Iccs 2016 program 20160614

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International Conference on City Sciences ICCS 2016

LOOKING FOR SUSTAINABLE, INFRASTRUCTURE-BASED AND PARTICIPATIVE INNOVATION

SANTIAGO CHILE 16-17, JUNE 2016


Historical: International Conference on City Sciences - ICCS 2015

NEW ARCHITECTURES, INFRASTRUCTURES AND SERVICES FOR FUTURE CITIES SHANGHAI, CHINA, 4 & 5, JUNE 2015

International Conference on City Sciences - ICCS 2016

LOOKING FOR SUSTAINABLE, INFRASTRUCTURE-BASED AND PARTICIPATIVE INNOVATION SANTIAGO DE CHILE, 16 & 17, JUNE 2016

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International Conference on City Sciences - ICCS 2016

LOOKING FOR SUSTAINABLE, INFRASTRUCTURE-BASED AND PARTICIPATIVE INNOVATION SANTIAGO DE CHILE, 16 & 17, JUNE 2016

Urban agglomerations make sense from an economic perspective saving resources and allowing for economies of scale. They also make sense from a social perspective facilitating the sharing of these same tangible resources while helping to spread culture and ideas. But the increasing rate of urban scale and density, specialization and diversity, brings also challenges previously unheard of. Precisely, city sciences provide a framework to understand the foundations of the functioning of a city, to drive the modernization of existing urban infrastructures, and to create and develop new urban services, always with a view on a realistic assessment on the benefits for the welfare of the citizen. Along these lines, the last two decades have seen numerous attempts to use new technologies to improve transportation, energy, safety, public administration, among many others, investing heavily but without a deep understanding of the overall effects in the life of citizens. In fact there is an increasing criticism of a purely technology-driven approach to city challenges. The traditional concept of smart cities is the paradigm of a mistaken aim: marketing and promotion of technology-based sales without a thorough research of real pressing problems for cities and citizens, and lacking evidence on which are the most effective solutions. In rather general terms it can be said that so far the results of many initiatives have not lived up to expectations, and particularly the transformation of the city life for the better is not being as rapid nor as radical as anticipated. It is, thus, the right time to discuss among practitioners and academicians how to use new perspectives on infrastructure and technology within sustainable and participative innovations. Main themes will be: - Innovations for infrastructures and services of relevance in an urban context: broadband, wireless, sensors, data, energy, transport, housing, water, waste, and environment. - Urban landscape as a new infrastructure - Smart city developments and cases, in particular those people-centred - Social and economic innovations citizen-centric - Platforms for both top-down and bottom-up urban innovations - Collaborative innovations to address urban challenges

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Universidad del Desarrollo

Universidad del Desarrollo is known not only for its academic excellence, but also for its entrepreneurial hallmark. This feature has earned it a place of privilege in higher education in Chile and Latin America a mere 20 years since it was founded. Entrepreneurship is a characteristic that distinguishes its students and professors. It creates aninteractive and dynamic environment on campus where innovationand new ideas are constant. Ethics and public responsibility, the hallmark values of UDD, are encouraged not only in the classroom, but are also put into practice in each of the activities conducted at UDD. Universidad del Desarrollo has defined internationalization not only as acompetitive advantage, but also as a distinctive seal of its students. It has therefore designed a project that will train global students on campuses where internationalization is an everyday experience, be it at UDD or abroad. With that in mind, UDD has created a variety of programs and choices that keep students aware of the actual order, where globalization is a reality and command of a second language is indispensable. On that basis, we have developed a powerful program, managed by the International Relations Department and the Schools. They have assured that internationalization is a factor in their curricula. Our objective is for students to be highly motivated and conscious of the process of internationalization. They must value it as an important part of their formation and participate actively in the different and innovative alternatives we offer, such as thematic short term programs which are developed all over the world and courses taught in English languagethat, in addition to “traditional� programs like Exchanges and Dual Degree Programs, have been key to the success of this process.

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Universidad Politécnica de Madrid

As a guarantee of the training of future generations, the UPM combines the four main pillars of a modern higher education institution: teaching, knowledge generation, the transfer of this knowledge to the productive sectors and the dissemination of the scientific and technological knowledge as an exponent of the global service that a higher education institution must be rendered to our society. Located in the Greater Madrid area (Comunidad de Madrid), this university offers its students an exceptional scientific and intellectual environment. The UPM was founded in 1971 by bringing together all the Superior Technical Schools (Escuelas Técnicas Superiores) which until then were part of the Superior Technical Institute (Instituto Politécnico Superior). The University Schools (Escuelas Universitarias) were integrated in 1972. However, the majority of the UPM Centers have existed for more than two centuries. For this reason it is no exaggeration to state that a large part of the history of Spanish technology for more than one and a half centuries has been written by the Schools of Architecture and Engineering of the UPM. The majority of the greatest figures in Spanish teaching and research have passed through its lecture halls as students or teachers. Nowadays, the UPM still continues to lead the way in standards of excellence in teaching, research and public service.

