View Full Version : Dear Next US President, Redesign Our Cities


Don Omar
September 24th, 2008, 08:11 PM
Mitchell Joachim: Redesign Cities From Scratch

By Tom Vanderbilt
09.22.08
Wired Magazine (http://www.wired.com/politics/law/magazine/16-10/sl_joachim#)

Dressed in architect black and sporting dreadlocks, Mitchell Joachim isn't your average Whole Foods envirogeek. For one thing, he speaks in an intense staccato punctuated with words like peristaltic and epiphetic. And don't get him started on sustainability. "I don't like the term," he says. "It's not evocative enough. You don't want your marriage to be sustainable. You want to be evolving, nurturing, learning." Efficiency doesn't cut it, either: "It just means less bad." Even zero emissions falls short. "This table does zero damage," he says, thumping the one in his office. "No VOCs, no carbons. Whatever. It doesn't do anything positive."

Joachim spent a decade working with architect Michael Sorkin, followed by a short spell with Frank Gehry. He now teaches at Columbia University and is a partner at Terreform 1, a nonprofit focused on ecological design. A kind of Frederick Law Olmsted for the 21st century, he spends most of his time thinking about how to reduce the ecological footprint of cities. It's not a short-term project. "It took 15 to 20 years to get a hybrid car," he says. "To change the basic paradigm for how we make buildings, 40 to 50 years. To change a city? That's 100 to 150 years." If the next president is smart, he'll want to get started sooner rather than later.

At the top of the agenda, Joachim says, is mobility and its inefficiencies. Citing US Department of Energy statistics, he says that while 29 percent of the nation's energy expenditure--what he calls "the suck"--now goes toward getting around, "in 50 years that will double." Among the biggest sources of waste, he argues, is the automobile--not only in energy but in the space it occupies (cars, he notes, spend more than 90 percent of the day parked). For nearly a century, Joachim says, "cities have been designed around cars. Why not design a car around a city?" So he did just that. One of his concept vehicles, the City Car , was named to Time magazine's Inventions of the Year list in 2007.

His various cars would be less machine than Facebook on wheels. Instead of rpm gauges, there'd be social networking software telling drivers where their friends are and how to get there. Made from neoprene and other soft materials, cars would no longer suffer traffic-fouling fender benders, merely what he calls "gentle congestion"--picture a flock of urban sheep grazing against one other. Like Zipcar vehicles, the cars would be shared. They would "read" potholes and send warnings to nearby drivers and city repair crews. Urban parking would be eased by intelligent real-time supply and demand management, with people bidding remotely for available spots. Of course, there'd also be more spaces to begin with, since his cars could be folded and stacked like shopping carts. The average New York City block could handle 880 of the vehicles, he says.

For Joachim, reinventing the city doesn't stop at the curb; he's been reimagining just about every part of the modern urban landscape. To help cool Atlanta, Joachim suggests flooding an area of the city now filled with parking lots to create a "munificent pool"--a large pond filled with fish, plants, and algae, surrounded by trees. It would counteract the urban "heat island" effect and process gray water and sewage. The waterworks would be powered by wind turbines.

http://www.wired.com/images/article/magazine/1610/sl_joachim2_f.jpg
In this vision of downtown Atlanta (based on Joachim's renderings), the city is transformed by wind power and flooded parking lots.

Some of Joachim's ideas are more conceptual than practical: His vision for the future of New York City includes airborne public transit. He imagines low-hung blimps tethered to buildings, moving through the city 24/7. They would function like a ski lift, and commuters could hop on and off with relative ease. "We put the funk in functionalism," he says.

Architecture needs radical reengineering, too, and Joachim envisions a retro-futurist alternative for home building: "Let's grow it onsite." That's the concept behind his Fab Tree Hab, currently on view at New York's Museum of Modern Art. Rather than cutting down a tree and transporting it from forest to mill to lumber-yard to building site, the house is the tree. It's the ancient art of "pleaching"--training and joining plants to create structures--with a 21st-century twist, using milling software to achieve precise geometries. "You can pregrow a village with no consequence on the land," he says. "In fact, with a positive carbon contribution."

