Dushko Bogunovich ISOCARP (1983) Assoc Professor of Urban Design Unitec Institute of Technology Auckland, New Zealand

Similar documents
An advanced tool for assessing and guiding sustainable urban development

China. City and Regional Planning in. Absorbing 50 Years of ISOCARP. Statutory Planning System In China. Planning Legislation in China

Urban Growth Management in Seven New World cities: Aligning visions and quality neighbourhood outcomes

Transforming Auckland: Institutional, technological and cultural innovations for sustainable cities

Urban Resilience and Disaster Vulnerability in the Asia-Pacific Region

Urban challenges opportunities for cities in Europe. Peter Austin Urban Development dept

Exploring Smart Cities: Cities of the Future

A conceptual framework for Urban Nexus and its linkages to the new global agenda

TOD Planning in China: Problems and Solutions. Yin Jia, Founder, EFC Engeering Consulting Co. Ltd.

The Charter of European Planning BARCELONA 2013

Humanity on the move Unlocking the transformative power of cities

Sept 2018 Global Climate Action Summit. Planners for Climate Action: Introduction

Urban Dimension of the SDGs in Asia and the Pacific

CITY VIEW OBJECTIVES

Workshop Invitation and Agenda

Sustaining Places & The Scales of Planning

Learning Unit 6: Urbanisation and the environment GGH2604

NZIS Urban Design Strategy. September 2012

Creating the City of the Future

BETTER URBAN PLANNING

JOINT DECLARATION BETWEEN THE EUROPEAN UNION AND THE REPUBLIC OF INDIA ON A PARTNERSHIP FOR SMART & SUSTAINABLE URBANISATION. New Delhi, 6 Oct 2017

THE CITY IN THE 21 ST CENTURY

FRAMING URBAN SPRAWL IN WUHAN AND ARNHEM Urban Growth without Sprawl, A way Towards Sustainable Urbanization

Managing Polycentric Cities: Towards an Integrated Platform for the Delivery of the Jeddah City Plan. Amr Attia, Director, AECOM

Innovative Solutions for Cities Sustainable Development

High Growth and Compact Cities: Balancing Greenfield, Intensification and Community Wellbeing

Cities and urbanisation

Cities and urbanisation

Building Smarter Cities. Building Smarter Cities 1

Integrated Urban Development in Europe: Instruments and Issues.

Smart City Governance URBIS Solutions. David Ludlow, Assoc. Professor European Smart Cities University of the West of England, Bristol

Promoting compact urban design for cities in developing countries

SUSTAINABLE URBAN DEVELOPMENT AND COHESION POLICY EUROPEAN COMMISSION. Urban Policy within the framework of EU Cohesion Policy

Intra-metropolitan polycentricity. as a useful concept

Urban Development Management in Munich, Germany. Integrated strategy, impacts, learning from external evaluation

Planning for Heritage

Building a green infrastructure concept and process in the Gauteng City Region, South Africa. Kerry Bobbins Researcher GCRO

Global Report on Culture and Sustainable Urban Development

African urban fantasies

Toward Sustainable Urban Infrastructure in the Asia- Pacific Region

Christof Schremmer (ÖIR), Vienna, Austria Dominic Stead (OTB), Delft, Netherlands

The role of urban mobility in (re)shaping cities

Planning Sustainable Communities: Implementing Calgary s Vision

Theme: Integrating Urbanization in National Development Planning in Africa

DUBAI 2020 URBAN MASTERPLAN A Smart Approch to Sustainable & Competent Urban Planning/ for 2020 & beyond

Integrated urban policies and land management The URBACT Experience Didier Vancutsem

Expert Group Meeting. NUP Framework for A Rapid Diagnostic. Mainstreaming Climate Change into National Urban Policies. Themba R.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE RESILIENT CITIES 2012 CONGRESS. Presentation title: Integrated Land Use Planning for Resilient Urban Communities

Preface by Dr. Andrea Koch-Kraft

Scottish Natural Heritage. Better places for people and nature

MOBILITY HUB GUIDELINES 2012 TAC Sustainable Urban Transportation Award Submission BACKGROUND MOBILITY HUB GUIDELINES

Do-It-Yourself Home Improvement

Energy Efficient Strategies for Urban Transportation Planning

ROLE OF GREEN SPACE IN SUSTAINABLE URBAN ENVIRONMENT: A CASE OF TEHRAN (IRAN)

