Submit Search
Upload
Urban Environments Built on Innovative Thinking
•
1 like
•
570 views
Virtual ULI
Follow
David furman, Urban Environments Built on Innovative Thinking
Read less
Read more
Report
Share
Report
Share
1 of 67
Download now
Download to read offline
Recommended
The University of Helsinki launched its participation in the World Design Capital Helsinki 2012 year with a comprehensive theme “Designing society through thinking”. The aim is to communicate the actions of the university that contribute to the cultural, economic and social development of the Helsinki Metropolitan Area and the living environment in general. www.helsinki.fi/wdc2012
Designing society through thinking | University of Helsinki
Designing society through thinking | University of Helsinki
University of Helsinki
The Penn Resolution: Educating Urban Designers for Post-Carbon Cities, a richly illustrated roadmap to guide 21st century urban design education. The Penn Resolution contributes to the field's rich heritage of manifestos. Each manifesto, in its own era, has transformed urban design practice by offering timely responses to changing social, economic, and environmental conditions. The Penn Resolution's sharp focus on sustainability frames clear principles for educating designers, both in school and in practice, to shrink the carbon footprint of the urban world. Its inventive integration of text and imagery — apt quotations, exemplary projects — illustrates the translation of the principles into new ideas, approaches, and connections. The Penn Resolution highlights the challenges posed by changing climate patterns and diminishing supplies of inexpensive oil and outlines the skills that both new and practicing urban designers will need to meet these challenges. An essay places the book in historical context, discussing the use of manifestos throughout the history of urban design. With the issuing of the Penn Resolution, Gary Hack, Dean Emeritus of PennDesign, observes that “over half the world’s population now lives in cities, a percentage that will increase to two-thirds in the next two decades." The Penn Resolution answers an urgent need to rethink urban design education. He warns: “If we are going to meet the dual challenges of reducing our over-reliance on oil and reversing the growth of carbon emissions, we are going to have to design cities differently. That means acquiring new knowledge and skills.” Readers will also have an opportunity to buy a softcover book online in early May. Details will be posted on the Penn IUR website when available. The Penn Resolution was developed by attendees of the Re-Imagining Cities: Urban Design After the Age of Oil conference hosted by Penn IUR and PennDesign. The conference and publication were made possible with support from the Rockefeller Foundation.
The Penn Resolution: Educating Urban Designers for Post-Carbon Cities
The Penn Resolution: Educating Urban Designers for Post-Carbon Cities
Penn Institute for Urban Research
Jan Gehl - Cities for people
Jan Gehl - Cities for people
Alberto Labarga
More info: http://thinkbrisk.com/brisk_2-cases/ We are avid on-site field researchers, immersing ourselves in our target groups, observing, interviewing, co-creating to capture their specific and unique human needs & expectations with methods from anthropology, ethnography, tech. management and design research. We’ve published these insights at conferences in London, Copenhagen, Boston, LeMans, Munich, Seoul and counting. Here’s a quick recap of 4 of these Design Insights: - Cook & Connect: Designing Urban Collaborative Cooking Spaces for Local Produce - Exploring the Impact of Context Factors in Quick and Correct Use of Public Interfaces - Mindset beyond the Myth: User Research about the Effectivity of Design Thinking Workshops in Semi-Open Ecosystems - Decoding Privacy: Perceptions, Conflicts and Strategies of Privacy in the Mobile World For background info on our field insights or your own research project, don't hesitate to get in touch! research@thinkbrisk.com
Design Thinking Field Research
Design Thinking Field Research
Diana Schneider
Jan Gehl. Liveable Cities for the 21st Century
Jan Gehl. Liveable Cities for the 21st Century
Юлия Егорова
Presentation for RSD3 symposium - October 2014, AHO Oslo. Proceedings will soon be available here: http://systemic-design.net/ Abstract: This work introduces an ongoing research project that seeks to develop appropriate visual techniques for the design of future scenarios that are able to capture interdependencies within and across different systems. These design methods are being explored as part of a wider research on the future of cities and sustainable urban living. The issue of cities as complex systems has been explored by a considerable amount of literature, across different disciplines (for example, Simmel, 1971; Lynch, 1960; Jacobs, 1992; Abrams and Hall, 2004). Cities are not only defined by buildings and infrastructure, but also by the material and immaterial flows generated by the activities that take place in the urban environment, as well as the personal experience of its inhabitants Environmental, social, and economic challenges call for actions of radical interventions in modern urban areas. In order to be truly sustainable these actions must be collaboratively developed in trans-disciplinary sessions. Here, people from various backgrounds and with different interests explore alternative solutions, find a common ground and plan concrete actions towards a desirable future (Holman et al., 2007). One of the challenges of this approach is to find effective ways to visualize how individual solutions impact on the context in which they are implemented, and how they relate to each other. There is a need to develop “means for drawing things together” (Bruno Latour, 2008), a common language to describe complexity and allow hidden interdependencies to emerge. The field of information visualization is rich with examples of how diagrams can be used to describe a complex matter by focusing primarily on the relations between different sets of qualitative and quantitative data. Drawing on Deleuze philosophical interpretation, Scagnetti (2007) describes diagrams as “operating devices able to reveal weak links among the elements of the system, and to show the driving forces that can facilitate (or hinder) a design intervention.” In this context diagrams are processes rather than finished products: they are working tools for design and decision making. This paper describes how this diagrammatic approach to city visualization is being adopted in different case studies, and as part of the Liveable Cities project. Liveable Cities is an interdisciplinary research project that aims to develop a method of designing and engineering low-carbon, resource-secure UK cities that do not compromise on individual and collective wellbeing. Different areas of the project are investigated by research teams at Lancaster University, University of Southampton, UCL, and Birmingham University, with the help of expert panelists, partners and potential users of future services. Great impo
Drawing Futures Together. Diagrams for the Design of Scenarios of Liveable Ci...
