English
Noun
urbanist
- a person who studies
cities and their growth
- an urban
planner
Cities laid out with forethought and design
permeate
antiquity.
Perhaps the earliest of these were those of the ancient
Mesopotamian
and
Harrapan
civilizations of
the third millennium
BCE.
Ur located near the
Euphrates
and
Tigris
rivers in modern day
Iraq and some ancient
cities of the Indus Valley in modern day
Pakistan are
perhaps the earliest examples of deliberately planned and managed
cities in history. The streets of these early cities were often
paved and laid out at right angles in a
grid pattern.
There was also with a hierarchy of streets (commercial boulevards
to small residential alleyways). In Harrapan settlements,
archaeological
evidence suggests the houses were laid out to protect from noise,
odors, and thieves, and had their own
wells, and
sanitation. Ancient cities often had drainage, large
granaries, and
well-developed urban
sanitation
The Greek
Hippodamus (c.
407 BC) is widely considered the father of city planning in the
West, for his design of
Miletus; Alexander
commissioned him to lay out
Alexandria, the
grandest example of idealized urban planning of the Mediterranean
world, where regularity was aided in large part by its level site
near a mouth of the Nile.
The
ancient
Romans used a consolidated scheme for city planning, developed
for military defense and civil convenience. The basic plan is a
central forum with city services, surrounded by a compact
rectilinear grid of streets and wrapped in a wall for defense. To
reduce travel times, two diagonal streets cross the square grid
corner-to-corner, passing through the central square. A river
usually flows through the city, to provide water and transport, and
carry away sewage, even in sieges. Effectively, many European towns
still preserve the essence of these schemes, as in
Turin.The Romans had
a very logical way of designing their cities. They put all the
streets at right angles, set up in a square grid. All the roads
were equal in width and length except for two. These two roads
formed the center of the grid and intersected in the middle. One
went East/West, the other North/South. They were slightly wider
than the others. All roads were made of carefully fitted stones and
smaller hard packed stones. Bridges were also constructed where
needed. Each square marked by four roads was called an insulae. An
insulae was the Roman equivalent of a city block. Each insulae was
80 yards square. The land of each insulae was divided up. As the
city developed, each insulae would eventually be filled with
buildings of various shapes and sizes and would be crisscrossed
with back roads and alleys. Most insulae were given to the first
settlers of a budding new Roman city, but each person had to pay
for the building of their own houses. The city was surrounded by a
wall to protect the city from invaders and other enemies, and to
mark the cities limits. Area outside of the walls and city limits
was left for farmland. At the end of each main road, there was a
large gateway with watchtowers. A portcullis covered the opening
when the city was under siege. Other watchtowers were constructed
around the rest of the city’s wall. An aqueduct was built outside
of the city's walls. This brought in the water necessary for the
city's functioning.
The idea of rational planning collapsed with the
idea of the
res publica
in the European
Early
Middle Ages. Round a fortress or fortified abbey or next to a
Roman nucleus — sometimes itself abandoned— urban growth occurred
"like the annular rings of a tree" whether in an extended village
or the center of a larger city. Since the new center was often on
high, defensible ground, the city plan took on an organic
character, following the irregularities of
elevation
contours like the shapes that result from
agricultural
terracing.
The ideal city resurfaced in the
Early
Renaissance in Florence, where the star-shaped city plan was
adapted from the new cannon-resistant
star fort. The
star-shaped fortification had a formative influence on the
patterning of Renaissance urban planning: "The Renaissance was
hypnotized by one city type which for a century and a half— from
Filarete to
Scamozzi—
was impressed upon utopian schemes: this is the star-shaped city"
Radial streets extend outward from a defined center of military,
communal or spiritual power. Only in ideal cities did a
centrally-planned structure stand at the heart, as in
Raphael's
Sposalizio of 1504 (illustration); as built, the unique example of
a rationally-planned quattrocento new city center, that of
Vigevano, 1493-95,
resembles a closed space instead, surrounded by arcading.
Filarete's ideal
city, building on hints in
Leone
Battista Alberti's De re aedificatoria, was named "
Sforzinda" in
compliment to his patron; its twelve-pointed shape, circumscribable
by a "perfect"
Pythagorean
figure, the circle, takes no heed of its undulating terrain in
Filarete's manuscript.
