this change in infrastructure in what she calls "next-generation infrastructure" which is "multifunctional; public; visible; socially productive; locally specific, flexible, and adaptable; sensitive to the eco-economy; composed of design prototypes or demonstration projects; symbiotic; technologically smart; and developed collaboratively across disciplines and agencies".

Sustainable Urbanism is the study from the 1990s of how a community can be beneficial for the ecosystem, the people, and the economy for which it is associated. It is based on Scott Campbell's planner's triangle which tries to find the balance between economy, equity, and the environment. Its main concept is to try and make cities as self-sufficient as possible while not damaging the ecosystem around them, today with an increased focus on climate stability.[4] A key designer working with sustainable urbanism is Douglas Farr.

Feminist Urbanism is the study and critique of how the built environment affects genders differently because of patriarchal social and political structures in society. Typically, the people at the table making design decisions are men, so their conception about public space and the built environment relates to their life perspectives and experiences, which do not reflect the same experiences of women or children. Dolores Hayden is a scholar who has researched this topic from 1980 to the present day. Hayden's writing says, “when women, men, and children of all classes and races can identify the public domain as the place where they feel most comfortable as citizens, Americans will finally have homelike urban space.”

Educational Urbanism is an emerging discipline, at the crossroads of urban planning, educational planning, and pedagogy. An approach that tackles the notion that economic activities, the need for new skills at the workplace, and the spatial configuration of the workplace rely on the spatial reorientation in the design of educational spaces and the urban dimension of educational planning.

Black Urbanism is an approach in which black communities are active creators, innovators, and authors of the process of designing and creating the neighborhoods and spaces of the metropolitan areas they have done so much to help revive over the past half-century. The goal is not to build black cities for black people but to explore and develop the creative energy that exists in so-called black areas: that has the potential to contribute to the sustainable development of the whole city.

Debates in urbanism edit

Underlying the practice of urban design are the many theories about how to best design the city. Each theory makes a unique claim about how to effectively design thriving, sustainable urban environments. Debates over the efficacy of these approaches fill the urban design discourse. Landscape Urbanism and New Urbanism are commonly debated as distinct approaches to addressing suburban sprawl. While Landscape Urbanism proposes landscape as the basic building block of the city and embraces horizontality, flexibility, and adaptability, New Urbanism offers the neighborhood as the basic building block of the city and argues for increased density, mixed uses, and walkability. Opponents of Landscape Urbanism point out that most of its projects are urban parks, and as such, its application is limited. Opponents of New Urbanism claim that its preoccupation with traditional neighborhood structures is nostalgic, unimaginative, and culturally problematic. Everyday Urbanism argues for grassroots neighborhood improvements rather than master-planned, top-down interventions. Each theory elevates the roles of certain professions in the urban design process, further fueling the debate. In practice, urban designers often apply principles from many urban design theories. Emerging from the conversation is a universal acknowledgement of the importance of increased interdisciplinary collaboration in designing the modern city.[32]

Urban design as an integrative profession edit

 
L'Enfant's plan for Washington DC
 
Gehl Architects' project for Brighton New Road employing shared space

Urban designers work with architects, landscape architects, transportation engineers, urban planners, and industrial designers to reshape the city. Cooperation with public agencies, authorities and the interests of nearby property owners is necessary to manage public spaces. Users often compete over the spaces and negotiate across a variety of spheres. Input is frequently needed from a wide range of stakeholders. This can lead to different levels of participation as defined in Arnstein's Ladder of Citizen Participation.[33]

While there are some professionals who identify themselves specifically as urban designers, a majority have backgrounds in urban planning, architecture, or landscape architecture. Many collegiate programs incorporate urban design theory and design subjects into their curricula. There is an increasing number of university programs offering degrees in urban design at the post-graduate level.

Urban design considers:

  • Pedestrian zones
  • Incorporation of nature within a city
  • Aesthetics
  • Urban structure – arrangement and relation of business and people
  • Urban typology, density, and sustainability - spatial types and morphologies related to the intensity of use, consumption of resources, production, and maintenance of viable communities
  • Accessibility – safe and easy transportation
  • Legibility and wayfinding – accessible information about travel and destinations
  • Animation – Designing places to stimulate public activity
  • Function and fit – places support their varied intended uses
  • Complimentary mixed uses – Locating activities to allow constructive interaction between them
  • Character and meaning – Recognizing differences between places
  • Order and incident – Balancing consistency and variety in the urban environment
  • Continuity and change – Locating people in time and place, respecting heritage and contemporary culture
  • Civil society – people are free to interact as civic equals, important for building social capital
  • Participation/engagement – including people in the decision-making process can be done at many different scales.

Relationships with other related disciplines edit

The original urban design was thought to be separated from architecture and urban planning. Urban Design has developed to a certain extent, and comes from the foundation of engineering. In Anglo-Saxon countries, it is often considered as a branch under the architecture, urban planning, and landscape architecture and limited as the construction of the urban physical environment. However Urban Design is more integrated into the social science-based, cultural, economic, political, and other aspects. Not only focus on space and architectural group, but also look at the whole city from a broader and more holistic perspective to shape a better living environment. Compared to architecture, the spatial and temporal scale of Urban Design processing is much larger. It deals with neighborhoods, communities, and even the entire city.

The urban design education edit

The University of Liverpool's Department of Civic Design is the first urban design school in the world founded in 1909.[34] Following the 1956 Urban Design conference, Harvard University established the first graduate program with urban design in its title, The Master of Architecture in Urban Design, although as a subject taught in universities its history in Europe is far older. Urban design programs explore the built environment from diverse disciplinary backgrounds and points of view. The pedagogically innovative combination of interdisciplinary studios, lecture courses, seminars, and independent study creates an intimate and engaging educational atmosphere in which students thrive and learn. Soon after in 1961, Washington University in St. Louis founded their Master of Urban Design program. Today, twenty urban design programs exist in the United States:

In the United Kingdom, Master's programmes in Urban Design at University of Manchester or University of Sheffield and Cardiff University or London South Bank University and City Design at the Royal College of Art or Queen's University Belfast are offered.

