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建设响应式城市:技术,设计和开发

Building Responsive Cities: Technology, Design, and Development
课程网址: http://videolectures.net/mitworld_vale_frenchman_mambro_welborne_...  
主讲教师: Antonio di Mambro; Associates
开课单位: 麻省理工学院
开课时间: 2013-07-29
课程语种: 英语
中文简介:
即使新的超级城市在世界各地涌现,人口达到数千万,城市规划仍然停留在较早的时代。正如丹尼斯·弗伦奇曼所说,“令人惊讶的是,进展甚微......我们基本上使用的是20世纪20年代的模型和方法,“法国人说,我们需要应对快速城市化、普遍流动性可持续性和基本宜居性的巨大挑战。 一些新兴的概念包括新世纪的城市,其中单个“凌乱”的混合用途区将容纳购物,生活和商业。他描述了城市环境中内置的技术网络,产生的数据流不仅揭示了城市的运作方式,而且允许更好地实时管理系统。城市将感知交通流量,并相应地改变街道标志和车道标记。智能汽车将引导用户到可用的停车场。公共建筑将改变面孔。这种“敏捷的基础设施有可能使日常互动更加高效和富有成效,但也更加个性化,因为系统可以与你互动并适应你的愿望,”Frenchman说。 安东尼奥·迪·曼布罗(Antonio di Mambro)说,波士顿在基础设施方面投入了大量资金,但其交通系统非常“以波士顿为中心”,他认为现在是时候将这个系统转变为区域性系统了,“与城市的新形象联系在一起”。“开发一个西站枢纽,将大学彼此连接起来,并与世界其他地区连接起来。 迪曼布罗还描述了沿海城市应如何规划全球变暖的影响。他描述了威尼斯的战略计划,以保护自己免受水位上升的影响,其中包括大规模的移动防洪屏障,环境恢复,被忽视地区的经济发展和绿色基础设施。 在20世纪90年代,玛莎·兰普金·韦尔伯恩开始相信,巴西的库拉蒂瓦公共交通系统将非常适合洛杉矶。在这个系统中,公共汽车在专用车道上运行,成本远远低于地铁甚至轻轨所需的成本。一个非营利性团队“创造了愿景,并将其出售给每个人 - MTA和城市”,在取得这一成就之后,洛杉矶市长起草了她在荒凉的城市中创建一个经济中心。韦尔伯恩说,在重新构想格兰德大道的过程中,她一直在将物理愿景转变为现实,从精确的经济分析开始,与市县官员进行政治交流,并与弗兰克·盖里(Frank Gehry)合作。 “毫不夸张地说,这是人类历史上最伟大的建筑热潮,”汤姆·康帕内拉(Tom Campanella)谈到中国的建筑狂潮时说。康帕内拉整理了许多令人惊讶的事实来支持这一说法:在上海,1990年至2004年间,该市增加了超过9亿平方英尺的商业办公空间,大致相当于335座帝国大厦。1985年至1995年间,上海的足迹和郊区从90平方英里跃升至790平方英里。中国最终将有超过10亿人居住在其城市中。他说,我们美国人必须“学会谦卑”,想象这种规模的建筑热潮的城市规划,或者确定什么是好的与坏的城市主义。
课程简介: Even as new supercities pop up around the world, with populations in the tens of millions, urban planning remains stuck in an older time. As Dennis Frenchman says, “Amazingly very little progress has been made ... We’re using basically the models and methods of the 1920s.” Frenchman says we need to confront the immense challenges of rapid urbanization, universal mobility sustainability and basic livability. Some emerging concepts include new century cities, where single “messy” mixed-use zones will house shopping, living, and commerce. He describes technology networks built into urban environments, producing streams of data that not only reveal how a city works, but allow better real-time management of systems. Cities will sense traffic flows and change street signage and lane markings accordingly. Smart cars will guide users to available parking. Public buildings will have changing faces. This “agile infrastructure has the potential to make day to day interactions more efficient and productive, but also more personal, because systems can interact with you and adjust to your desires,” says Frenchman. Boston invests big-time in infrastructure, says Antonio di Mambro, but its transportation system is very “Boston-centric.” He believes it’s time to convert this system into a regional one, “tied to a new image of the city.” Di Mambro is developing a new transportation network based on the area’s “educational necklace,” developing a West Station hub that connects universities to each other, and to the rest of the world. Di Mambro also describes how coastal cities should plan for global warming impacts. He describes Venice’s strategic plan to defend itself from rising water, which includes massive mobile flood barriers, environmental restoration, economic development of neglected areas and green infrastructure. In the 1990s, Martha Lampkin Welborne became convinced that Curativa, Brazil’s public transit system would be perfect for LA. In this system, buses operate in dedicated lanes, with costs far less than those required for subway or even light rail. A nonprofit team “created the vision and sold it to everyone -- the MTA and the city.” After this accomplishment, LA’s mayor drafted her to create an economic center in a desolate city stretch. In re-imagining Grand Avenue, says Welborne, she has been transforming a physical vision into a reality, starting with a precise economic analysis, politicking with city and county officials and collaborating with Frank Gehry. “Without being hyperbolic, it’s the greatest building boom in human history,” says Tom Campanella of China’s construction frenzy. Campanella marshals many astonishing facts to back up the statement: In Shanghai, more than 900 million square feet of commercial office space were added to the city between 1990 and 2004, roughly equivalent to 335 Empire State Buildings. Between 1985-1995 Shanghai’s footprint and suburbs jumped from 90 to 790 square miles. China will end up with more than 1 billion people in its cities. We Americans must “learn humility,” he says, in imagining urban planning for this scale of building boom, or establishing what constitutes good versus bad urbanism.
关 键 词: 城市规划; 城市化; 建筑热潮
课程来源: 视频讲座网
数据采集: 2020-09-26:liush
阅读次数: 42