The true heirs of Greek rational planning were
the
Muslims,
who are thought to have originated the idea of formal
zoning (see
haram and
hima and the more general notion of
khalifa, or
"stewardship" from which they arise), although modern usage in the
West largely dates from the ideas of the
Congrès Internationaux d'Architecture Moderne.
Many cities in Central American civilizations
also engineered urban planning in their cities including sewage
systems and running water. Mexico-Tenochtitlan, was the capital of
the Aztec empire, built on an island in Lake Texcoco in what is now
the Federal District in central Mexico. At its height, Tenochtitlan
was one of the largest cities in the world, with close to 250,000
inhabitants.
In developed countries (
Western
Europe,
North
America,
Japan and
Australasia)
during the last two centuries, planning and architecture can be
said to have gone through various stages of general consensus.
Firstly there was the industrialised city of the 19th century,
where control of building was largely held by businesses and the
wealthy elite. Around the turn of the 20th century there began to
be a movement for providing people, and factory workers in
particular, with healthier environments. The concept of
garden
cities arose and some model towns were built, such as
Letchworth
and
Welwyn
Garden City the world's first garden cities, in
Hertfordshire,
UK. However, these were principally small scale in size, typically
dealing with only a few thousand residents.
It wasn't until the 1920s when
modernism began to surface.
Based on the ideas of
Le Corbusier
and utilising new skyscraper building techniques, the modernist
city stood for the elimination of disorder, congestion and the
small scale, replacing them instead with preplanned and widely
spaced freeways and tower blocks set within gardens. There were
plans for large scale rebuilding of cities, such as the Plan Voisin
(based on Le Corbusier's
Ville
Contemporaine), which proposed clearing and rebuilding most of
central Paris. No large scale plans were implemented until after
World
War II however. Throughout the late 1940s and 1950s, housing
shortages caused by war destructions led many cities around the
world to build substantial amounts of government housing. Planners
at the time used the opportunity to implement the modernist ideal
of towers surrounded by gardens. The most prominent example of an
entire modernist city is
Brasilia,
constructed between 1956 and 1960 in
Brazil.
By the late 1960s and early 1970s, many planners
were coming to realise that the imposition of modernist clean lines
and a lack of human scale also tended to sap vitality from the
community. This was expressed in high crime and social problems
within these planned neighbourhoods. Modernism can be said to have
ended in the 1970s when the construction of the cheap, uniform
tower
blocks ended in many countries, such as Britain and France.
Since then many have been demolished and in their way more
conventional housing has been built. Rather than attempting to
eliminate all disorder, planning now concentrates on individualism
and diversity in society and the economy. This is the
post-modernist era.
Minimally-planned cities still exist.
Houston is
an example of a large city (with a metropolitan population of 5.5
million) in a developed country, without a comprehensive zoning
ordinance. Houston does, however, have many of the land use
restrictions covered by traditional zoning regulations, such as
restrictions on development density and parking requirements, even
though specific land uses are not regulated. Moreover,
private-sector developers have used subdivision covenants and deed
restrictions effectively to create the same kinds of land use
restrictions found in most municipal zoning laws. Houston voters
have rejected proposals for a comprehensive zoning ordinance three
times since 1948. Even without zoning in its traditional sense,
metropolitan Houston displays similar land use patterns at the
macro scale to regions comparable in age and population that do
have zoning, such as Dallas. This suggests that factors outside the
regulatory environment, such as the provision of urban
infrastructure and methods of financing development, may play a
greater role in the way American cities are developed than does
zoning.
Sustainable development and sustainability
Sustainable
development and sustainability have become buzzwords in the
planning industry, with the recognition that present ways of
consumption and living have led to problems like the overuse of
natural resources, ecosystem destruction, urban heat islands,
pollution, growing inequality in cities, the degradation of human
living conditions and human-induced climate change. Planners have,
as a result, taken to advocating for the development of sustainable
cities.