Issues edit

 
Protest banner during the Climate Change Camp 2007 at Heathrow Airport in London.

The field of urban design holds enormous potential for helping us address today's biggest challenges: an expanding population, mass urbanization, rising inequality, and climate change. In its practice as well as its theories, urban design attempts to tackle these pressing issues. As climate change progresses, urban design can mitigate the results of flooding, temperature changes, and increasingly detrimental storm impacts through a mindset of sustainability and resilience. In doing so, the urban design discipline attempts to create environments that are constructed with longevity in mind, such as zero-carbon cities. Cities today must be designed to minimize resource consumption, waste generation, and pollution while also withstanding the unprecedented impacts of climate change.[4][35][36][37] To be truly resilient, our cities need to be able to not just bounce back from a catastrophic climate event but to bounce forward to an improved state.

Another issue in this field is that it is often assumed that there are no mothers of planning and urban design. However, this is not the case, many women have made proactive contributions to the field, including the work of Mary Kingsbury Simkhovitch, Florence Kelley, and Lillian Wald, to name a few of whom were prominent leaders in the City Social movement. The City Social was a movement that steamed between the commonly known City Practical and City Beautiful movements. It was a movement that’s main concerns lay with the economic and social equalities regarding urban issues.[38]

Justice is and will always be a key issue in urban design. As previously mentioned, past urban strategies have caused injustices within communities incapable of being remedied via simple means. As urban designers tackle the issue of justice, they often are required to look at the injustices of the past and must be careful not to overlook the nuances of race, place, and socioeconomic status in their design efforts. This includes ensuring reasonable access to basic services, transportation, and fighting against gentrification and the commodification of space for economic gain. Organizations such as the Divided Cities Initiatives at Washington University in St. Louis and the Just City Lab at Harvard work on promoting justice in urban design.

Until the 1970s, the design of towns and cities took little account of the needs of people with disabilities. At that time, disabled people began to form movements demanding recognition of their potential contribution if social obstacles were removed. Disabled people challenged the 'medical model' of disability which saw physical and mental problems as an individual 'tragedy' and people with disabilities as 'brave' for enduring them. They proposed instead a 'social model' which said that barriers to disabled people result from the design of the built environment and attitudes of able-bodied people. 'Access Groups' were established composed of people with disabilities who audited their local areas, checked planning applications, and made representations for improvements. The new profession of 'access officer' was established around that time to produce guidelines based on the recommendations of access groups and to oversee adaptations to existing buildings as well as to check on the accessibility of new proposals. Many local authorities now employ access officers who are regulated by the Access Association. A new chapter of the Building Regulations (Part M) was introduced in 1992. Although it was beneficial to have legislation on this issue the requirements were fairly minimal but continue to be improved with ongoing amendments. The Disability Discrimination Act 1995 continues to raise awareness and enforce action on disability issues in the urban environment.


The issue of walkability has gained prominence in recent years, not only with the concerns of the aforementioned climate change, but also the health outcomes of residents. Car-centric urban design has an invariably negative effect on such outcomes. With proximity to internal combustion engines, residents tend to suffer from dangerous levels of air pollution which lead to cardiovascular complications ranging from the acute, in hypertension and alterations in heart rate, and the chronic, the outright development of atherosclerosis. More people die from air pollution each year than from car accidents. This issue has been used to fuel movements for alternative forms of long to mid range transportation such as trains and bicycles, with walking as the primary means of short-range travel. This would bring benefits from two simultaneous avenues. The physical activity from walking, and the lack of particulate matter (carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, etc.) has shown to alleviate and lower the risk of many maladies such as diabetes, hypertension and cardiovascular disease. Physical activity levels from walking are closely related to the abundance of open public spaces, commercial shops, greenery, among others. These attributes also have been stated to contribute to stronger social and emotional health as the open public spaces facilitate more social interaction within communities. This issue is most prevalent in the United States, where the rise of neoliberalism directly and intentionally caused the car-centric infrastructure.

See also edit

References edit

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  3. ^ Wheeler, Stephen M. (18 July 2013). Planning for Sustainability: Creating Livable, Equitable and Ecological Communities. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-48201-4.
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  20. ^ Peter Hall, Mark Tewdwr-Jones (2010). Urban and Regional Planning. Routledge. ISBN 9780203861424.
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  29. ^ Issue Brief: Smart-Growth: Building Livable Communities. American Institute of Architects. Retrieved on 2014-03-23.
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  31. ^ Meg Studer (2011). An Interview With Charles Waldheim: Landscape Urbanism Now. Scenario Journal.
  32. ^ Kelbaugh, Douglas (2015). "The Environmental Paradox of the City, Landscape Urbanism, and New Urbanism". Consilience (13): 1–15. ISSN 1948-3074. JSTOR 26427272.
  33. ^ Arnstein, Sherry (1969). (PDF). Journal of the American Planning Association. 35: 216–224. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-05-11. Retrieved 2019-12-23.
  34. ^ "Event celebrates oldest planning school in the UK - University of Liverpool News". 22 May 2013.
  35. ^ Seto, Karen C.; Churkina, Galina; Hsu, Angel; Keller, Meredith; Newman, Peter W.G.; Qin, Bo; Ramaswami, Anu (18 October 2021). "From Low- to Net-Zero Carbon Cities: The Next Global Agenda". Annual Review of Environment and Resources. 46 (1): 377–415. doi:10.1146/annurev-environ-050120-113117. ISSN 1543-5938. S2CID 238677484.
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Further reading edit

  • Carmona, Matthew Public Places Urban Spaces, The Dimensions of Urban Design, Routledge, London New York, ISBN 9781138067783.
  • Carmona, Matthew, and Tiesdell, Steve, editors, Urban Design Reader, Architectural Press of Elsevier Press, Amsterdam Boston other cities 2007, ISBN 0-7506-6531-9.
  • Larice, Michael, and MacDonald, Elizabeth, editors, The Urban Design Reader, Routledge, New York London 2007, ISBN 0-415-33386-5.