Or why not build cities out of garbage? Joachim notes that if you could somehow convert waste into construction material, you could make another Empire State Building out of what New Yorkers throw away in two weeks. There's enough trash in the city's , he says, to "remake Manhattan island seven times at full scale." That this sounds a bit like a recent Pixar release in which a robot builds towers of unrecycled trash isn't lost on Joachim, who recently gave a talk at Disney on making its theme parks greener. Wall-E destroyed a lot of my visions," he says. "They really did it so well." Not to worry: There's always room for another visionary in Tomorrowland.

http://www.wired.com/images/article/magazine/1610/sl_joachim_f.jpg
Mitchell Joachim

Don Omar
September 24th, 2008, 08:25 PM
Its a little far out there but the principles of the Fab Tree Hab (http://www.archinode.com/bienal.html) should be part of our outlook for the future

http://www.archinode.com/Fabaxo1.jpg

Principles:
This home concept is intended to replace the outdated design solutions at Habitat for Humanity. We propose a method to grow homes from native trees. A living structure is grafted into shape with prefabricated Computer Numeric Controlled (CNC) reusable scaffolds. Therefore, we enable dwellings to be fully integrated into an ecological community.

1. Composed with 100% living nutrients.
2. Make effective contributions to the ecosystem.
3. Accountable removal of human impacts.
4. Involve arboreal farming & production.
5. Subsume technology within terrestrial environs.
6. Circulate water & metabolic flows symbiotically.
7. Consider the life cycle, from use to disposal.

http://www.archinode.com/Terreviewsclose1_0.jpg

http://www.archinode.com/Fabtime1a.jpg
Arboreal farming of living hull structure sections at local nurseries.

http://www.archinode.com/Fabsec1.jpg
Section revealing nutrient flows:
1. Circulation + Entry, 2. Gravity Plumbing, 3. Composting, 4. Aqueous Garden.


50% Living Home Design:
http://www.archinode.com/MATscapeNew1.jpg
An alternate proposal that uses mixed traditional prefab construction with living surfaces.

A mosaic of materials, components, and spaces evolved for this dwelling, asserting that nature and people are mutually beneficial.
The built-form sanctions life at all levels. Soil pockets serve gardens, native species, and the water cycle. Minute channels within the grid framework collect and direct rainfall. The mass-flows from life within the home feed ponds and nutrient producing compost. Participating in the logic of the home, the people determine their consumption patterns to ensure that outputs become inputs for other processes.

Don Omar
September 24th, 2008, 08:39 PM
Car, Compacted
http://img.timeinc.net/time/2007/best_of_the_rest/citi_car.jpg

Time Magazine (http://www.time.com/time/specials/2007/article/0,28804,1677329_1677971_1677986,00.html)
Best of the Year 2007

Aiming for the sweet spot between the comfort of a private vehicle and the efficiency of public transportation, the City Car from MIT's Media Lab is a stackable electric car that can be checked out like a luggage cart at the airport, then returned to any station around the city. Electric motors in each wheel eliminate the need for a mechanical drivetrain, and these 5-ft.-long (1.5 m) two-seaters zip along at 55 m.p.h. (about 90 km/h).
Available: 2011
cities.media.mit.edu (http://cities.media.mit.edu/index.html)
__________________________

The CityCar is a stackable electric two-passenger city vehicle. The one-way sharable user model is designed to be used in dense urban areas. Vehicle Stacks will be placed throughout the city to create an urban transportation network that takes advantage of existing infrastructure such as subway and bus lines. By placing stacks in urban spaces and key points of convergence, the vehicle allows the citizens the flexibility to combine mass transit effectively with individualized mobility. The stack receives incoming vehicles and electrically charges them. Similar to luggage carts at the airport, users simply take the first fully charged vehicle at the front of the stack. The City car is NOT a replacement for personal vehicles, taxis, buses, or trucks; it is a NEW vehicle type that promotes a socially responsible and more effective means of urban mobility.

http://img87.imageshack.us/img87/820/carsem6.png

The CityCar utilizes fully integrated in-wheel electric motors and suspension systems called, "Wheel Robots." The wheel robots eliminate the need traditional drive train configurations like engine blocks, gear boxes, and differentials because they are self-contained, digitally controlled, and reconfigurable. Additionally, the wheel robot provides all wheel power and steering capable of 360 degrees of movement, thus allowing for Omni-directional movement. The vehicle can maneuver in tight urban spaces and park by sideways translation. This technology is patented-pending and under design development at the MIT Media Lab.