However, the notion of sustainable development
can be considered as rather recent and evolving, with many
questions surrounding this concept. That said, it is often not
difficult to recognise what are 'unsustainable' forms of
lifestyles, and urban planning is recognised to play a crucial
position in the development of sustainable cities.
Stephen Wheeler, in his 1998 article, suggests a
definition for sustainable urban development to be as "development
that improves the long-term social and ecological health of cities
and towns." He goes on to suggest a framework that might help all
to better understand what a 'sustainable' city might look like.
These include compact, efficient land use; less automobile use yet
with better access; efficient resource use, less pollution and
waste; the restoration of natural systems; good housing and living
environments; a healthy social ecology; sustainable economics;
community participation and involvement; and preservation of local
culture and wisdom.
The challenge facing planners comes with the
implementation of policy, programs, and the need to modify
institutions to achieve the goals of sustainability.
Aspects of planning
In
developed countries there has been a backlash against excessive
man-made clutter in the environment, such as signposts, signs, and
hoardings. Other issues that generate strong debate amongst urban
designers are tensions between peripheral growth, increased housing
density and planned new settlements. There are also unending
debates about the benefits of mixing tenures and land uses, versus
the benefits of distinguishing geographic zones where different
uses predominate.
Successful urban planning considers character, of
"home" and "sense of place", local identity, respect for natural,
artistic and historic heritage, an understanding of the "urban
grain" or "townscape," pedestrians and other modes of traffic,
utilities and natural hazards, such as flood zones.
Some argue that the medieval
piazza and arcade are the most
widely appreciated elements of successful urban design, as
demonstrated by the Italian cities of
Siena and
Bologna.
While it is rare that cities are planned from
scratch, planners are important in managing the growth of cities,
applying tools like
zoning to manage the uses of
land, and
growth
management to manage the pace of development. When examined
historically, many of the cities now thought to be most beautiful
are the result of dense, long lasting systems of prohibitions and
guidance about building sizes, uses and features. These allowed
substantial freedoms, yet enforce styles, safety, and often
materials in practical ways. Many conventional planning techniques
are being repackaged using the contemporary term,
smart
growth.
There are some cities that have been planned from
conception, and while the results often don't turn out quite as
planned, evidence of the initial plan often remains. (See
List
of planned cities)
Safety
Historically within the Middle East, Europe and the
rest of the
Old World,
settlements were located on higher ground (for defense) and close
to fresh water sources. Cities have often grown onto coastal and
flood plains at risk of floods and storm surges. Urban planners
must consider these threats. If the dangers can be localised then
the affected regions can be made into parkland or
Greenbelt, often
with the added benefit of open space provision.
Extreme
weather,
flood, or other emergencies can
often be greatly mitigated with secure
emergency
evacuation routes and emergency operations centres. These are
relatively inexpensive and unintrusive, and many consider them a
reasonable precaution for any urban space. Many cities will also
have planned, built safety features, such as
levees,
retaining
walls, and shelters.
In recent years, practitioners have also been
expected to maximize the accessibility of an area to people with
different abilities, practicing the notion of "inclusive design,"
to anticipate criminal behaviour and consequently to "design-out
crime" and to consider "traffic calming" or "pedestrianisation" as
ways of making urban life more pleasant.
City planning tries to control
criminality with structures
designed from theories such as
socio-architecture
or
environmental
determinism. These theories say that an urban environment can
influence individuals' obedience to social rules. The theories
often say that psychological pressure develops in more densely
developed, unadorned areas. This stress causes some crimes and some
use of illegal drugs. The antidote is usually more individual space
and better, more beautiful design in place of
functionalism.
Oscar Newman’s
defensible
space theory cites the modernist housing projects of the 1960s
as an example of environmental determinism, where large blocks of
flats are surrounded by shared and disassociated public areas,
which are hard for residents to identify with. As those on lower
incomes cannot hire others to maintain public space such as
security guards or grounds keepers, and because no individual feels
personally responsible, there was a general deterioration of public
space leading to a sense of alienation and social disorder
Source
Jane Jacobs
is another notable environmental determinist and is associated with
the "eyes on the street" concept. By improving ‘natural
surveillance’ of shared land and facilities of nearby residents by
literally increasing the number of people who can see it, and
increasing the familiarity of residents, as a collective, residents
can more easily detect undesirable or criminal behaviour.
