As sensors become small and cheap, we’re creating a global network of environmental data collection to help us figure out the best ways to quickly cut emissions, writes Sean Captain via FastCoExist.
It has been estimated that by 2019, he writes, ” ‘citizen environmentalists’ will have deployed more personal sensors, measuring things like air and water pollution, than governments have in countries with well developed economies.”
And at the government level, cities are beginning to use motion sensors to track traffic – connect this to traffic lights, and weather reports, writes Captain, and “you get an automated world that adjusts itself to changing conditions.
“And while it isn’t specifically targeted at environmental management, it almost always touches on the environment, because it so often measures and controls things that use – and waste – energy.”
Daniel Bennett writes in Sourceable‘s Architecture News that the contribution of public space to a city’s economy can be measured and used to advocate for bigger and better parks.
He asks, “with the pressure on our increasingly urbanised populations, why is quality public open space in our cities too often seen as a ‘nice to have’ rather than a valuable investment for which the return is high?
“We need to quantify and qualify every positive aspect of our public spaces and park systems, where possible, into a value to make the business case.”
Quantifiable outcomes include increased property values, higher rates for local government, and more businesses in turn attracting customers, employees and services.
British architect and Pritzker Prize winner Richard Rogers writes for CNN on the pressures, and value, of well designed cities with equitable public space.
He writes, “When public space is eroded, it is our civic culture that suffers, even our democracy.
“Demonstrations are suppressed by governments, and even in London the right to congregate in Parliament Square — outside the ‘mother of parliaments’ — is constrained.
“But other forces can erode the public realm too,” he says.
For instance, market forces that propelled the popularity of shopping malls over the high street, the parallel worlds of the rich and the poor, public space sacrificed for roads and cars.
“The only way to accommodate growing populations, while preserving urban vitality and minimizing carbon emissions, is to live in denser, better-designed cities,” he says.
Lisa Pryor, a medical doctor, writes of her experience living in the privileged inner city and commuting to Western Sydney for work.
In the past 20 years, she says, “the urban village ethos has encouraged prosperous neighborhoods to turn inward and even take pride in not connecting with fellow citizens in the suburban areas beyond.”
Pryor writes of the inner city’s fight for resources, its determination to hold to its cultural clout at the expense of Western Sydney suburbs.
“In Western Sydney more than anywhere, our future nation is being formed,” she says.
“The streets are not built for street life, but there is life, in spite of the streets. Thousands of years of culture are being woven into something loose we call Australian. And it is passing by those who refuse to venture beyond the inner city.
“The passion for well-designed communities needs to be directed outward instead of inward, geographically and in spirit. We need to let go of some of our resources; we need to learn to share.”
The Street Furniture Australia factory, in Regents Park, Western Sydney, is both a manufacturing hub and R&D studio for our Australian-designed and made street furniture products. We run fun and informative group events for customers throughout the year, to share how products are designed, tested and built, and the latest products and projects. Director of Tract Julie Lee said: “It was a great opportunity for our team to look behind the scenes and understand the innovation, research and climate positive outcomes Street Furniture Australia is focusing on. Thank you for having us!” Place Design Group Associate, Liam Isaksen, said: “The factory tour is a fun experience to learn about the design and manufacturing process of public furniture we use in landscape architecture design. Seeing the work behind the scenes and …
Did you catch these most-read case studies, furnishing tips, new product announcements and special industry events in your StreetChat updates in 2023? Each month our StreetChat enewsletter publishes new projects, products and trends from the public domain; subscribe to receive it in your inbox. 10. Which design firm can see Longhorn Cattle from their office window? 2 countries. 9 cities. 300 landscape architects. Street Furniture Australia and USA partner Spruce & Gander visited offices in Australia and Texas. There were key similarities and some notable standouts. 9. Jazz at The Mint: Product and Book Launch Sydney landscape architects gathered at the iconic Mint Courtyard to launch a design book by our founding directors Darrel Conybeare and Bill Morrison, and expansions to the Linea collection. 8. 2023 Good Cause Giveaway goes to …
Street Furniture Australia has designed and built prototype charging stands as part of a Transport for NSW program to deliver free phone chargers at 15 Sydney train stations. Developed by Street Furniture Australia’s inhouse industrial designers in collaboration with Transport for NSW, the prototypes offer wireless, USB-A and USB-C charging, and can power 7 devices at once. They were built at the Street Furniture Australia factory in Western Sydney. Two Power Spots are now installed at Liverpool and Campbelltown stations. The $1 million Power Spots Project rollout to 15 transport hubs including Bankstown, Hurstville, Lidcombe, Penrith, Wynyard, Central, Town Hall and Bondi Junction will be completed by late 2024. NSW Transport Minister Jo Haylen said the Power Spots provide peace of mind: “In the modern world, our phones are our …
Print-it-yourself street furniture Inspired by WikiHouse, an open-source, easy-to-assemble home, Better Block has launched WikiBlock, an open-data hub with a library of print-on-demand placemaking tools. Users can download free plans and assembly manuals for a collection of 29 objects including stages, kiosks, planters, benches and tables. Builders bring the PDF and sheets of plywood to a makerspace and use a CNC router to cut out the pieces, which usually pop into place with a few smacks from a rubber mallet – no need for screws, nails or glue. Read more at City Lab. How to design a city for women: City Lab tracks efforts in Vienna, Austria, to improve women’s experience of living in the city since the nineties – backing each proposal with a social study. Urban planners have been melding ‘gender mainstreaming’ and city …
The science of happy cities: Happy City, a Canadian organisation, makes the case for retrofitting cities for happiness and argues that streets, parks, shopping centres, housing estates – most urban infrastructure – can be designed to make people feel happier, behave better and be kinder. Their first tip: people are nicer to each other when they walk more slowly. “If we give a damn about human wellbeing in cities, we need to study the emotional effects of spaces and systems,” says Charles Montgomery. “We need to use evidence to help fix the horrific mistakes we’ve made over the last century.” Read more at The Guardian. Photo by Elizabeth Villalta on Unsplash. Books loose on the rail: Two Melbourne friends inspired by a UK idea of leaving novels on public transport for …
smart pavement: Melbourne design agency Büro North is proposing in-ground traffic lights to safeguard pedestrians glued to their smartphones. Architecture & Design reports that the firm developed the idea following reports of accidents involving players of the augmented reality game Pokémon Go (see our White Paper on Pokémon, augmented reality and cities). Read the full story and watch the video, here. Photo: Büro North. #GetSunflowered: David Bullpitt documents beautiful urban interventions with the planting of sunflower fields in prime renewal areas in the La Trobe Valley, Victoria. In Architecture AU he writes, “the Get Sunflowered project by RMIT University’s Office of Urban Transformations Research (OUTR) offers an un-ashamedly happy intervention.” The project received an Award of Excellence in this year’s Victorian AILA awards. See the latest via the #getsunflowered Facebook feed, or visit the website for …