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Calendar:

FIRST PART : Tuesday 14 :

LEARN ABOUT CHILE Trip to Valparaiso

City Tour : Valparaíso Lunch

Talk : Valparaíso Urban Challenges Visit : Ex-Carcel Cultural Center Trip to Santiago Wednesday 15 :

Visit : Telefonica Chile

City Tour : Santiago Part 1 Lunch

City Tour : Santiago Part 2

Reception at Spanish Embassy

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SECOND PART : Thursday 16 :

SHARE KNOWLEDGE Registration and Welcome

Keynote Speech : PLENARY 1 Coffee Break Keynote Speech : PLENARY 2 Break for lunch

SESSION 1 - SMART CITIES : Pannel 1 - Environment Coffee Break Pannel 2 - Case Studies Friday 17 :

Registration and Welcome

SESSION 2 - INFRASTRUCTURE : Pannel 3 - ICT´S Coffee Break Pannel 4 - Shared economy Break for lunch

SESSION 3 - CITYZENSHIP : Pannel 5 - New Architecture and Urban planning Coffee Break Pannel 6 - Case Studies

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FIRST PART : Tuesday 14 : 10:00

10:00 - 11:30

LEARN ABOUT CHILE

Trip to Valparaiso Departure

Trip to Valparaiso Valparaíso is a major city, seaport, and educational center in the county or commune of Valparaíso, Chile. Greater Valparaíso is the second largest metropolitan area in the country, one of the South Pacific’s most important seaports, capital of Chile’s third most populated administrative region and headquarter for the Chilean National Congress since 1990. Valparaíso played an important geopolitical role in the second half of the 19th century, when the city served as a major stopover for ships traveling between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans by crossing the Straits of Magellan. Valparaíso mushroomed during its golden age, as a magnet for European immigrants, when the city was known by international sailors as “Little San Francisco” and “The Jewel of the Pacific”. In 2003, the historic quarter of Valparaíso was declared a United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) World Heritage Site.

The second half of the twentieth century was not kind to Valparaíso, as many wealthy families abandoned the city. The opening of the Panama Canal and reduction in ship traffic dealt a staggering blow to Valparaíso’s port-based economy. However, over the past 15 years, the city has staged an impressive renaissance, attracting many artists and cultural entrepreneurs who have set up shop in the city’s hillside historic districts. Today, many thousands of tourists visit Valparaíso from around the world to marvel at the city’s unique labyrinth of cobbled alleys and colorful buildings. The port of Valparaíso continues to be a major distribution center for container traffic, copper, and fruit exports. Valparaíso also receives growing attention from cruise ships that visit during the South American summer. Most significantly, Valparaíso has transformed itself into a major educational center with four large traditional universities and several large vocational colleges. The city exemplifies Chilean culture, with festivals every year, and a number of street artists and musicians.


11:30 - 13:30

City Tour : Valparaíso

15:00 - 16:30

Talk : Valparaíso Urban Challenges

13:30 - 15:00

16:30 - 17:30

Lunch : Dinamarca 399

Visit : Ex-Carcel Cultural Center

Parque Cultural de Valparaíso – PCdV, is an architectural complex with three buildings of 10.000 m2, built in a area of 2,5 hectares where the Public Prison of the city was formely situated. This Place is hurl from a harmonic joint to install cultural resources around a park open to the community. The old cell block was kept and fitted out to be used for artistic displays. Nowadays, the PCdV is a cultural, artistic and a social center that develops actions that include these three areas which to work as a local development agent. Today, it is a place assigned to exhibit the local artistic practices, with training rooms for theater, dance, music and circus. The park has a building of modern architecture style that contains a big theater with 307 armchairs and a modern acoustic system. Also, it has a vast visual arts room of 460 m2 and a lab room for multiple activities.

17:30 - 19:00

The long-term purpose of PCdV is to consolidate a cultural and architectural landmark of international standard in order to boost the artistic, social and communitarian activities of the city and the region of Valparaíso, thus aiming to become not only nationally, but internationally known.

Trip to Santiago

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Wednesday 15 : 9:30

10:00 - 11:30 11:30 - 13:30

Santiago Tour Departure

Visit : Telefonica Building & Introductory lecture by Pablo Allard, Dean UDD. City Tour part 1 :

- Father Renato Poblete River Park, Carrascal /

Father Renato Poblete River Park is a public park located in the commune of Quinta Normal in Santiago, Chile. The park is named after the Jesuit priest Father Renato Poblete (1924 - 2010), known for his efforts in the reconciliation process after the end of the Chilean dictatorship and the transition to democracy. It is part of the “Santiago integrated park system” that also included Parque Forestal and Parque de Los Reyes. The park was inaugurated on January 21, 2015 and is the first of its kind in the country. As part of the “Santiago integrated park system”, located west of Parque de Los Reyes on the south bank of the Mapocho River, and it will be connected with the future “Parque Centenario de Quinta Normal” by the “Cicloparque Mapocho 42K” , a 42 kilometre cycle path and park that, when finished, will run along the Mapocho River.