The
"broken-windows"
theory argues that small indicators of neglect, such as broken
windows and unkempt lawns, promote a feeling that an area is in a
state of decay. Anticipating decay, people likewise fail to
maintain their own properties. The theory suggests that abandonment
causes crime, rather than crime causing abandonment.
Some planning methods might help an elite group
to control ordinary citizens.
Haussmann's renovation of Paris created a system of wide
boulevards which prevented the construction of barricades in the
streets and eased the movement of military troops. In
Rome, the
Fascists in the
1930s created ex novo many new
suburbs in order to concentrate
criminals and poorer
classes away from the elegant town.
Other social theories point out that in Britain
and most countries since the 18th century, the transformation of
societies from rural
agriculture to industry caused a difficult adaptation to urban
living. These theories emphasize that many planning policies ignore
personal tensions, forcing individuals to live in a condition of
perpetual extraneity to their cities. Many people therefore lack
the comfort of feeling "at home" when at home. Often these
theorists seek a reconsideration of commonly used "standards" that
rationalize the outcomes of a free (relatively unregulated)
market.
Slums
The rapid
urbanization of the last
century has resulted in a significant amount of slum habitation in
the major cities of the world, particularly in developing
countries. There is significant demand for planning resources and
strategies to address the issues that arise from slum development,
and many planning theorists and practitioners are calling for
increased attention and resources in this area, particularly the
Commonwealth Association of Planners. When urban planners give
their attention to slums, one also has to pay attention to the
racial make-up of that area to ensure that
racial
steering does not occur.
The issue of slum habitation has often been
resolved via a simple policy of clearance, however more creative
solutions are beginning to emerge such as
Nairobi's "
Camp of
Fire" program, where established slum-dwellers have promised to
build proper houses, schools, and community centers without any
government money, in return for land they have been illegally
squatting on for 30 years. The "Camp of Fire" program is one of
many similar projects initiated by
Slum Dwellers International, which has programs in
Africa,
Asia, and
South
America.
Urban decay
Urban decay
is a process by which a
city, or a part of a city, falls
into a state of disrepair. It is characterized by
depopulation,
economic
restructuring, property abandonment, high
unemployment, fragmented
families, political
disenfranchisement,
crime, and desolate and
unfriendly urban landscapes.
Urban decay was associated with Western cities,
especially
North
America and parts of
Europe during the
1970s and
1980s. During
this time period major changes in global economies,
transportation, and
government policies created conditions that fostered urban
decay.
The effects of urban decay run counter to the
development patterns found in most cities in
Europe and countries
outside of
North
America, where
slums
are usually located on the outskirts of major metropolitan areas
while the
city center
and
inner
city retain high
real estate
values and a steady or increasing population. In contrast, North
American cities often experienced an outflux of population to city
suburbs or
exurbs, as
in the case of
white
flight..
There is no single cause of urban decay, though
it may be triggered by a combination of interrelated factors,
including urban planning decisions, the development of
freeways,
suburbanisation,
redlining, immigration
restrictions,
racial
discrimination, and ill-informed government subsidies.
Reconstruction and renewal
Areas devastated by war or
invasion represent a unique challenge to urban planners: the area
of development is not one for simple modification, nor is it a
"
blank
slate". Buildings, roads, services and basic infrastructure
like power, water and sewerage are often severely compromised and
need to be evaluated to determine what, if anything, can be
salvaged for re-incorporation. There is also the problem of
population. More often than not, people are also still living in
these areas, displaced but not removed, and their issues need to be
addressed. Historic areas and religious or social centers also need
to be preserved and re-integrated into the new city plan. A prime
example of this is the capital city of
Kabul,
Afghanistan,
which after decades of civil war and occupation has regions that
have literally been reduced to rubble. Despite this, the indigenous
population continues to live in the area, constructing makeshift
homes and shops out of whatever can be salvaged. Any reconstruction
plan proposed, such as
Hisham
Ashkouri's
City of Light Development, needs to be sensitive to the needs
of this community and its existing culture, businesses and
needs.
