The Sustainable City: Solving for the Whole

Page 1

Story Bellows: AAF

Elizabeth Blazevich

Uwe Brandes

Brandy H. M. Brooks Bruner Foundation

Bill Browning Terrapin Bright Green

Jeff Caudill: Green Building Services

Clive Crook:TheAtlantic The Financial Times

Martin J. Chávez

Mayors’ Institute

AAF

Urban Land Institute

ICLEI USA

The Sustainable City: Solving for the Whole By John Syvertsen, FAIA, LEED AP

In December 2010, the American Architectural Foundation (AAF), in partnership with UTC, organized a forum of 25 internationally recognized sustainability thought leaders in Washington, D.C., as part of its Sustainable Cities Design Academy (SCDA). The purpose of the forum was to wrestle with a series of questions vital to the evolution of America’s cities: · What is a “sustainable” city, and what trends yield successful solutions? · What challenges stand in the way of urban infill projects? · What incentives will catalyze and support the creation and maintenance of innovative public/private development partnerships? Let’s put these questions into context. For the first time ever, over half of the world’s population lives in cities; by 2050, world population is projected to rise from 6.9 to 9 billion. The additional demand for energy and food will be daunting, and if we really do care about future generations, inaction is not an option. Building cities will either be a major contributor to the problem or the vehicle to help us solve it.

On the first day of the SCDA forum, Ewe Brandes gave us an excellent description of where we are now, providing statistical information and proposing goals to be achieved by 2050. The conclusion—we must move fast. As Ewe noted, 2050 is only two development cycles away. What stands in our way? For one, there was general agreement that cities, for the most part, are hindered by the incapacity of government to take on the complexity of their evolution. This simple realization was one of the most striking of the day, and we came back to it a number of times. It was noted that we are missing levels of “governance” (which I might define as effective government) at the scale of the metro area, or region, and at the level of “place,” or town centers. It has been a long time since I have heard the name of Jane Jacobs mentioned so many times. In my city, Chicago’s Metropolis 2020 is an example of a strong effort to address our regional challenges. I believe that good progress is being made in the areas of transportation, education, and social equity, though movement is slow due to


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.