1 / 23

Sustainable Cities

Sustainable Cities. Chapter 22 “ Most cities are places where they cut down the trees and name the streets after them.”. Evolution of Cities and Urbanization. Core Case Study: The Ecocity Concept in Curitiba, Brazil. Ecocity, green city : Curitiba, Brazil

janicew
Download Presentation

Sustainable Cities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sustainable Cities Chapter 22 “Most cities are places where they cut down the trees and name the streets after them.” Evolution of Cities and Urbanization

  2. Core Case Study: The Ecocity Concept in Curitiba, Brazil • Ecocity, green city: Curitiba, Brazil • Bus system: cars banned in certain areas • Housing and industrial parks • Recycling of materials • Helping the poor • New challenges

  3. Half of the World’s People Live in Urban Areas • Urbanization – percentage of population living in an urban area - increasing!!! • 2 ways to grow - 1. Natural increase 2. Immigration from rural areas • Pushed from rural areas to urban areas • Poverty, lack of land, declining ag. Jobs, famine, etc • Pulled to urban areas from rural areas • Search of housing, food, better life, etc.

  4. Four Major Trends in Urban Growth 1. Proportion of global population living in urban areas is increasing – about 52% 2. Number and size of urban areas is mushrooming • Megacities (10 million or more people) 3. Urban growth slower in developed countries and faster in developing countries 4. Poverty is becoming increasingly urbanized; mostly in developing countries

  5. Global Outlook: Satellite Image of Major Urban Areas Throughout the World

  6. Case Study: Urbanization in the United States • Four phases between 1800 and 2008: 1. Migration from rural areas to large central cities 2. Migration from large central cities to suburbs and smaller cities 3. Migration from North and East to South and West

  7. Major Urban Areas in the United States Revealed by Satellite Images at Night

  8. Urban Sprawl Gobbles Up the Countryside • Urban sprawl - the growth of low-density development edges of cities and towns • Contributing factors to urban sprawl in the U.S. • Ample land • Federal government loans • Low-cost gasoline; highways • Tax laws encouraged home ownership • State and local zoning laws • Poor urban planning

  9. Urban Sprawl in and around the U.S. City of Las Vegas, Nevada, from 1973 to 2000

  10. Urban Sprawl

  11. Natural Capital Degradation: Urban Sprawl

  12. What Are the Advantages and Disadvantages of Cities?

  13. How can we build more sustainable cities? • Smart growth: • Reduces dependence on cars • Controls and directs sprawl • Cuts wasteful resource • U.S. cities • Portland, OR • San Francisco, CA • Curitiba, Brazil • Europe: compact cities

  14. Trade-Offs: Bicycles, Advantages and Disadvantages

  15. Trade-Offs: Mass Transit Rail, Advantages and Disadvantages

  16. Trade-Offs: Buses, Advantages and Disadvantages

  17. Trade-Offs: Rapid Rail, Advantages and Disadvantages

  18. Conventional Land-Use Planning • Land-use planning • Encourages future population growth • Economic development • Revenues: property taxes • Environmental and social consequences • Zoning –various parcels of land are designated for certain uses • Mixed-use zoning

  19. Preserving and Using Open Space • Urban growth boundary • U.S. states: Washington, Oregon, and Tennessee • Municipal parks • U.S. cities: New York City and San Francisco • Greenbelts • Canadian cities: Vancouver and Toronto • Western European cities

  20. Central Park, New York City, USA

  21. How Can Cities Become More Sustainable and Livable? • An ecocity allows people to: choose walking, biking, or mass transit for most transportation needs; recycle or reuse most of their wastes; grow much of their food; and protect biodiversity by preserving surrounding land.

  22. The Ecocity Concept: Cities for People Not Cars • Ecocities or green cities • Build and redesign for people • Use renewable energy resources • Recycle and purify water • Use energy and matter resources efficiently • Prevent pollution and reduce waste • Recycle, reuse and compost municipal waste • Protect and support biodiversity • Urban gardens; farmers markets • Zoning and other tools for sustainability

  23. New Urbanism Is Growing • Conventional housing development • Cluster development • New urbanism, old villageism • Walkability • Mixed-use and diversity • Quality urban design • Environmental sustainability • Smart transportation

More Related