External links edit

    urban, design, this, article, about, design, stage, planning, stage, urban, planning, approach, design, buildings, spaces, between, them, that, focuses, specific, design, processes, outcomes, addition, designing, shaping, physical, features, towns, cities, reg. This article is about the design stage For the planning stage see Urban planning Urban design is an approach to the design of buildings and the spaces between them that focuses on specific design processes and outcomes In addition to designing and shaping the physical features of towns cities and regional spaces urban design considers bigger picture issues of economic social and environmental value and social design The scope of a project can range from a local street or public space to an entire city and surrounding areas Urban designers connect the fields of architecture landscape architecture and urban planning to better organize physical space and community environments 1 Monumental Axis Brasilia designed by Oscar Niemeyer and Lucio CostaSome important focuses of urban design on this page include its historical impact paradigm shifts its interdisciplinary nature and issues related to urban design Contents 1 Theory 2 History 2 1 Early modern era 2 2 Modern urban design 2 2 1 20th century 2 2 1 1 Postwar 2 2 2 Current trends 2 2 3 Paradigm shifts 3 New approaches 3 1 Debates in urbanism 4 Urban design as an integrative profession 4 1 Relationships with other related disciplines 5 The urban design education 6 Issues 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksTheory edit nbsp A Christmas lit Alexander Street in Helsinki FinlandUrban design deals with the larger scale of groups of buildings infrastructure streets and public spaces entire neighbourhoods and districts and entire cities with the goal of making urban environments that are equitable beautiful performative and sustainable 2 3 4 Urban design is an interdisciplinary field that utilizes the procedures and the elements of architecture and other related professions including landscape design urban planning civil engineering and municipal engineering 5 6 It borrows substantive and procedural knowledge from public administration sociology law urban geography urban economics and other related disciplines from the social and behavioral sciences as well as from the natural sciences 7 In more recent times different sub subfields of urban design have emerged such as strategic urban design landscape urbanism water sensitive urban design and sustainable urbanism Urban design demands an understanding of a wide range of subjects from physical geography to social science and an appreciation for disciplines such as real estate development urban economics political economy and social theory nbsp Model of Dubai Sports City in Dubai United Arab EmiratesUrban design theory deals primarily with the design and management of public space i e the public environment public realm or public domain and the way public places are used and experienced Public space includes the totality of spaces used freely on a day to day basis by the general public such as streets plazas parks and public infrastructure Some aspects of privately owned spaces such as building facades or domestic gardens also contribute to public space and are therefore also considered by urban design theory Important writers on urban design theory include Christopher Alexander Peter Calthorpe Gordon Cullen Andres Duany Jane Jacobs Jan Gehl Allan B Jacobs Kevin Lynch Aldo Rossi Colin Rowe Robert Venturi William H Whyte Camillo Sitte Bill Hillier space syntax and Elizabeth Plater Zyberk History editAlthough contemporary professional use of the term urban design dates from the mid 20th century urban design as such has been practiced throughout history Ancient examples of carefully planned and designed cities exist in Asia Africa Europe and the Americas and are particularly well known within Classical Chinese Roman and Greek cultures Specifically Hippodamus of Miletus was a famous ancient Greek architect and urban planner and all around academic that is often considered to be a father of European urban planning and the namesake of the Hippodamian plan also known as the grid plan of a city layout 8 European Medieval cities are often and often erroneously regarded as exemplars of undesigned or organic city development There are many examples of considered urban design in the Middle Ages 9 In England many of the towns listed in the 9th century Burghal Hidage were designed on a grid examples including Southampton Wareham Dorset and Wallingford Oxfordshire having been rapidly created to provide a defensive network against Danish invaders 10 12th century western Europe brought renewed focus on urbanisation as a means of stimulating economic growth and generating revenue 11 The burgage system dating from that time and its associated burgage plots brought a form of self organising design to medieval towns 12 Throughout history the design of streets and deliberate configuration of public spaces with buildings have reflected contemporaneous social norms or philosophical and religious beliefs 13 Yet the link between designed urban space and the human mind appears to be bidirectional Indeed the reverse impact of urban structure upon human behaviour and upon thought is evidenced by both observational study and historical records There are clear indications of impact through Renaissance urban design on the thought of Johannes Kepler and Galileo Galilei 14 Already Rene Descartes in his Discourse on the Method had attested to the impact Renaissance planned new towns had upon his own thought and much evidence exists that the Renaissance streetscape was also the perceptual stimulus that had led to the development of coordinate geometry 15 Early modern era edit Early modern nbsp Boulevard Haussmann Paris Georges Eugene Haussmann nbsp Vienna Ring Road Vienna Georges Eugene Haussmann nbsp Circus Bath completed in 1768The beginnings of modern urban design in Europe are associated with the Renaissance but especially with the Age of Enlightenment 16 Spanish colonial cities were often planned as were some towns settled by other imperial cultures 17 These sometimes embodied utopian ambitions as well as aims for functionality and good governance as with James Oglethorpe s plan for Savannah Georgia 18 In the Baroque period the design approaches developed in French formal gardens such as Versailles were extended into urban development and redevelopment In this period when modern professional specializations did not exist urban design was undertaken by people with skills in areas as diverse as sculpture architecture garden design surveying astronomy and military engineering In the 18th and 19th centuries urban design was perhaps most closely linked with surveyors engineers and architects The increase in urban populations brought with it problems of epidemic disease the response to which was a focus on public health the rise in the UK of municipal engineering and the inclusion in British legislation of provisions such as minimum widths of street in relation to heights of buildings in order to ensure adequate light and ventilation citation needed Much of Frederick Law Olmsted s work was concerned with urban design and the newly formed profession of landscape architecture also began to play a significant role in the late 19th