1 / 25

Urban and Cultural DNA Mapping for the Creative City

Urban and Cultural DNA Mapping for the Creative City. Forum for Creative Europe Prague 26-27 March 2009. Lia Ghilardi Noema Research and Planning www.noema.org.uk. Creative Cities of the Past. The Painters of Modern Life. Music in the Tuileries Gardens, E. Manet - 1862.

Download Presentation

Urban and Cultural DNA Mapping for the Creative City

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. Urban and Cultural DNA Mapping for the Creative City Forum for Creative Europe Prague 26-27 March 2009 Lia Ghilardi Noema Research and Planning www.noema.org.uk

  2. Creative Cities of the Past

  3. The Painters of Modern Life Music in the Tuileries Gardens, E. Manet - 1862

  4. Paris New Opéra - 1863

  5. Vienna - 1875

  6. Vienna – New Artistic Movements Frederica Maria Beer, G. Klimt - 1916

  7. Vienna • Presence of writers, thinkers, painters, composers, creative individuals. PLUS patrons, and cultural intermediaries. • Outsiders/Jewish • Rejection of the aristocratic Austrian culture. • Value vacuum / cultural paralysis. • Young Vienna / Social criticism and new forms of artistic expression (e.g. 1897 the Secession and Gustav Klimt)

  8. Not Selfconsciously Creative… These cities had something in common: • They were cosmopolitan places. • Attracted migrants and as such had a strong input of new ideas. • They were not afraid of taking risks. • Had a sound financial basis while allowing room for experimentation without tight regulation. • Good possibilities for informal and spontaneous communication. • An environment catering for diversity and variety within their cultural milieux.

  9. General Instability…Continuous Creativity • Rapid economic growth. • New wealth in new hands. • New social relationships. • Stage of transition from an ordered, hierarchical world to an individualistic one. • Within the cultural milieux: • Established artistic order displaced by change in policies. • Art becomes a commodity, an industry. • Young artists rebel and form movements/schools…

  10. Today • Today most of us work with creative thinking. • More and more cities aspire to become attractive creative centres. • Policies oriented towards fostering creative milieux. • Concentration on top down formulas: (e.g. the Triple Helix model of collaboration between state, industry and academia, or the 3 Ts of R. Florida) • However…flux and constant change are the norm.

  11. The Creative City Formula??

  12. Yes we can…but not in the old way Currently too much focus on urban improvements and regeneration as a tool for repositioning cities. Concentration on BIG iconic statements. Concentration of consumption. Universities also concentrating on expanding ‘customer-base’ and less on research. Branding bland and ‘unreal’ (or positively dada)

  13. The magic of Barcelona!

  14. Need for New Approaches to City Making To deliver on the creative city we need to take a holistic view of place making. Focus on the local distinctive cultural (broadly defined) resources. Concentration on building urban, human, social and cultural capital in an integrated way. Collaboration between different levels of government, disciplines, professions and shared leadership on the ground.

  15. Creativity: “It’s all in the process” • A cultural understanding of local communities’ different components and diverse resources. • Opportunities for local people and professionals to collaborate and jointly create a vision of what's best for a city. • A process leading to policy initiatives (not top down but criss-cross) • “A timeless way of building places and communities”.

  16. Practical Tools • Urban and Cultural DNA Mapping • Research: • Place (landscape, history, architecture, urban texture) • Institutions (cultural, educational, health) • People ( memory, social networks, informal networks, perceptions of place, affiliations, life styles) • Economy (traditional skills, contemporary creative industries, current dynamics, issues, potential, etc.)

  17. Practical Tools EXAMPLES

  18. Mantua: Just a boring heritage town?

  19. The reality after mapping

  20. The romance of nature?

  21. The Storm House

  22. Yeats Country?

  23. Yeats Country!

  24. Another example: Copenhagen

  25. Denmark - Copenhagen The ‘Metropolzonen’ Project About Copenhagen as a ‘liveable place’ We are proposing: • Slow, step by step, experiments in integrated urban living • Densification of the area (mix of uses, functions, work/live) • Creative/cultural infrastructure better integrated into the urban fabric and more focus on the contemporary • Incentives to work and live in the MTPZ

More Related