Don Omar
September 24th, 2008, 09:21 PM
http://img254.imageshack.us/img254/1985/obamabidenim3.png

Obama's website has a lot of detailed plans when it comes to urban issues. Listed below is some of his key points relative to this thread, but many more exist in regards to Urban Economic Stimulus, Housing, Poverty, Strengthen Homeland Security, and Supporting Families

http://www.barackobama.com/images/issues/urbanpolicy.jpg
Obama's Plan for Urban Policy (http://www.barackobama.com/issues/urbanpolicy/#stimulate-economic-prosperity)

Strengthen Federal Commitment to our Cities
Create a White House Office on Urban Policy: Obama and Biden will create a White House Office of Urban Policy to develop a strategy for metropolitan America and to ensure that all federal dollars targeted to urban areas are effectively spent on the highest-impact programs. The Director of Urban Policy will report directly to the president and coordinate all federal urban programs.
Fully Fund the Community Development Block Grant: In the long run, regions are only as strong as their people and neighborhoods. The Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program is an important program that provides housing and creating jobs primarily for low- and moderate-income people and places. Barack Obama has fought against Bush Administration cuts to the CDBG program and, as president, he will restore funding for the CDBG program.

Stimulate Economic Prosperity in our Metropolitan Regions
Support Regional Innovation Clusters: Thriving innovation clusters across the country like the North Carolina Research Triangle Park and Nashville's thriving entertainment cluster prove that local stakeholders can successfully come together and help reshape their local economies. Barack Obama and Joe Biden will create a federal program to support "innovation clusters" - regional centers of innovation and next-generation industries. This innovation clusters program will provide $200 million in planning and matching grants for regional business, government and university leaders to collaborate on leveraging a region’s existing assets - from transportation infrastructure to universities - to enhance long-term regional growth.
Convert our Manufacturing Centers into Clean Technology Leaders: America boasts the highest-skilled manufacturing workforce in the world and advanced manufacturing facilities that have powered economic growth in America for decades. Barack Obama and Joe Biden believe that America is at a competitive advantage when it comes to building the high-demand technologies of the future, and they will help nurture America's success in clean technology manufacturing by establishing a federal investment program to help manufacturing centers modernize.
Strengthen Core Infrastructure: Barack Obama and Joe Biden will make strengthening our transportation systems, including our roads and bridges, a top priority. As part of this effort, Obama and Biden will create a National Infrastructure Reinvestment Bank to expand and enhance, not supplant, existing federal transportation investments. These projects will create up to two million new direct and indirect jobs per year and stimulate approximately $35 billion per year in new economic activity.

Housing
Increase the Supply of Affordable Housing throughout Metropolitan Regions: Communities prosper when all families have access to affordable housing. Barack Obama and Joe Biden supported efforts to create an Affordable Housing Trust Fund to create thousands of new units of affordable housing every year. Barack Obama and Joe Biden will also restore cuts to public housing operating subsidies, and ensure that all Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) programs are restored to their original purpose.

Strengthen Livability of Cities
Build More Livable and Sustainable Communities: Our communities will better serve all of their residents if we are able to leave our cars, to walk, bicycle and access other transportation alternatives. As president, Barack Obama will re-evaluate the transportation funding process to ensure that smart growth considerations are taken into account.
Use Innovative Measures to Dramatically Improve Efficiency of Buildings: Buildings account for nearly 40 percent of carbon emissions in the United States today and carbon emissions from buildings are expected to grow faster than emissions from other major parts of our economy. It is expected that 15 million new buildings will be constructed between today and 2015. Barack Obama and Joe Biden will work with cities so that we make our new and existing buildings more efficient consumers of electricity.
Foster Healthy Communities: How a community is designed – including the layout of its roads, buildings and parks – has a huge impact on the health of its residents. For instance, nearly one-third of Americans live in neighborhoods without sidewalks and less than half of our country's children have a playground within walking distance of their homes. Barack Obama introduced the Healthy Places Act to help local governments assess the health impact of new policies and projects, like highways or shopping centers.

Don Omar
September 24th, 2008, 09:31 PM
http://img149.imageshack.us/img149/7413/mccainoq9.png

Now I really did try to find any plans that McCain has on urban issues, but there really isn't any. Well I guess aside a 'Crime-Fighting Strategy' section which is ironically right above a 'Protecting Second Amendment Rights' section.

Otherwise the only other related policy of McCain is to keep taxes low or none. I wish there was more, but I don't think there is.

Hia-leah JDM
September 24th, 2008, 09:50 PM
^^ :lol:

OBAMA!