century 19 Modern urban design edit nbsp Ebenezer Howard s influential 1902 diagram illustrating urban growth through garden city off shoots In the 19th century cities were industrializing and expanding at a tremendous rate Private businesses largely dictated the pace and style of this development The expansion created many hardships for the working poor and concern for public health increased However the laissez faire style of government in fashion for most of the Victorian era was starting to give way to a New Liberalism This gave more power to the public The public wanted the government to provide citizens especially factory workers with healthier environments Around 1900 modern urban design emerged from developing theories on how to mitigate the consequences of the industrial age The first modern urban planning theorist was Sir Ebenezer Howard His ideas although utopian were adopted around the world because they were highly practical He initiated the garden city movement 20 in 1898 His garden cities were intended to be planned self contained communities surrounded by parks Howard wanted the cities to be proportional with separate areas of residences industry and agriculture Inspired by the Utopian novel Looking Backward and Henry George s work Progress and Poverty Howard published his book Garden Cities of To morrow in 1898 His work is an important reference in the history of urban planning 21 He envisioned the self sufficient garden city to house 32 000 people on a site of 6 000 acres 2 428 ha He planned on a concentric pattern with open spaces public parks and six radial boulevards 120 ft 37 m wide extending from the center When it reached full population Howard wanted another garden city to be developed nearby He envisaged a cluster of several garden cities as satellites of a central city of 50 000 people linked by road and rail 22 His model for a garden city was first created at Letchworth 23 and Welwyn Garden City in Hertfordshire Howard s movement was extended by Sir Frederic Osborn to regional planning 23 20th century edit In the early 1900s urban planning became professionalized With input from utopian visionaries civil engineers and local councilors new approaches to city design were developed for consideration by decision makers such as elected officials In 1899 the Town and Country Planning Association was founded In 1909 the first academic course on urban planning was offered by the University of Liverpool 24 Urban planning was first officially embodied in the Housing and Town Planning Act of 1909 Howard s garden city compelled local authorities to introduce a system where all housing construction conformed to specific building standards 25 In the United Kingdom following this Act surveyor civil engineers architects and lawyers began working together within local authorities In 1910 Thomas Adams became the first Town Planning Inspector at the Local Government Board and began meeting with practitioners In 1914 The Town Planning Institute was established The first urban planning course in America wasn t established until 1924 at Harvard University Professionals developed schemes for the development of land transforming town planning into a new area of expertise In the 20th century urban planning was changed by the automobile industry Car oriented design impacted the rise of urban design City layouts now revolved around roadways and traffic patterns In June 1928 the International Congresses of Modern Architecture CIAM was founded at the Chateau de la Sarraz in Switzerland by a group of 28 European architects organized by Le Corbusier Helene de Mandrot and Sigfried Giedion The CIAM was one of many 20th century manifestos meant to advance the cause of architecture as a social art Modernism nbsp Brasilia Oscar Niemeyer Lucio Costa nbsp Palace of Assembly Chandigarh 1952 1961 Le Corbusier nbsp Headquarters of the United Nations nbsp FDR Drive designed by Robert MosesPostwar edit Team X was a group of architects and other invited participants who assembled starting in July 1953 at the 9th Congress of the International Congresses of Modern Architecture CIAM and created a schism within CIAM by challenging its doctrinaire approach to urbanism In 1956 the term Urban design was first used at a series of conferences hosted by Harvard University The event provided a platform for Harvard s Urban Design program The program also utilized the writings of famous urban planning thinkers Gordon Cullen Jane Jacobs Kevin Lynch and Christopher Alexander In 1961 Gordon Cullen published The Concise Townscape He examined the traditional artistic approach to city design of theorists including Camillo Sitte Barry Parker and Raymond Unwin Cullen also created the concept of serial vision It defined the urban landscape as a series of related spaces nbsp Jane Jacobs urban design activist and author of The Death and Life of Great American Cities Also in 1961 Jane Jacobs published The Death and Life of Great American Cities She critiqued the modernism of CIAM International Congresses of Modern Architecture Jacobs also claimed crime rates in publicly owned spaces were rising because of the Modernist approach of city in the park She argued instead for an eyes on the street approach to town planning through the resurrection of main public space precedents e g streets squares In the same year Kevin Lynch published The Image of the City He was seminal to urban design particularly with regards to the concept of legibility He reduced urban design theory to five basic elements paths districts edges nodes landmarks He also made the use of mental maps to understand the city popular rather than the two dimensional physical master plans of the previous 50 years Other notable works Architecture of the City by Aldo Rossi 1966 Learning from Las Vegas by Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown 1972 Collage City by Colin Rowe 1978 The Next American Metropolis by Peter Calthorpe 1993 The Social Logic of Space by Bill Hillier and Julienne Hanson 1984 The popularity of these works resulted in terms that become everyday language in the field of urban planning Aldo Rossi introduced historicism and collective memory to urban design Rossi also proposed a collage metaphor to understand the collection of new and old forms within the same urban space Peter Calthorpe developed a manifesto for sustainable urban living via medium density living He also designed a manual for building new settlements in his concept of Transit Oriented Development TOD Bill Hillier and Julienne Hanson introduced Space Syntax to predict how movement patterns in cities would contribute to urban vitality anti social behaviour and economic success Sustainability livability and high quality of urban components also became commonplace in the field Current trends edit New Urbanism nbsp Market Street Celebration Florida nbsp New urbanist Sankt Eriksomradet quarter in Stockholm Sweden built in the 1990s nbsp Poundbury Dorset nbsp Jakriborg in Sweden started in the late 1990s as a new urbanist eco friendly new town near MalmoToday urban design seeks to create sustainable urban environments with long lasting structures buildings and overall livability Walkable urbanism is another approach to practice that is defined within the Charter of New Urbanism It aims to reduce environmental impacts by altering the built environment to create smart