25th November Final statement by the ministers in charge of urban development

Ningbo Initiative - APEC High-Level Urbanization Forum 2016

Bottom-up meeting topdown: a SND on the local level

Transport Demand Management (TDM) Policies and Measures for Sustainable Cities

Sustainable Transport and Mobility in the Metropolitan Area

Official Plan Review

Bangkok: Chaos or System? 30 years of urban development and transport planning

The re-urbanisation of business and innovation Opportunities and imperatives in the next cycle

Urbanization dynamics along the Belt and Road

Sustainable Urban Mobility Plans. a concept to create liveable cities

PhD in URBAN PLANNING, DESIGN, AND POLICY - 32nd cycle

Tāhuhu whakaruruhau ā-taone The sheltering ridge pole

Strategies to Connect and Integrate Urban Planning and Environmental Planning Through Focusing On Sustainability : Case Study of Cheongju City, Korea.

Mr Tony HO Chief Geotechnical Engineer Geotechnical Engineering Office Civil Engineering and Development Department Hong Kong, China

Transport s role in fostering economic growth. Corinne Swain, Arup Fellow - Planning

EU Research and Innovation for Smart and Sustainable Cities

Regional Training Workshop on Human Settlement indicators

Ireland 2040 Our Plan Press Release

Appendix 1 Structure plan guidelines

An Eco- economics Analysis on Construction and Development of New Urban Areas

Progress of ICLEI Strategic Plan 2021

MAKING CITIES INCLUSIVE, SAFE, RESILIENT, AND SUSTAINABLE: FOR AND WITH STAKEHOLDERS

International Miranda Schut

TEHRAN LONG TERM URBAN RAIL PLAN

Dubai gears up for global security, safety, and fire protection trade fair, Intersec 2019

SOUTH AFRICA S PREPARATIONS FOR HABITAT III COMMON AFRICAN POSITION FOR HABITAT III. Habitat III Urban Breakfast 5 October 2016

Elodie Gonthier (Team leader) Kevin Ramirez Sandra Velasco Krishna Chandran Anna Aghvanyan Sirin Hamsho

Corridor Plans: An Opportunity to Develop Low Carbon Open Spaces Network-The Case Study in Tehran, Iran

1. Introduction. 2. Literature Review

Intensive Use of Urban Land in New Urbanization for China: Issue and Solution

European Urban Forum. Prague, Ministry of Regional Development, 13 October 2017

Plan Modification to Chapter B2 of the Auckland Unitary Plan(AUP) Operative in part (15 November 2016)

The position of Cultural Heritage in the New Urban Agenda A preliminary analysis prepared for ICOMOS Andrew Potts October 21, 2016

Technical Advisory in Rainwater Management

WILL PLANNING SAVE THE CITIES? MANAGING RESPONSES TO CLIMATE CHAGE

Mexican Dialogues The New School New York City. November 19th 2015

G4 / Randstad Prof Greg Clark

Encouraging collaboration:

Heritage Impact Assessment: Evaluating Development at Heritage Sites Joseph King, Sites Unit

Smart Growth for Dallas

Planning Canadian Cities to be Smart and Inclusive. Betsy Donald with Morgan Sage, Queen s University April SFU, Vancouver

«Corridor» designs in town planning : Sustainable planning for large cities in developed countries

World Towns Agreement

Fostering metropolitan cooperation for sustainable urban development THE MONTRÉAL DECLARATION ON METROPOLITAN AREAS

IDENTIFICATION TO IMPLEMENTATION THE JOURNEY OF CITY RESILIENCE

Marion Bogers and Bas Pedroli

Transcription:

Dushko Bogunovich ISOCARP (1983) Assoc Professor of Urban Design Unitec Institute of Technology Auckland, New Zealand

30 June 2016: Business Program

URBAN DEVELOPMENT AND PLANNING IN THE AGE OF MEGACITIES AN OVERVIEW OF GLOBAL TRENDS AND CURRENT PRACTICES MOSCOW URBAN FORUM 2016 AND INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY OF CITY AND REGIONAL PLANNERS

Dushko Bogunovich ISOCARP (1983) Assoc Professor of Urban Design Unitec Institute of Technology Auckland, New Zealand

Душко Богунович ИCОКАРП (1983) Професор Урбан Дизайна Юнитек Институт Технологийе Окланд, Нови Зеланд

ISOCARP research team Dr Jacob Babarinde, (Canada) Dr Dushko Bogunovich (New Zealand) Mr Eric Huybrechts (France) Ms Taru Jain (India) Dr Dorota Kamrowska-Zaluska (Poland) Dr Liang Huew Wang (China)