Drawing Futures Together. Diagrams for the Design of Scenarios of Liveable Ci...
serena pollastri
dasfhjkl
Urbanism
Urbanism
Caryl Jane Veriña
Urbanism
Urbanism
Mehul Kanodia
Recommended
The University of Helsinki launched its participation in the World Design Capital Helsinki 2012 year with a comprehensive theme “Designing society through thinking”. The aim is to communicate the actions of the university that contribute to the cultural, economic and social development of the Helsinki Metropolitan Area and the living environment in general. www.helsinki.fi/wdc2012
Designing society through thinking | University of Helsinki
Designing society through thinking | University of Helsinki
University of Helsinki
The Penn Resolution: Educating Urban Designers for Post-Carbon Cities, a richly illustrated roadmap to guide 21st century urban design education. The Penn Resolution contributes to the field's rich heritage of manifestos. Each manifesto, in its own era, has transformed urban design practice by offering timely responses to changing social, economic, and environmental conditions. The Penn Resolution's sharp focus on sustainability frames clear principles for educating designers, both in school and in practice, to shrink the carbon footprint of the urban world. Its inventive integration of text and imagery — apt quotations, exemplary projects — illustrates the translation of the principles into new ideas, approaches, and connections. The Penn Resolution highlights the challenges posed by changing climate patterns and diminishing supplies of inexpensive oil and outlines the skills that both new and practicing urban designers will need to meet these challenges. An essay places the book in historical context, discussing the use of manifestos throughout the history of urban design. With the issuing of the Penn Resolution, Gary Hack, Dean Emeritus of PennDesign, observes that “over half the world’s population now lives in cities, a percentage that will increase to two-thirds in the next two decades." The Penn Resolution answers an urgent need to rethink urban design education. He warns: “If we are going to meet the dual challenges of reducing our over-reliance on oil and reversing the growth of carbon emissions, we are going to have to design cities differently. That means acquiring new knowledge and skills.” Readers will also have an opportunity to buy a softcover book online in early May. Details will be posted on the Penn IUR website when available. The Penn Resolution was developed by attendees of the Re-Imagining Cities: Urban Design After the Age of Oil conference hosted by Penn IUR and PennDesign. The conference and publication were made possible with support from the Rockefeller Foundation.
The Penn Resolution: Educating Urban Designers for Post-Carbon Cities
The Penn Resolution: Educating Urban Designers for Post-Carbon Cities
Penn Institute for Urban Research
Jan Gehl - Cities for people
Jan Gehl - Cities for people
Alberto Labarga
More info: http://thinkbrisk.com/brisk_2-cases/ We are avid on-site field researchers, immersing ourselves in our target groups, observing, interviewing, co-creating to capture their specific and unique human needs & expectations with methods from anthropology, ethnography, tech. management and design research. We’ve published these insights at conferences in London, Copenhagen, Boston, LeMans, Munich, Seoul and counting. Here’s a quick recap of 4 of these Design Insights: - Cook & Connect: Designing Urban Collaborative Cooking Spaces for Local Produce - Exploring the Impact of Context Factors in Quick and Correct Use of Public Interfaces - Mindset beyond the Myth: User Research about the Effectivity of Design Thinking Workshops in Semi-Open Ecosystems - Decoding Privacy: Perceptions, Conflicts and Strategies of Privacy in the Mobile World For background info on our field insights or your own research project, don't hesitate to get in touch! research@thinkbrisk.com
Design Thinking Field Research
Design Thinking Field Research
Diana Schneider
Jan Gehl. Liveable Cities for the 21st Century
Jan Gehl. Liveable Cities for the 21st Century
Юлия Егорова
Presentation for RSD3 symposium - October 2014, AHO Oslo. Proceedings will soon be available here: http://systemic-design.net/ Abstract: This work introduces an ongoing research project that seeks to develop appropriate visual techniques for the design of future scenarios that are able to capture interdependencies within and across different systems. These design methods are being explored as part of a wider research on the future of cities and sustainable urban living. The issue of cities as complex systems has been explored by a considerable amount of literature, across different disciplines (for example, Simmel, 1971; Lynch, 1960; Jacobs, 1992; Abrams and Hall, 2004). Cities are not only defined by buildings and infrastructure, but also by the material and immaterial flows generated by the activities that take place in the urban environment, as well as the personal experience of its inhabitants Environmental, social, and economic challenges call for actions of radical interventions in modern urban areas. In order to be truly sustainable these actions must be collaboratively developed in trans-disciplinary sessions. Here, people from various backgrounds and with different interests explore alternative solutions, find a common ground and