cities that support sustainable transport Compact urban neighborhoods encourage residents to drive less These neighborhoods have significantly lower environmental impacts when compared to sprawling suburbs 26 To prevent urban sprawl Circular flow land use management was introduced in Europe to promote sustainable land use patterns As a result of the recent New Classical Architecture movement sustainable construction aims to develop smart growth walkability architectural tradition and classical design 27 28 It contrasts with modernist and globally uniform architecture In the 1980s urban design began to oppose the increasing solitary housing estates and suburban sprawl 29 Managed Urbanisation with the view to making the urbanising process completely culturally and economically and environmentally sustainable and as a possible solution to the urban sprawl Frank Reale has submitted an interesting concept of Expanding Nodular Development E N D that integrates many urban designs and ecological principles to design and build smaller rural hubs with high grade connecting freeways rather than adding more expensive infrastructure to existing big cities and the resulting congestion Paradigm shifts edit Throughout the young existence of the Urban Design discipline many paradigm shifts have occurred that have affected the trajectory of the field regarding theory and practice These paradigm shifts cover multiple subject areas outside of the traditional design disciplines Team 10 The first major paradigm shift was the formation of Team 10 out of CIAM or the Congres Internationaux d Architecture Moderne They believed that Urban Design should introduce ideas of Human Association which pivots the design focus from the individual patron to concentrating on the collective urban population The Brundtland Report and Silent Spring Another paradigm shift was the publication of the Brundtland Report and the book Silent Spring by Rachel Carson These writings introduced the idea that human settlements could have detrimental impacts on ecological processes as well as human health which spurred a new era of environmental awareness in the field The Planner s Triangle The Planner s Triangle created by Scott Cambell emphasized three main conflicts in the planning process This diagram exposed the complex relationships between Economic Development Environmental Protection and Equity and Social Justice For the first time the concept of Equity and Social Justice was considered as equally important as Economic Development and Environmental Protection within the design process Death of Modernism Demolition of Pruitt Igoe Pruitt Igoe was a spatial symbol and representation of Modernist theory regarding social housing In its failure and demolition these theories were put into question and many within the design field considered the era of Modernism to be dead Neoliberalism amp the election of Reagan The election of President Reagan and the rise of Neoliberalism affected the Urban Design discipline because it shifted the planning process to emphasize capitalistic gains and spatial privatization Inspired by the trickle down approach of Reaganomics it was believed that the benefits of a capitalist emphasis within design would positively impact everyone Conversely this led to exclusionary design practices and to what many consider as the death of public space Right to the City The spatial and political battle over our citizens rights to the city has been an ongoing one David Harvey along with Dan Mitchell and Edward Soja discussed rights to the city as a matter of shifting the historical thinking of how spatial matter was determined in a critical form This change of thinking occurred in three forms ontologically sociologically and the combination of this socio spatial dialect Together the aim shifted to be able to measure what matters in a socio spatial context Black Lives Matter Ferguson The Black Lives Matter movement challenged design thinking because it emphasized the injustices and inequities suffered by people of color in urban space as well as emphasized their right to public space without discrimination and brutality It claims that minority groups lack certain spatial privileges and that this deficiency can result in matters of life and death In order to reach an equitable state of urbanism there needs to be equal identification of socio economic lives within our urbanscapes New approaches editThere have been many different theories and approaches applied to the practice of urban design New Urbanism is an approach that began in the 1980s as a place making initiative to combat suburban sprawl Its goal is to increase density by creating compact and complete towns and neighborhoods The 10 principles of new urbanism are walkability connectivity mixed use and diversity mixed housing quality architecture and urban design traditional neighborhood structure increased density smart transportation sustainability and quality of life New urbanism and the developments that it has created are sources of debates within the discipline primarily with the landscape urbanist approach but also due to its reproduction of idyllic architectural tropes that do not respond to the context Andres Duany Elizabeth Plater Zyberk Peter Calthorpe and Jeff Speck are all strongly associated with New Urbanism and its evolution over the years Landscape Urbanism is a theory that first surfaced in the 1990s arguing that the city is constructed of interconnected and ecologically rich horizontal field conditions rather than the arrangement of objects and buildings Charles Waldheim Mohsen Mostafavi James Corner and Richard Weller are closely associated with this theory Landscape urbanism theorises sites territories ecosystems networks and infrastructures through landscape practice according to Corner 30 while applying a dynamic concept to cities as ecosystems that grow shrink or change phases of development according to Waldheim 31 Everyday Urbanism is a concept introduced by Margaret Crawford and influenced by Henry Lefebvre that describes the everyday lived experience shared by urban residents including commuting working relaxing moving through city streets and sidewalks shopping buying eating food and running errands Everyday urbanism is not concerned with aesthetic value Instead it introduces the idea of eliminating the distance between experts and ordinary users and forces designers and planners to contemplate a shift of power and address social life from a direct and ordinary perspective Tactical Urbanism also known as DIY Urbanism Planning by Doing Urban Acupuncture or Urban Prototyping is a city organizational or citizen led approach to neighborhood building that uses short term low cost and scalable interventions and policies to catalyze long term change Top up Urbanism is the theory and implementation of two techniques in urban design top down and bottom up Top down urbanism is when the design is implemented from the top of the hierarchy normally the government or planning department Bottom up or grassroots urbanism begins with the people or the bottom of the hierarchy Top up means that both methods are used together to make a more participatory design so it is sure to be comprehensive and well regarded in order to be as successful as possible Infrastructural Urbanism is the study of how the major investments that go into making infrastructural