Urban Reconstruction Development plans must also
work with government agencies as well as private interests to
develop workable designs.
Transport
Transport within urbanized areas presents unique
problems. The density of an urban environment can create
significant levels of road traffic, which can impact businesses and
increase pollution. Parking space is another concern, requiring the
construction of large parking garages in high density areas which
could be better used for other development.
Good planning attempts to place higher densities
of jobs or residents near high-volume transportation. For example,
some cities permit commerce and multi-story apartment buildings
only within one block of train stations and four-lane boulevards,
and accept single-family dwellings and parks farther away.
Densities can be measured in several ways. A
common method, used is the
Floor area
ratio, using the floor area of buildings divided by the land
area. Ratios below 1.5 could be considered low density, and plot
ratios above five very high density. Most
exurbs are
below two, while most city centres are well above five. Walk-up
apartments with basement garages can easily achieve a density of
three. Skyscrapers easily achieve densities of thirty or
more.
City authorities may try to encourage lower
densities to reduce infrastructure costs, though some observers
note that low densities may not accommodate enough population to
provide adequate demand or funding for that infrastructure. In the
UK, recent years have seen a concerted effort to increase the
density of residential development in order to better achieve
sustainable development. Increasing development density has the
advantage of making mass transport systems, district heating and
other community facilities (schools, health centres, etc) more
viable. However critics of this approach dub the densification of
development as 'town cramming' and claim that it lowers quality of
life and restricts market-led choice.
Problems can often occur at residential densities
between about two and five. These densities can cause traffic jams
for
automobiles, yet
are too low to be commercially served by
trains or
light rail
systems. The conventional solution is to use
buses, but these and light rail
systems may fail where automobiles and excess road network capacity
are both available, achieving less than 1% ridership.
The
Lewis-Mogridge
Position claims that increasing road space is not an effective
way of relieving traffic jams as
latent or
induced demand invariably emerges to restore a
socially-tolerable level of congestion.
Some theoreticians speculate that
personal
rapid transit (PRT) might coax people from their automobiles,
and yet effectively serve intermediate densities, but this has not
been demonstrated.
Addressing
If
house
numbering is part of the plan, the risk that the numbering task
will end up in the hands of non-professionals can be reduced,
saving citizens much lost time looking for addresses later. This is
especially important for non-
grid plan areas
with no city-wide addressing standard already in place.
Suburbanization
In some countries declining satisfaction
with the urban environment is held to blame for continuing
migration
to smaller towns and rural areas (so-called
urban
exodus). Successful urban planning supported
Regional
planning can bring benefits to a much larger
hinterland or
city region
and help to reduce both congestion along transport routes and the
wastage of energy implied by excessive
commuting.
Environmental factors
Environmental
protection and conservation are of utmost importance to many
planning systems across the world. Not only are the specific
effects of development to be mitigated, but attempts are made to
minimise the overall effect of development on the local and global
environment. This is commonly done through the assessment of
Sustainable urban infrastructure. In Europe this process is
known as
Sustainability
Appraisal.
Arcology seeks to
unify the fields of
ecology and
architecture, especially
landscape
architecture, to achieve a harmonious environment for all
living things. On a small scale, the
eco-village
theory has become popular, as it emphasizes a traditional 100-140
person scale for communities.
In most advanced urban or village planning
models, local context is critical. In many,
gardening assumes a central
role not only in
agriculture but in the daily
life of citizens. A series of related movements including
green
anarchism,
eco-anarchism,
eco-feminism
and
Slow
Food have put this in a
political
context as part of a focus on smaller systems of resource
extraction, and waste disposal, ideally as part of
living
machines which do such recycling automatically, just as nature
does. The modern theory of
natural
capital emphasizes this as the primary difference between
natural and
infrastructural
capital, and seeks
an economic
basis for rationalizing a move back towards smaller village
units. A common form of planning that leads to suburban sprawl is
single
use zoning.
An urban planner is likely to use a number of
Quantitative tools to forecast impacts of development on a variety
of environmental concerns including
roadway air dispersion models to predict air quality impacts of
urban highways and
roadway
noise models to predict
noise
pollution effects of urban highways. As early as the 1960s,
noise pollution was addressed in the design of urban highways as
well as
noise
barriers. The
Phase I Environmental Site Assessment can be an important tool
to the urban planner by identifying early in the planning process
any geographic areas or parcels which have
toxic constraints.