Contents THE TEAM INTRODUCTION CASE STUDIES METHODOLOGY FINDINGS RECOMMENDATIONS CONCLUSIONS

2. INTRODUCTION Dec 2015 MUF and ISOCARP reached agreement: A series of case studies will be produced and then synthesised into a report Purpose: global overview of key issues, trends & practices in megacities Megacities: mega-problems + mega-impact + mega-investment Urban Infrastructure = project of the century (trillions of dollars ) Focus: mobility and mega-projects Mega-projects: public (infrastructure) and private (real estate) Moscow: Moscow-City IBC

Московский Международный Деловой Центр

TOD project in Shenzhen (2016, by Woods-Bagot, Australia)

Business as usual Will the future tolerate that? Or surprise us with. Disruptive events! In two areas: Technology (innovation - IT, CT, ET, TT, BT) Ecology (global environment)

technology!

technology!

ecology! (climate change)

ecology! (climate change)

We are 16 years now into the 21 st century, and there is still too much 20 th century thinking in our urban projects!

3. CASE STUDIES Paris Mumbai Hong Kong Wuhan New York Dubai London Johannesburg Gdansk/Gdynia Buenos Aires Auckland

4. METHODOLOGY Global sample (11 big cities) Case study Desk research Key informants Personal experience

5. FINDINGS GROWTH (demographic + economic + physical) MEGA-PROJECTS (site-specific + city-wide) MOBLITY & URBAN FORM (transport shapes cities!) INFRASTRUCTURE (more is better!)

GROWTH (demographic + economic + physical) Economic growth dominates the agenda. Environmental and social development agendas are declared as equally important, but in reality, most often are ignored, or given marginal importance. MEGA-PROJECTS (site-specific + city-wide) They are more successful both for the developer and the wider society when they are integrated into, or coordinated with, an overall urban development strategy (such as polycentric development). Strategic master planning is crucial ; context matters. MOBLITY & URBAN FORM (transport shapes cities!) Polycentric development and compactness/density continue to be the city authorities preferred spatial pattern and urban fabric. But, urban sprawl actually dominates the reality. INFRASTRUCTURE (more is better!) Whether it only supports private investment and props up economic growth, or improves the environment and quality of life, it always increases the city s ecological footprint.

GOOD PRACTICE?

MATURE MEGACITIES: prefer intensification and polycentric development, over expansion and monocentric development; prefer strategic over ad-hoc planning, and long-term vision over short-term gain; are seriously concerned about the environmental impacts of urban growth; are using the smart city concept to achieve the green&clean city

Is this relevant?

6. RECOMMENDATIONS REGIONAL APPROACH URBAN FORM REGENERATION SUSTAINABILITY RESILIENCE

REGIONAL APPROACH Megacities are not just cities they are also regions. They are city-regions. Planning for the full extent of their territorial influence is the only way to maximize benefits and minimize cost and impacts. URBAN FORM Compact urban fabric and polycentric structure are the key, and complementary, spatial concepts. They will never eliminate urban sprawl, but they do have the power to ameliorate its worst excesses (while letting the sprawl do well what it does well lifestyle, self-sufficiency. New configurations and technology of infrastructure are part of this urban transformation. REGENERATION Mobilizing poorly used land inside the existing city is the best way to reduce the demand for urban expansion. But these in-the-city opportunities are fraught with obstacles and require rigorous analysis and innovative solutions before qualifying for redevelopment. SUSTAINABILITY Climate change is a serious and present threat. Cities have a triple role in this global drama: they are the main cause; they will be the main victim, and the main potential solution. Megacities have a mega-metabolism they must make a mega-effort to reduce their consumption. RESILIENCE Some climate change is inevitable. Thus mitigation is no more the only agenda - adaptation is necessary too. Cities must improve their resource efficiency, as well as their sufficiency. The concept of resilience may soon become more important than sustainability, with considerable consequence for the planning of urban form and planning and engineering of urban infrastructure.

7. CONCLUSION The future of MEGACITIES will be determined by technological innovation and our ecological situation, not by sheer desire for more growth and ever bigger projects. The cities have been the engines of ecological destruction now they have to become our engines of ecological restoration. Only the MEGA-PROJECTS which use Smart Technology and Green Technology for the ecological restoration agenda will be successful in the long term. The future of the urban knowledge economy is in greennovation innovation for Urban Ecological Solutions.