systems can be leveraged to be more sustainable for communities Instead of the systems being solely about efficiency in both cost and production infrastructural urbanism strives to utilize these investments to be more equitable for social and environmental issues as well Linda Samuels is a designer investigating how to accomplish this change in infrastructure in what she calls next generation infrastructure which is multifunctional public visible socially productive locally specific flexible and adaptable sensitive to the eco economy composed of design prototypes or demonstration projects symbiotic technologically smart and developed collaboratively across disciplines and agencies Sustainable urbanism nbsp BedZED Hackfield London nbsp BedZED Hackfield London nbsp Arcosanti ArizonaSustainable Urbanism is the study from the 1990s of how a community can be beneficial for the ecosystem the people and the economy for which it is associated It is based on Scott Campbell s planner s triangle which tries to find the balance between economy equity and the environment Its main concept is to try and make cities as self sufficient as possible while not damaging the ecosystem around them today with an increased focus on climate stability 4 A key designer working with sustainable urbanism is Douglas Farr Feminist Urbanism is the study and critique of how the built environment affects genders differently because of patriarchal social and political structures in society Typically the people at the table making design decisions are men so their conception about public space and the built environment relates to their life perspectives and experiences which do not reflect the same experiences of women or children Dolores Hayden is a scholar who has researched this topic from 1980 to the present day Hayden s writing says when women men and children of all classes and races can identify the public domain as the place where they feel most comfortable as citizens Americans will finally have homelike urban space Educational Urbanism is an emerging discipline at the crossroads of urban planning educational planning and pedagogy An approach that tackles the notion that economic activities the need for new skills at the workplace and the spatial configuration of the workplace rely on the spatial reorientation in the design of educational spaces and the urban dimension of educational planning Black Urbanism is an approach in which black communities are active creators innovators and authors of the process of designing and creating the neighborhoods and spaces of the metropolitan areas they have done so much to help revive over the past half century The goal is not to build black cities for black people but to explore and develop the creative energy that exists in so called black areas that has the potential to contribute to the sustainable development of the whole city Debates in urbanism edit Underlying the practice of urban design are the many theories about how to best design the city Each theory makes a unique claim about how to effectively design thriving sustainable urban environments Debates over the efficacy of these approaches fill the urban design discourse Landscape Urbanism and New Urbanism are commonly debated as distinct approaches to addressing suburban sprawl While Landscape Urbanism proposes landscape as the basic building block of the city and embraces horizontality flexibility and adaptability New Urbanism offers the neighborhood as the basic building block of the city and argues for increased density mixed uses and walkability Opponents of Landscape Urbanism point out that most of its projects are urban parks and as such its application is limited Opponents of New Urbanism claim that its preoccupation with traditional neighborhood structures is nostalgic unimaginative and culturally problematic Everyday Urbanism argues for grassroots neighborhood improvements rather than master planned top down interventions Each theory elevates the roles of certain professions in the urban design process further fueling the debate In practice urban designers often apply principles from many urban design theories Emerging from the conversation is a universal acknowledgement of the importance of increased interdisciplinary collaboration in designing the modern city 32 Urban design as an integrative profession edit nbsp L Enfant s plan for Washington DC nbsp Gehl Architects project for Brighton New Road employing shared spaceUrban designers work with architects landscape architects transportation engineers urban planners and industrial designers to reshape the city Cooperation with public agencies authorities and the interests of nearby property owners is necessary to manage public spaces Users often compete over the spaces and negotiate across a variety of spheres Input is frequently needed from a wide range of stakeholders This can lead to different levels of participation as defined in Arnstein s Ladder of Citizen Participation 33 While there are some professionals who identify themselves specifically as urban designers a majority have backgrounds in urban planning architecture or landscape architecture Many collegiate programs incorporate urban design theory and design subjects into their curricula There is an increasing number of university programs offering degrees in urban design at the post graduate level Urban design considers Pedestrian zones Incorporation of nature within a city Aesthetics Urban structure arrangement and relation of business and people Urban typology density and sustainability spatial types and morphologies related to the intensity of use consumption of resources production and maintenance of viable communities Accessibility safe and easy transportation Legibility and wayfinding accessible information about travel and destinations Animation Designing places to stimulate public activity Function and fit places support their varied intended uses Complimentary mixed uses Locating activities to allow constructive interaction between them Character and meaning Recognizing differences between places Order and incident Balancing consistency and variety in the urban environment Continuity and change Locating people in time and place respecting heritage and contemporary culture Civil society people are free to interact as civic equals important for building social capital Participation engagement including people in the decision making process can be done at many different scales Relationships with other related disciplines edit The original urban design was thought to be separated from architecture and urban planning Urban Design has developed to a certain extent and comes from the foundation of engineering In Anglo Saxon countries it is often considered as a branch under the architecture urban planning and landscape architecture and limited as the construction of the urban physical environment However Urban Design is more integrated into the social science based cultural economic political and other aspects Not only focus on space and architectural group but also look at the whole city from a broader and more holistic perspective to shape a better living environment Compared to architecture the spatial and temporal scale of Urban Design processing is much larger It deals with neighborhoods communities and even the entire city The urban design education editThe examples and