plan concrete actions towards a desirable future (Holman et al., 2007). One of the challenges of this approach is to find effective ways to visualize how individual solutions impact on the context in which they are implemented, and how they relate to each other. There is a need to develop “means for drawing things together” (Bruno Latour, 2008), a common language to describe complexity and allow hidden interdependencies to emerge. The field of information visualization is rich with examples of how diagrams can be used to describe a complex matter by focusing primarily on the relations between different sets of qualitative and quantitative data. Drawing on Deleuze philosophical interpretation, Scagnetti (2007) describes diagrams as “operating devices able to reveal weak links among the elements of the system, and to show the driving forces that can facilitate (or hinder) a design intervention.” In this context diagrams are processes rather than finished products: they are working tools for design and decision making. This paper describes how this diagrammatic approach to city visualization is being adopted in different case studies, and as part of the Liveable Cities project. Liveable Cities is an interdisciplinary research project that aims to develop a method of designing and engineering low-carbon, resource-secure UK cities that do not compromise on individual and collective wellbeing. Different areas of the project are investigated by research teams at Lancaster University, University of Southampton, UCL, and Birmingham University, with the help of expert panelists, partners and potential users of future services. Great impo
Drawing Futures Together. Diagrams for the Design of Scenarios of Liveable Ci...
Drawing Futures Together. Diagrams for the Design of Scenarios of Liveable Ci...
serena pollastri
dasfhjkl
Urbanism
Urbanism
Caryl Jane Veriña
Urbanism
Urbanism
Mehul Kanodia
Will balthrope, Multifamily Development Today
Will balthrope, Multifamily Development Today
Will balthrope, Multifamily Development Today
Virtual ULI
Spencer stuart, Multifamily Development Today
Spencer stuart, Multifamily Development Today
Spencer stuart, Multifamily Development Today
Virtual ULI
Peter porraro, Multifamily Development Today
Peter porraro, Multifamily Development Today
Peter porraro, Multifamily Development Today
Virtual ULI
Timothy mc entee, Multifamily Development Today
Timothy mc entee, Multifamily Development Today
Timothy mc entee, Multifamily Development Today
Virtual ULI
Marc goldstein, Building Capital Stacks in Today's Market
Marc goldstein, Building Capital Stacks in Today's Market
Marc goldstein, Building Capital Stacks in Today's Market
Virtual ULI
Jeffrey bijur, Building Capital Stacks in Today's Market
Jeffrey bijur, Building Capital Stacks in Today's Market
Jeffrey bijur, Building Capital Stacks in Today's Market
Virtual ULI
Perry reader, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Perry reader, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Perry reader, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Virtual ULI
Jack cecil, Don whyte, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot Building community in Western North Carolina
Jack cecil, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Jack cecil, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Virtual ULI
Don whyte, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Don whyte, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Don whyte, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Virtual ULI
Andy cohen, Rethinking Office
Andy cohen, Rethinking Office
Andy cohen, Rethinking Office
Virtual ULI
Martha o'mara, Rethinking Office
Martha o'mara, Rethinking Office
Martha o'mara, Rethinking Office
Virtual ULI
Tom caputo, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Tom caputo, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Tom caputo, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Virtual ULI
Robert grossman, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Robert grossman, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Robert grossman, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Virtual ULI
Michael carroll, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Michael carroll, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Michael carroll, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Virtual ULI
Anthony chang, Making ULI Work for you
Anthony chang, Making ULI Work for you
Anthony chang, Making ULI Work for you
Virtual ULI
Michael smith
Michael smith, Urban Environments Built on Innovative Thinking
Michael smith, Urban Environments Built on Innovative Thinking
Virtual ULI
Ron kimble, Urban Environments Built on Innovative Thinking
Ron kimble, Urban Environments Built on Innovative Thinking
Ron kimble, Urban Environments Built on Innovative Thinking
Virtual ULI
Tina votaw, Cats: Issues/Challenges for the Future
Cats: Issues/Challenges for the Future
Cats: Issues/Challenges for the Future
Virtual ULI
Todd noell, South Corridor Development Summary
South Corridor Development Summary
South Corridor Development Summary
Virtual ULI
Jerry orr, Connecting the Carolinas to the World
Connecting the Carolinas to the World
Connecting the Carolinas to the World
Virtual ULI
More Related Content
More from Virtual ULI
Will balthrope, Multifamily Development Today
Will balthrope, Multifamily Development Today