Canyon effect
The canyon effect is a colloquial,
non-scientific term referring to street space bordered by very high
buildings. This type of environment may disallow direct sunlight to
reach sidewalk level during most of the daylight hours. While an
oft-decried phenomenon, this is very rare outside of very dense,
hyper-tall urban environments, such as those found in Lower and
Midtown Manhattan and Kowloon in Hong Kong.
Sound
In urban planning sound is merely considered as a
pollution problem. Lately a more positive approach towards sound in
urban planning is rising. Sound is a quality and an opportunity.
The sound of fountains is an example of a creatible enjoyable
soundscape.
Process
The traditional planning process focused on
top-down processes where the
town planner
created the plans. A planner is usually skilled in either
surveying, engineering or architecture, bringing to the town
planning process ideals based around these disciplines. They
typically worked for national or local governments.
Changes to the planning process
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strategic_Urban_Planning
over past decades have witnessed the metamorphosis of the role of
the urban planner in the planning process. Calls championing for
more
democratic planning processes have played a huge role in
allowing the
public to
make important decisions as part of the planning process.
Community
organizers and
social
workers are now very involved in planning from the grassroots
level.
Developers
too have played huge roles in influencing the way development
occurs, particularly through project-based planning. Many recent
developments were results of large and small-scale developers who
purchased land, designed the district and constructed the
development from scratch. The
Melbourne
Docklands, for example, was largely an initiative pushed by
private developers who sought to redevelop the waterfront into a
high-end residential and commercial district.
Notes
References
- The American City: What Works and What
Doesn't (A standard text for many college and graduate
courses in city planning in America)
- Hoch, Charles, Linda C. Dalton and Frank S. So, editors (2000).
The Practice of Local Government Planning, Intl City County
Management Assn; 3rd edition. ISBN 0-87326-171-2 (The "Green Book")
- Tunnard, Christopher and Boris Pushkarev (1963). Man-Made
America: Chaos or Control?: An Inquiry into Selected Problems of
Design in the Urbanized Landscape, New Haven:
Yale
University Press. (This book won the National
Book Award, strictly America; a time capsule of photography and
design approach.)
- Wheeler, Stephen (1998). "Planning Sustainable and Livable
Cities", Routledge; 3rd edition.
- Environmental Design of Urban Buildings: An Integrated
Approach, Matheos Santamouris: 2006
- Atmospheric Environment Volume 35, Issue 10, April 2001, Pages
1717-1727. "Traffic pollution in a downtown site of Buenos Aires
City"
- T. R. Oke (1982). "The energetic basis of the urban heat
island". Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 108:
1–24.
Further reading
-
City Planning According to Artistic Principles, Camillo
Sitte, 1889
-
Tomorrow: A Peaceful Path to Real Reform, Ebenezer
Howard, 1898
-
The Improvement of Towns and Cities, Charles
Mulford Robinson, 1901
-
Town Planning in practice, Raymond
Unwyn, 1909
-
The Principles of Scientific Management, Frederick
Winslow Taylor, 1911
- Cities
in Evolution, Patrick
Geddes, 1915
- The
Image of the City, Kevin
Lynch, 1960
- The
Concise Townscape, Gordon
Cullen, 1961
-
The Death and Life of Great American Cities, Jane Jacobs,
1961
- The
City in History, Lewis
Mumford, 1961
- A
Pattern Language, Christopher
Alexander, Sara
Ishikawa and Murray
Silverstein, 1977
- Urban
Planning, 1794-1918: An International Anthology of Articles,
Conference Papers, and Reports, Selected, Edited, and Provided
with Headnotes by John W. Reps, Professor Emeritus, Cornell
University.
- Urban
Development: The Logic Of Making Plans, Lewis D. Hopkins,
Island Press, 2001. ISBN 1-55963-853-2
- The City is the Frontier, Charles Abrams, Harper & Row
Publishing, New York, 1965.
External links
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