Older and Wiser: Creating Communities
for Life
By Randolph Jones, AIA, AICP
Americans are growing older, in the largest numbers ever. By the
decade ending 2012, the Bureau of Labor Statistics anticipates six
million persons, ages 16 to 54, will have been added to the
working-age population. Over the same period, the 55-and-over age
bracket will swell by 18 million baby boomers, raising the
question, Where will we all work, live, recreate,
and retire? To answer the question, the author offers some
steps necessary to create new communities for a
quality future.
Designing the Future of New Orleans
Architectural Record, in partnership with the
Tulane School of Architecture, announces two international
competitions to generate housing proposals for New Orleans in the
aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The dual competitions are New
Orleans House Prototype, open to current architecture students; and
High-Density on the High-Ground, open to everyone. Click here to find out more.
Conference Focuses on Gulf States Recovery Effort
In November, the Disaster Preparedness Task Force of the
AIA New York Chapter sponsored a conference, Gulf States Recovery:
Reports from the Front. The conference, held at the Center for
Architecture in New York City, featured "reports from the field"
from various organizations, conferences, and initiatives to better
understand where there are common objectives and needs for
assistance. The goal of the conference was to determine how design
professionals can help in the recovery effort. Click here to read the component's Gulf
Coast report.
AIA Assembles Assessment Team for Sri Lanka
After the December 2004 tsunami, the Sri Lanka Institute
of Architects requested the AIA create a team of professionals to
visit Sri Lanka. The AIA assembled an experienced team comprising
five members of the AIA , two members of the American Planning
Association, a member of the American Society of Landscape
Architects, and a member of the American Society of Civil
Engineers. The team visited Sri Lanka in May 2005 and traveled for
nearly four days along most of the country's devastated coastal
areas, studying the varying coastal landscape, damage to the homes
and businesses, and the difficult issues of building thousands of
new homes for displaced people.
Communities Conference Connected the Dots
The Communities on the Line Conference, literally and
figuratively, connected the dots, linking transit with land use and
creating a dialogue between those who have successfully delivered
transit-oriented development (TOD) and those who are struggling to
do so. Arlington County (Va.) was featured at the
conference, with its 20-year history of transit-oriented
development. The conference also featured in-depth
presentations by planners (Peter Bass) and elected officials (Chris
Zimmerman) who accompanied workshop tours of the county's
five-station transit development results. Plenary speakers,
including Bill Millar of the American Public Transportation
Association, U.S. Rep. Earl Blumenauer, and David Vozzolo
of the Federal Transit Administration provided enough
excitement and electricity to power the Red Line's third rail,
while breakout sessions focused on TOD's expanding role in
place-making throughout our urban regions.
Roger Lewis, FAIA, noted architect, columnist, and educator,
explored America's changing attitudes toward community through his
cartoonist's lensa most evocative and entertaining session.
The final morning provided conferees the opportunity to visit TOD
sites on the Red and Green Lines. The afternoon session,
billed as the Tyson's Corner Charrette, turned into a fascinating
"how to" session with Arlington, once again, serving as coach and
mentor for Tysons Corner officials actively engaged in creating a
strategy (overcoming legislative hurdles, addressing land assembly
issues, selling the urban design vision, and hammering out the
development costs and sources of funding) to recreate Tysons
Corner as a full-fledged transit-oriented development.
This Year's Venice Architecture Biennale Will Focus
on City Planning
The 10th Venice Architecture Biennale will be
staged from September to November, with the theme of
transformation of cities and regions. The exhibition will be under
the artistic direction of Richard Burdett, professor of
architecture and city planning at the London School of Economics
(LSE). Titled The Meta-City: Issues in City Planning, the
exhibition will focus on innovative proposals and directions needed
in response to changing populations and working habits.
Burdett, born in London in 1956, founded the Cities Program at LSE
and has more than 20 years of experience in staging
exhibitions and competitions. He advises Londons mayor, Ken
Livingstone, on architecture and urban issues, and is director of
Urban Age, a two-year sequence of conferences on urban development.
The Italian Pavilion will for the first time be in the Arsenale
exhibition complex.
Learning from Lower Manhattan Proceedings
Published
Almost two years have passed since the Learning from Lower
Manhattan conference, and the debate over reconstruction and
redevelopment of the World Trade Center site and its environs is as
spirited as ever. Click here to read the suggestions and
recommendations from the conference.