perspective in this section deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this section discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new section as appropriate January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The University of Liverpool s Department of Civic Design is the first urban design school in the world founded in 1909 34 Following the 1956 Urban Design conference Harvard University established the first graduate program with urban design in its title The Master of Architecture in Urban Design although as a subject taught in universities its history in Europe is far older Urban design programs explore the built environment from diverse disciplinary backgrounds and points of view The pedagogically innovative combination of interdisciplinary studios lecture courses seminars and independent study creates an intimate and engaging educational atmosphere in which students thrive and learn Soon after in 1961 Washington University in St Louis founded their Master of Urban Design program Today twenty urban design programs exist in the United States Andrews University Berrien Springs MI Clemson University Charleston SC Columbia Graduate School of Architecture Planning and Preservation New York NY City College of New York New York NY Estopinal College of Architecture and Planning at Ball State University Muncie IN Georgia Institute of Technology College of Design Atlanta GA Harvard Graduate School of Design Cambridge MA Iowa State University Ames IA New York Institute of Technology New York NY Notre Dame School of Architecture Notre Dame IN Pratt Institute Brooklyn NY Sam Fox School of Design amp Visual Arts at Washington University in St Louis St Louis MO Savannah College of Art and Design Savannah GA Stuart Weitzman School of Design at University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning at University of Michigan Ann Arbor MI University of California Berkeley Berkeley CA University of Colorado Denver Denver CO University of Maryland College Park MD University of Miami Miami FL Stuart Weitzman School of Design at University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture Austin TX University of North Carolina at Charlotte Charlotte NCIn the United Kingdom Master s programmes in Urban Design at University of Manchester or University of Sheffield and Cardiff University or London South Bank University and City Design at the Royal College of Art or Queen s University Belfast are offered Issues edit nbsp Protest banner during the Climate Change Camp 2007 at Heathrow Airport in London The field of urban design holds enormous potential for helping us address today s biggest challenges an expanding population mass urbanization rising inequality and climate change In its practice as well as its theories urban design attempts to tackle these pressing issues As climate change progresses urban design can mitigate the results of flooding temperature changes and increasingly detrimental storm impacts through a mindset of sustainability and resilience In doing so the urban design discipline attempts to create environments that are constructed with longevity in mind such as zero carbon cities Cities today must be designed to minimize resource consumption waste generation and pollution while also withstanding the unprecedented impacts of climate change 4 35 36 37 To be truly resilient our cities need to be able to not just bounce back from a catastrophic climate event but to bounce forward to an improved state Another issue in this field is that it is often assumed that there are no mothers of planning and urban design However this is not the case many women have made proactive contributions to the field including the work of Mary Kingsbury Simkhovitch Florence Kelley and Lillian Wald to name a few of whom were prominent leaders in the City Social movement The City Social was a movement that steamed between the commonly known City Practical and City Beautiful movements It was a movement that s main concerns lay with the economic and social equalities regarding urban issues 38 Justice is and will always be a key issue in urban design As previously mentioned past urban strategies have caused injustices within communities incapable of being remedied via simple means As urban designers tackle the issue of justice they often are required to look at the injustices of the past and must be careful not to overlook the nuances of race place and socioeconomic status in their design efforts This includes ensuring reasonable access to basic services transportation and fighting against gentrification and the commodification of space for economic gain Organizations such as the Divided Cities Initiatives at Washington University in St Louis and the Just City Lab at Harvard work on promoting justice in urban design Until the 1970s the design of towns and cities took little account of the needs of people with disabilities At that time disabled people began to form movements demanding recognition of their potential contribution if social obstacles were removed Disabled people challenged the medical model of disability which saw physical and mental problems as an individual tragedy and people with disabilities as brave for enduring them They proposed instead a social model which said that barriers to disabled people result from the design of the built environment and attitudes of able bodied people Access Groups were established composed of people with disabilities who audited their local areas checked planning applications and made representations for improvements The new profession of access officer was established around that time to produce guidelines based on the recommendations of access groups and to oversee adaptations to existing buildings as well as to check on the accessibility of new proposals Many local authorities now employ access officers who are regulated by the Access Association A new chapter of the Building Regulations Part M was introduced in 1992 Although it was beneficial to have legislation on this issue the requirements were fairly minimal but continue to be improved with ongoing amendments The Disability Discrimination Act 1995 continues to raise awareness and enforce action on disability issues in the urban environment The issue of walkability has gained prominence in recent years not only with the concerns of the aforementioned climate change but also the health outcomes of residents Car centric urban design has an invariably negative effect on such outcomes With proximity to internal combustion engines residents tend to suffer from dangerous levels of air pollution which lead to cardiovascular complications ranging from the acute in hypertension and alterations in heart rate and the chronic the outright development of atherosclerosis More people die from air pollution each year than from car accidents This issue has been used to fuel movements for alternative forms of long to mid range transportation such as trains and bicycles with walking as the primary means of short range travel This would bring benefits from two simultaneous avenues The physical activity from walking and the lack of particulate matter carbon dioxide sulfur dioxide nitrogen dioxide etc has shown to alleviate and lower the risk of many maladies such as diabetes hypertension and cardiovascular disease Physical activity levels from walking are closely related to the