Title: Visions of the sustainable city coalitions and conflicts
1Visions of the sustainable city coalitions and
conflicts
2Content
- Planning for sustaianable development in the
Nordic countries - New Urbanism and sustainable development
- Perspectives on urban development coalitions and
conflicts
3 New Bearings for the Nordic Countries Planning
for Sustainable Development
-
- Aims
- - Show how planning on national, regional and
local levels can be used to promote sustainable
development - - Complement the Nordic strategy for sustainable
development (2000) with planning perspectives
4Local sustainable development/Agenda 21
- A clear link between environmental issues and the
economy as well as political issues - A clear global dimension where local issues are
related to global effects - Cross-sectoral integration of environmental,
social and economical issues in planning,
decision making and the working process - A conscious effort to engage citizens in the
planning process, for example through NGOs, labor
organizations, schools, companies etc. - Working with local issues with a much greater
time horizon (three or more generations)
5Ecological footprint
- The Ecological Footprint (EF) is a measure of the
consumption of renewable natural resources by a
human population, be it that of a country, a
region or the whole world. A population's EF is
the total area of productive land or sea required
to produce all the crops, meat, seafood, wood and
fibre it consumes, to sustain its energy
consumption and to give space for its
infrastructure. The EF can be compared with the
biologically productive capacity of the land and
sea available to that population. - (Wackernagel Rees)
6Ecological footprints in hectares (1999)
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8Scott Campbell (1996)
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10Conclusions from the study
- Uniform picture of the sustainable society
- The mixed and compact city, small scale retail
and service, well-delimited urban areas, unbroken
green areas, revitalized industrial areas,
efficent public transportation and multimodality,
well-preserved local cultural heritage and new
eco-efficient buildings
11Conclusions from the study cont.
- Sustainable development has meant more emphasis
on environmental aspects, increased public
participation, cross-sectoral planning, efforts
to integrate social, economical and environmental
concerns in planning
12Further conclusions from the study and questions
it has raised
- Lack of social and cultural aspects
- Lack of global perspectives
- Planning for sustainable development a
bottom-up and municipal business? - Integrating social, environmental and economical
concerns a radical task or only lots of
compromises? - Sustainable development the catchword of the
90s and early 00s, but does it still have meaning
for the future?
13Sustainable cities
- There is no single model for sustainable cities.
They could be compact, polycentric, linear or
dispersed. It all depends on the context, the
socio-environmental ethic you employ, factors as
transportation, eco-cycling, biodiversity. - No scientific evidence that compact cities are
more sustainable.
14- However you could outline principles for
sustainable urban development, for instance as
incorporating - Inter-generational equity
- Geographical equity (or transfrontier
responsiblity) - Intragenerational equity
- Inter-species equity
- Procedural equity
- (Haughton, 1995)
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16New urbanism
- American movement aiming at creating lively
urban neighbourhoods with strong sense of
community, safe, walkable and transit-oriented - Mixing of functions, mixing of traffic modes
- Local history, culture and economy
17The Disney town Celebration, USA
18Jakriborg, Sweden
19Background to and assumptions in new urbanism
- Marriage of Traditional Neighborhood Design
and Pedestrian Pocket/Transit-Oriented
Development - Fear of loss of community
- Emphasis on human scale
- Nostalgic
- Modern urban planning seen as unnatural
- Totality approach Design Codes, Transect,
Charette
20Sandercock (1998) on Celebration
- All houses must have a front porch, to promote
neighbourliness, and all will be within walking
distance of the school and downtown area. Those
who currently moving in fully expect that other
new residents will have a similar outlook on
life. It seems to me that it will attract people
with the same values, says one new resident
(quoted in Katz, 1997). And if it does not, there
is no shortage of rules to ensure conformity. All
curtains visible from the street must be white,
or off-white. Residents may not work on cars or
boats in the street. All visible shrubbery must
be appropriate and approved by Disney.
Neighbourliness, you might say, is mandatory.
(p. 194)
21Poundbury, UK
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23Seaside, Florida, US
24Critiques to new urbanism
- Idealising community feeling, but neglecting its
backsides (Young 1990, Harvey, 1997)
25Harvey (1997) on new urbanism
- Community has ever been one of the key sites
of social control and surveillance, bordering on
overt social repression. Well-founded communities
often exclude, define themselves against others,
erect all sorts of keep-out signs (if not
tangible walls). (p. 3)
26Sandercock on new urbanism
- This is the flight from metropolis to
community, an attempt to turn away from the
challenges of the present, and return to an
imagined pre-industrial golden age of extended
families living in small villages, engaged in
face-to-face relations. But this ideal fails to
acknowledge that pre-industrial life was in fact
embedded in a highly unequal, feudal,
patriarchal, and imperialist society. That there
is clearly a demand for such nostalgia as a way
of life indicates a crisis in the transition from
modern metropolis to postmodern cosmopolis. (p.
194)
27Critiques to new urbanism
- Idealising community feeling, but neglecting its
backsides (Young 1990, Harvey, 1997) - Lacks gender, ethnicity and class analyses
(Sandercock, 1998)
28Critiques to new urbanism
- Idealising community feeling, but neglecting its
backsides (Young 1990, Harvey, 1997) - Lacks gender, ethnicity and class analyses
(Sandercock, 1998) - Preserving local traditions and local economy
- Counter to regional enlargement which has meant
larger freedom for many societal groups
29Sandercock on new urbanism
- Unlike the gated communities which are also
mushrooming around the US, these examplars of the
New Urbanism, like Seaside and Celebration, are
more subtly exclusive communities of like-minded
people seeking, in some cases literally, a return
to the imagined world of their childhood. (p.
194)
30Critiques to new urbanism
- Idealising community feeling, but neglecting its
backsides (Young 1990, Harvey, 1997) - Lacks gender, ethnicity and class analyses
(Sandercock, 1998) - Preserving local traditions and local economy
- Counter to regional enlargement which has meant
larger freedom for many societal groups - Exclusive enclaves have so far not proven to be
more environmentally friendly or improving social
integration (Robbins 2004)
31Robbins (2004) on new urbanism
- Few, though, of the many and different projects
New Urbanists claim as theirs have been actually
realized and none have met the goals set out in
their various charters and written texts. (p.
212)
32Critiques of new urbanism cont.
- An image of being sustaianable. There is no
urban structure that is per definition
sustainable. Context-dependent - North-American perspective, but with global
ambitions - Simplifying the alternatives modernism/sprawl OR
new urbanism. There are MORE alternatives
33A simplification!
34Robbins (2004) on new urbanism
- Finally, at it its core is an authoritarianism
similar to that of modernism. The New Urbanist
belief that their design solutions are the one
and only answer to the problems that beset us is
not only a conceit but it is a dangerous conceit.
In their unquestioned belief in their own good
works, New Urbanists try to close off discussion
of alternative visions of urbanism and urban
design. They try to limit the range of diversity
of the discourse about a subject that can only be
strengthened by more, rather than fewer,
potential approaches to what has become an
increasingly intractable problem what to do
about our cities and suburbs. (p. 228)
35Strengths of new urbanism
- We DO need to make our cities more sustainable
and energy-effective and TOD and mixed use is one
way to do it - Ability to bring diverse actors together
- Often better than conventional North-American
urban development
36How is sustainable urban development interpreted
in your home countries?