Mscraper89
September 24th, 2008, 10:06 PM
*Dear US citizens, vote Obama!*

I love those art-works... aren't they building something like that in japan? or I don't know somewhere in an Asian country....

yooik4890
September 25th, 2008, 04:12 AM
Car, Compacted
http://img.timeinc.net/time/2007/best_of_the_rest/citi_car.jpg

Time Magazine (http://www.time.com/time/specials/2007/article/0,28804,1677329_1677971_1677986,00.html)
Best of the Year 2007

Aiming for the sweet spot between the comfort of a private vehicle and the efficiency of public transportation, the City Car from MIT's Media Lab is a stackable electric car that can be checked out like a luggage cart at the airport, then returned to any station around the city. Electric motors in each wheel eliminate the need for a mechanical drivetrain, and these 5-ft.-long (1.5 m) two-seaters zip along at 55 m.p.h. (about 90 km/h).
Available: 2011
cities.media.mit.edu (http://cities.media.mit.edu/index.html)
__________________________

The CityCar is a stackable electric two-passenger city vehicle. The one-way sharable user model is designed to be used in dense urban areas. Vehicle Stacks will be placed throughout the city to create an urban transportation network that takes advantage of existing infrastructure such as subway and bus lines. By placing stacks in urban spaces and key points of convergence, the vehicle allows the citizens the flexibility to combine mass transit effectively with individualized mobility. The stack receives incoming vehicles and electrically charges them. Similar to luggage carts at the airport, users simply take the first fully charged vehicle at the front of the stack. The City car is NOT a replacement for personal vehicles, taxis, buses, or trucks; it is a NEW vehicle type that promotes a socially responsible and more effective means of urban mobility.

http://img87.imageshack.us/img87/820/carsem6.png

The CityCar utilizes fully integrated in-wheel electric motors and suspension systems called, "Wheel Robots." The wheel robots eliminate the need traditional drive train configurations like engine blocks, gear boxes, and differentials because they are self-contained, digitally controlled, and reconfigurable. Additionally, the wheel robot provides all wheel power and steering capable of 360 degrees of movement, thus allowing for Omni-directional movement. The vehicle can maneuver in tight urban spaces and park by sideways translation. This technology is patented-pending and under design development at the MIT Media Lab.


Yeah. The only problem is what if that thing gets hit by an SUV or a pickup truck

El Mariachi
September 25th, 2008, 06:21 AM
Interesting stuff. Never is going to happen though. Just look at the pictures and renderings from things like the Chicago World Fair. We will always picture futuristic cities in such fantastic ways.

American cities have so much potential. More creativity is needed in our urban centers. The bit in this article about blimp mass transit connecting towers in NYC sounds cool. I would love to see NYC develop into a city where skyscapers become something like arcologies.

Inkdaub
September 25th, 2008, 12:32 PM
Yeah. The only problem is an SUV or a pickup truck

Exactly.

hoosier
September 26th, 2008, 04:32 AM
http://img149.imageshack.us/img149/7413/mccainoq9.png

Now I really did try to find any plans that McCain has on urban issues, but there really isn't any. Well I guess aside a 'Crime-Fighting Strategy' section which is ironically right above a 'Protecting Second Amendment Rights' section.

Otherwise the only other related policy of McCain is to keep taxes low or none. I wish there was more, but I don't think there is.

God they are pathetic.

ambiente2008
September 26th, 2008, 05:28 AM
Get Smart
http://www.photo.net/photo/pcd0796/smart-swatch-car-38.4.jpg

jamude18
September 26th, 2008, 07:06 AM
I really like this car, and I dont know why ?

philip
September 26th, 2008, 07:55 AM
Otherwise the only other related policy of McCain is to keep taxes low or none. I wish there was more, but I don't think there is.

Yeah, I know that's funny. Especially when he wants to lower tax, but his pal, Bush, wants to use all our tax money to bailout banks. So how does he plan to run this country when the government has no money???

And at the same time, he wants to increase spending on war.

ØlandDK
September 26th, 2008, 02:45 PM
I really like this car, and I dont know why ?
maybe because it's Mercedes who build them?

Taylorhoge
September 26th, 2008, 02:48 PM
Actually the other day I saw a smart car driving on the LIE(Expressway between JFK and Manhattan) It looked like it could handle the highway well.

sharon333
September 27th, 2008, 12:11 AM
Those are some great ideas.

ambiente2008
September 27th, 2008, 02:58 AM
I really like this car, and I dont know why ?

or the design by swatch

BoulderGrad
September 28th, 2008, 10:30 AM
Yeah. The only problem is what if that thing gets hit by an SUV or a pickup truck

That would be a problem with just about any car smaller than a mid-sized sedan. The solution to that problem is not "dont build small cars" Its "stop buying pickups and suvs"