Will balthrope, Multifamily Development Today
Virtual ULI
Spencer stuart, Multifamily Development Today
Spencer stuart, Multifamily Development Today
Spencer stuart, Multifamily Development Today
Virtual ULI
Peter porraro, Multifamily Development Today
Peter porraro, Multifamily Development Today
Peter porraro, Multifamily Development Today
Virtual ULI
Timothy mc entee, Multifamily Development Today
Timothy mc entee, Multifamily Development Today
Timothy mc entee, Multifamily Development Today
Virtual ULI
Marc goldstein, Building Capital Stacks in Today's Market
Marc goldstein, Building Capital Stacks in Today's Market
Marc goldstein, Building Capital Stacks in Today's Market
Virtual ULI
Jeffrey bijur, Building Capital Stacks in Today's Market
Jeffrey bijur, Building Capital Stacks in Today's Market
Jeffrey bijur, Building Capital Stacks in Today's Market
Virtual ULI
Perry reader, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Perry reader, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Perry reader, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Virtual ULI
Jack cecil, Don whyte, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot Building community in Western North Carolina
Jack cecil, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Jack cecil, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Virtual ULI
Don whyte, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Don whyte, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Don whyte, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Virtual ULI
Andy cohen, Rethinking Office
Andy cohen, Rethinking Office
Andy cohen, Rethinking Office
Virtual ULI
Martha o'mara, Rethinking Office
Martha o'mara, Rethinking Office
Martha o'mara, Rethinking Office
Virtual ULI
Tom caputo, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Tom caputo, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Tom caputo, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Virtual ULI
Robert grossman, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Robert grossman, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Robert grossman, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Virtual ULI
Michael carroll, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Michael carroll, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Michael carroll, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Virtual ULI
Anthony chang, Making ULI Work for you
Anthony chang, Making ULI Work for you
Anthony chang, Making ULI Work for you
Virtual ULI
Michael smith
Michael smith, Urban Environments Built on Innovative Thinking
Michael smith, Urban Environments Built on Innovative Thinking
Virtual ULI
Ron kimble, Urban Environments Built on Innovative Thinking
Ron kimble, Urban Environments Built on Innovative Thinking
Ron kimble, Urban Environments Built on Innovative Thinking
Virtual ULI
Tina votaw, Cats: Issues/Challenges for the Future
Cats: Issues/Challenges for the Future
Cats: Issues/Challenges for the Future
Virtual ULI
Todd noell, South Corridor Development Summary
South Corridor Development Summary
South Corridor Development Summary
Virtual ULI
Jerry orr, Connecting the Carolinas to the World
Connecting the Carolinas to the World
Connecting the Carolinas to the World
Virtual ULI
More from Virtual ULI
(20)
Will balthrope, Multifamily Development Today
Will balthrope, Multifamily Development Today
Spencer stuart, Multifamily Development Today
Spencer stuart, Multifamily Development Today
Peter porraro, Multifamily Development Today
Peter porraro, Multifamily Development Today
Timothy mc entee, Multifamily Development Today
Timothy mc entee, Multifamily Development Today
Marc goldstein, Building Capital Stacks in Today's Market
Marc goldstein, Building Capital Stacks in Today's Market
Jeffrey bijur, Building Capital Stacks in Today's Market
Jeffrey bijur, Building Capital Stacks in Today's Market
Perry reader, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Perry reader, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Jack cecil, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Jack cecil, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Don whyte, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Don whyte, What Is the Recipe for Community Development-Let's Stir the Pot
Andy cohen, Rethinking Office
Andy cohen, Rethinking Office
Martha o'mara, Rethinking Office
Martha o'mara, Rethinking Office
Tom caputo, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Tom caputo, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Robert grossman, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Robert grossman, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Michael carroll, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Michael carroll, Repositioning and Restructuring Retail
Anthony chang, Making ULI Work for you
Anthony chang, Making ULI Work for you
Michael smith, Urban Environments Built on Innovative Thinking
Michael smith, Urban Environments Built on Innovative Thinking
Ron kimble, Urban Environments Built on Innovative Thinking
Ron kimble, Urban Environments Built on Innovative Thinking
Cats: Issues/Challenges for the Future
Cats: Issues/Challenges for the Future
South Corridor Development Summary
South Corridor Development Summary
Connecting the Carolinas to the World
Connecting the Carolinas to the World
Download now