abundance of open public spaces commercial shops greenery among others These attributes also have been stated to contribute to stronger social and emotional health as the open public spaces facilitate more social interaction within communities This issue is most prevalent in the United States where the rise of neoliberalism directly and intentionally caused the car centric infrastructure See also editActivity centre Blue space Complete streets Continuous productive urban landscape Crime prevention through environmental design Cyclability Neighbourhood character New Urbanism Permeability spatial and transport planning Placemaking Sustainable urbanism Urban density Urban forest Urban forestry Urban green space Urban planning Urban vitality Urbanism WalkabilityReferences edit What is Urban Design Urban Design Group 23 September 2019 Retrieved 28 September 2022 Rosenzweig Cynthia Solecki William D Romero Lankao Patricia Mehrotra Shagun Dhakal Shobhakar Ibrahim Somayya Ali 29 March 2018 Climate Change and Cities Second Assessment Report of the Urban Climate Change Research Network Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 316 94456 1 Retrieved 28 September 2022 Wheeler Stephen M 18 July 2013 Planning for Sustainability Creating Livable Equitable and Ecological Communities Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 48201 4 a b c Padmanaban Deepa 9 June 2022 How cities can fight climate change Knowable Magazine doi 10 1146 knowable 060922 1 Retrieved 31 August 2022 Van Assche K Beunen R Duineveld M de Jong H 2013 Co evolutions of planning and design Risks and benefits of design perspectives in planning systems Planning Theory 12 2 177 98 doi 10 1177 1473095212456771 S2CID 109970261 Archived from the original on 2013 06 28 Retrieved 2015 04 08 Moudon Anne Vernez 1992 A Catholic Approach to Organizing What Urban Designers Should Know Journal of Planning Literature 6 4 331 349 doi 10 1177 088541229200600401 S2CID 143564034 Caves R W 2004 Encyclopedia of the City Routledge p 692 ISBN 978 0415862875 Glaeser Edward L 2011 Triumph of the city how our greatest invention makes us richer smarter greener healthier and happier New York Penguin Press ISBN 978 1 59420 277 3 OCLC 650211168 Friedman David 1988 Florentine new towns urban design in the late Middle Ages Architectural History Foundation ISBN 0 262 06113 9 OCLC 17674587 Lavelle Ryan Roffey Simon 2015 11 30 Introduction Danes in Wessex Oxbow Books pp 1 6 doi 10 2307 j ctvh1dprb 8 retrieved 2021 12 06 Hohenberg Paul M 1995 The Making of urban Europe 1000 1994 with a new preface and a new chapter Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 54362 9 OCLC 807274312 Feliciotti Alessandra Romice Ombretta Porta Sergio 2018 12 17 Urban form Resilience Urban Design Practice Masterplanning for Change Proceedings of IFoU 2018 Reframing Urban Resilience Implementation Aligning Sustainability and Resilience Basel Switzerland p 5976 doi 10 3390 ifou2018 05976 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Bober Harry Panofsky Erwin December 1953 Gothic Architecture and Scholasticism The Art Bulletin 35 4 310 doi 10 2307 3047514 ISSN 0004 3079 JSTOR 3047514 Akkerman Abraham August 2001 Urban planning in the founding of Cartesian thought Philosophy amp Geography 4 2 141 167 doi 10 1080 10903770124810 ISSN 1090 3771 S2CID 144226288 Brodsky Lacour Claudia 1996 04 22 Lines of Thought Duke University Press doi 10 1515 9780822379225 ISBN 978 0 8223 7922 5 Olegovich Shvidkovskiĭ D O Dmitriĭ 2007 Russian architecture and the West Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10912 2 OCLC 184966675 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lejeune Jean Francois 2005 Cruelty amp utopia cities and landscapes of Latin America Princeton Architectural Press ISBN 1 56898 489 8 OCLC 55846666 Ebrahim Yusuf 2018 Lessons in tropical design Erich Meffert and beyond Ebenergy Enterprises Limited pp 70 79 Eisenman Theodore S 2013 03 27 Frederick Law Olmsted Green Infrastructure and the Evolving City Journal of Planning History 12 4 287 311 doi 10 1177 1538513212474227 ISSN 1538 5132 S2CID 144997893 Peter Hall Mark Tewdwr Jones 2010 Urban and Regional Planning Routledge ISBN 9780203861424 To morrow A Peaceful Path to Real Reform Goodall B 1987 Dictionary of Human Geography London Penguin a b History 1899 1999 PDF TCPA archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 27 Freestone Robert ed 2000 06 22 Urban Planning in a Changing World doi 10 4324 9780203819630 ISBN 9781136744600 The birth of town planning Ewing R Growing Cooler the Evidence on Urban Development and Climate Change Archived 2010 12 24 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2009 03 16 Charter of the New Urbanism Beauty Humanism Continuity between Past and Future Traditional Architecture Group Archived from the original on 5 March 2018 Retrieved 23 March 2014 Issue Brief Smart Growth Building Livable Communities American Institute of Architects Retrieved on 2014 03 23 James Corner 2006 Landscape Urbanism Reader Terra Fluxus PDF Princeton Architectural Press ISBN 978 1 56898 439 1 Meg Studer 2011 An Interview With Charles Waldheim Landscape Urbanism Now Scenario Journal Kelbaugh Douglas 2015 The Environmental Paradox of the City Landscape Urbanism and New Urbanism Consilience 13 1 15 ISSN 1948 3074 JSTOR 26427272 Arnstein Sherry 1969 A Ladder of Citizen Participation PDF Journal of the American Planning Association 35 216 224 Archived from the original PDF on 2020 05 11 Retrieved 2019 12 23 Event celebrates oldest planning school in the UK University of Liverpool News 22 May 2013 Seto Karen C Churkina Galina Hsu Angel Keller Meredith Newman Peter W G Qin Bo Ramaswami Anu 18 October 2021 From Low to Net Zero Carbon Cities The Next Global Agenda Annual Review of Environment and Resources 46 1 377 415 doi 10 1146 annurev environ 050120 113117 ISSN 1543 5938 S2CID 238677484 Urge Vorsatz Diana Khosla Radhika Bernhardt Rob Chan Yi Chieh Verez David Hu Shan Cabeza Luisa F 17 October 2020 Advances Toward a Net Zero Global Building Sector Annual Review of Environment and Resources 45 1 227 269 doi 10 1146 annurev environ 012420 045843 ISSN 1543 5938 S2CID 225303035 Narayan Abishek Sankara Marks Sara J Meierhofer Regula Strande Linda Tilley Elizabeth Zurbrugg Christian Luthi Christoph 18 October 2021 Advancements in and Integration of Water Sanitation and Solid Waste for Low and Middle Income Countries Annual Review of Environment and Resources 46 1 193 219 doi 10 1146 annurev environ 030620 042304 ISSN 1543 5938 S2CID 236252766 Retrieved 12 September 2022 Sies Mary Corbin Silver Christopher 1996 Planning the Twentieth century American City JHU Press ISBN 978 0 8018 5164 3 Further reading editCarmona Matthew Public Places Urban Spaces The Dimensions of Urban Design Routledge London New York ISBN 9781138067783 Carmona Matthew and Tiesdell Steve editors Urban Design Reader Architectural Press of Elsevier Press Amsterdam Boston other cities 2007 ISBN 0 7506 6531 9 Larice Michael and MacDonald Elizabeth editors The Urban Design Reader Routledge New York London 2007 ISBN 0 415 33386 5 External links editCities of the Future overview of important urban design elements Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Urban design amp oldid 1197016798, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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