Fall Conference To Focus on Livable
Communities
Planning is under way for Livable Communities: Walking, Working,
and Water, the 2006 fall conference collaboration between the AIA
Regional and Urban Design Committee, AIA Housing Committee, AIA
Committee on the Environment, and AIA Seattle. Stay tuned to the AIA Regional
and Urban Design Web site for future details. Conference
topics include
- An assessment of the Pacific Northwest region
- Urbanism and livability
- Environmental issues
- A vision for the future
There will also be workshops at various sites in Seattle,
including Gas Works Park, Pike's Place Market, Seattle Public
Library, and Buchart Gardens.
Planning Under Way for Smart Growth
Conference
Smart growth attracts many people from multiple endeavors. Some are
regulators, some are doers, and some are users. The fifth annual New Partners
for Smart Growth conference, to be held January
2628, 2006, in Denver, is about coordinating the
needs and activities of this diverse group to help us all begin to
speak the same language.
The program will feature cutting-edge smart growth issues, the
latest research, implementation tools and strategies, studies of
successful cases, interactive learning experiences, new partners,
new projects, and new policies. Most important, this event offers
an opportunity to network and coordinate with your peers and
practitioners from many different disciplines with the same
goalbuilding safe, healthy, and livable communities for
all.
Submissions Open for 2006 Charter Awards
Submissions are now being accepted for the annual Charter Awards.
Sponsored by the Congress for the New Urbanism (CNU),
the Charter Awards set the gold standard for urban
design and development. Instead of recognizing projects in
isolation, the Charter Awards honor exceptional designs that
complement, enhance, or even repair their built and natural
environments. Honored projects serve as powerful examples for
future development.
Each year the CNU convenes a jury of the highest caliber to review
submissions and select the winning entries that best embody and
advance the principles of the Congress of the New Urbanism. In
2006, jury members include foremost urbanists such as designers
Leon Krier, Jacque Robertson, and Barbara Littenberg and
development analyst Todd Zimmerman.
The CNU welcomes professional submissions in three
categories:
The Region: Metropolis, City, and Town
The Neighborhood, District, and Corridor
The Block, Street, and Building
Student and faculty submissions are welcome in all three
categories. The submissions deadline is January 31,
2006.
Closing Words from the 2005 RUDC Chair
By Lance Jay Brown, FAIA
The importance of regional and urban design has never been more
apparent than it is today. Not since the end of the second world
war has our population experienced the radical relocation that was
produced by the combined hurricanes of Katrina and Rita. We are
still in shock from the combined effect of the September 11
terrorist attacks, the tsunami, and the hurricane season on
our global, national, regional, and local landscapes.
In New York, my home town, the immediate response to the September
11 tragedy was just short of miraculous. However, the obvious
failings in early warning and preparedness, from September 11
through Hurricane Rita, were totally unacceptable and the recovery
and rebuilding efforts, especially in the Gulf Coast region, leave
enormous room for improvement. Please, lest any of the many true
heroes in all of these disasters be offended, please understand
that we all have done our best in all ways to prepare for and
respond to the challenges illuminated by these disasters.
As professionals, however, we must now look at ways we
can do better.
This is a special moment for urban designers. The occurrences
mentioned above both illustrate and illuminate the importance of
advocacy as a task of urban design. Urban designers have always
played an important role in the profession as "advocates." At
no other time has this role been more important. Urban designers,
as the recognized synthesizers of all the elements that comprise
our ever urbanizing landscape, have both the opportunity and the
responsibility of informing decision-makers of the manifold
physical design issues that need to be addressed and, ultimately,
engaging the decision-making process directly to influence
it.
This is a special moment for all the design professions. The door
is open for all of us to think broadly about how we go about our
business. Disaster issues can transform previously limited
opportunities into broad new initiatives. Why shouldnt we be
able to reverse the flow of traffic in our cities? Why was this a
problem in Texas? Do we really need a calamity like Hurricane
Katrina to encourage us to carefully design and build a sustainable
Gulf Coast region? If so, we had one. Lets take this
opportunity to do it right. Lets take this opportunity every
place we can while the public and the politicians are still aware
of and understand the reasons for doing it right.
I have seen, with my own eyes, the physical destruction caused by
war, terrorism, and natural disasters. I have met the people
affected by disasters. The biggest lesson to be learned from
bearing witness to such events is that of putting people first.
Putting people first, in the best sense of the idea, would be
keeping them out of harms way from the
beginning. Regions and cities and hinterlands with balanced
economies, affordable living conditions, rational movement systems,
and in healthy, sustainable landscapes is putting people first.
Smoke alarms and fire stairs exist in buildings because we put
people first. Lets start putting people first at the global,
continental, regional, and urban scales. Good design is putting
people first at all scales.
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