Tag: urbanism

Simulating future cities

meh i think it looks awesome.

Cities of Tomorrow extends this tension to a dark, satirical future. You’re technically still mayor of a metropolis, but in the case of the gleaming downtown scenario, the true arbiter of power is a small organization called The Academy. Tucked below the elevated trains and glittering skyscrapers, The Academy is basically a publicly funded think tank whose sole mission is to push the boundaries of urban infrastructure. The Academy develops all of the city’s technology, and the more public funding it receives, the quicker it innovates. The catch is that all Academy-developed technology has to run on ControlNet, a computing system owned and operated by The Academy.

NYC 2030

i’m a fan of nyc’s plan for 2030, the sort of large-scale, long-term thinking cities ought to be invested in, but which is very rare in practice, even though most of society’s wealth is produced in cities. it’s fun to contrast this to Hyperurbanization which is full of eye-opening stuff like

The next 10 years will see the largest transformation of our built environment ever. 50% of what will be the built environment in 2030 doesn’t exist today.

Tokyo Zoning

Tokyo is known for its oddly angled buildings such as the sloping roof’s on the row of buildings in the center of the picture. The slicing and angles come from natural lighting regulations – neighbors have the right to the same level of natural light with the new building, as what previously stood there. Builders optimize the interior size of the building by optimizing the meterage by taking up as much of that space as possible, even if it means slicing off corners to provide light-access.

Why Tokyo is the land of rising home construction but not prices

It was the rapidity of what happened to the house next door that took us by surprise. We knew it was empty. Grass was steadily taking over its mossy Japanese garden; the upstairs curtains never moved. But one day a notice went up, a hydraulic excavator tore the house down, and by the end of next year it will be a block of 16 apartments instead. Abruptly, we are living next door to a Tokyo building site. It is not fun. They work 6 days a week. Were this London, Paris or San Francisco, there would be howls of resident rage — petitions, dire warnings about loss of neighborhood character, and possibly a lawsuit or 2. Local elections have been lost for less. Yet in our neighborhood, there was not a murmur. “There is no legal restraint on demolishing a building. People have the right to use their land so basically neighboring people have no right to stop development.”

Comparing cities

this is really awesome, and the first time in recorded history where ESRI produced maps that don’t suck.

The Urban Observatory is an interactive exhibit that gives you the chance to compare and contrast maps of cities around the world–all from one location. It aims to make the world’s data both understandable and useful. Brought to life by Richard Saul Wurman, RadicalMedia, and Esri, it is the first exhibit of its kind.

Proper HVAC

by collecting 500M data points from the sensors in all their buildings every 24h, finding huge energy savings right away:

In 1 building garage, exhaust fans had been mistakenly left on for a year (to the tune of $66K of wasted energy). Within moments of coming online, the smart buildings solution sniffed out this fault and the problem was corrected.

2016-07-21: Cooling AI

by applying DeepMind’s machine learning to Google data centers, we’ve reduced the energy we use for cooling by up to 40%. In any large scale environment, this would be a huge improvement. Given how sophisticated Google’s data centers are already, it’s a phenomenal step forward.

this is why smart grids are one of the highest ROI investments countries could make.

Against Ephemera

Swap out the over-educated and underemployed for the Oompa-Loompas, chocolate for lifestyle amenities, and the Chocolate Room for the concept of “Portland-as-place”, and you got yourself a sequel. But there are problems with such city building: it’s too often defined by the ephemera, or that “transitory matter not intended to be retained or preserved”. Livability is too often defined by the ephemera, which represent America’s tendency to fix hard structural deficits with the airy promises of the pleasure principle. the emphasis will not be on the people of a city, but on potential consumers.

Mall Death

excellent. strip malls are some of the worst man-made features on the planet and the more bulldozing, the better.

we’re seeing clear signs that the e-commerce revolution is seriously impacting commercial real estate. Online retailers are relentlessly gaining share in many retail categories, and offline players are fighting for progressively smaller pieces of the retail pie. A number of physical retailers have already succumbed to online competition including Circuit City, Borders, CompUSA, Tower Records and Blockbuster, and many others are showing signs of serious economic distress.