- Renca /

commune founded on 1894.

- Américo Vespucio - Maipú - Route 78, la Aguada Park, Franklin /

Maipú is a commune founded on 1821 and it is the place of the Battle of Maipú (April 5, 1818), where Chile’s independence was consolidated. Inhabitants are mostly part of a young middle class. Maipú is the largest commune in Chile. / Autopista del Sol or Route CH 78 is a toll highway that runs from Santiago, Santiago Metropolitan Region to San Antonio, Valparaíso Region, in central Chile. For its first kilometers, the highway runs through the urban area of Santiago.

- Centro de Innovación UC /

The Anacleto Angelini UC Innovation Center is a space conceived to promote a pro innovation and entrepreneurship ecology which is open to all faculties of Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. Conceived as a multidisciplinary and generalist center, it embraces both innovation projects and entrepreneurship initiatives of high economic, social and cultural impact. The Center aspires to make a very significant contribution to the society, helping to bring together a fruitful interaction among higher education, private sector and public sector.


- Historic centre : Walking tour Paseo Ahumada /

13:30 - 15:00

15:00 - 17:30

Paseo Ahumada is fourblock-long street in downtown Santiago. It extends in a north–south direction from Plaza de Armas to the Avenida Libertador General Bernardo O’Higgins and is lined by buildings housing retail establishments at their lower levels. In early 1977, the street began to be transformed into a pedestrian zone, as a measure to reduce the migration of retailers to the then emerging commercial district of Providencia. The renovation was completed in January 1978. Pop jet fountains were placed at both ends of the street. The project was complemented by the construction of a direct entrance to the Universidad de Chile station, which included the first public escalators in Chile.[1]At present, the street is used by 2.5 million pedestrians each day.

Lunch : Central market / It was opened in 1872 and Fermín Vivaceta was in charge of its construction. The market replaced the Plaza del Abasto, which was destroyed by a fire in 1864. The market is housed in a building in which its main feature is a cast-iron roof and supporting structure, which was fabricated by the Scottish firm R Laidlaw & Sons, Glasgow. Edward Woods and Charles Henry Driver took part in the design of the structure.The metal structure stands on a square base and features a vaulted ceiling. Its intricate roof design consists of a central pyramidal roof crowned by a domed tower, which is surrounded by 8 smaller roofs with a two-tier design. The structure is enclosed by a masonry building.

City Tour part 2 :

- Providencia/Santiago: Esplanade of the markets, Parque Forestal. - Providencia – Sanhattan - Highway Costanera Norte.

Providencia is a commune of Chile located in Santiago Province, Santiago Metropolitan Region. Part of Greater Santiago, it is bordered by the communes of Santiago to the west, Recoleta to the northwest, Las Condes and Vitacura to the northeast, La Reina to the east, and Ñuñoa to the south. Providencia is home to a large upper middle and high-class population and it holds the region’s highest percentage of population over 60 (21.51%). It contains many high-rise apartment buildings as well as a significant portion of Santiago’s commerce. It is notable for its large, old and elegant houses inhabited in the past by the Santiago elite and now mostly used as offices.

- Vitacura: Parque Bicentenario (Teo Fernandez, Smiljan Radic) / Vi-

tacura is one of the most expensive and fashionable areas of Santiago. Inhabitants are primarily high income families. There is an abundance of elite private schools in Vitacura. Vitacura is see of ECLAC headquarters, home to the European Southern Observatory (ESO) headquarters in Chile, and home to Santiago’s most exclusive shopping street, Avenida Alonso de Córdova. The bicentennial Park is the result of the tender convened in 1998 by the municipality of Vitacura, to establish a strategic plan that ordered the landscape and urban development on the edge of the Mapocho River.

- Lo Barnechea /

Most of the commune is mountainous and its inhabited areas are part of the northeasternmost section of Greater Santiago. It is home to some of Chile’s fanciest neighborhoods (including La Dehesa, often associated with the nouveau riche), but also to very poor areas, such as Cerro Dieciocho.

19:00

Reception at Spanish Embassy

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SECOND PART : Thursday 16 : 8:30 - 9:00 9:00 - 9:10

9:10 - 9:15 9:15 - 9:20 9:20 - 10:50 9:50 - 10:20 10:20 - 10:40 11:00 - 11:30 11:30 11:45 12:15 12:45 13:15 -

11:45 12:15 12:45 13:15 13:30

13:30 - 15:00

15:00 - 15:05 15:05 - 15:25 15:25 - 15:45 15:45 - 16:05 16:05 - 16:25 16:25 - 16:35 16:35 - 16:55 16:55 - 17:00 17:00 - 17:20 17:20 - 17:40 17:40 - 18:00 18:00 - 18:20 18:20 - 18:30

SHARE KNOWLEDGE

Conference

Registration and Welcome

Keynote Speech : PLENARY 1 - Postgraduate Building - Opening: Undersecretary of Transport (Ministry of Transport and Telecommunications) / Cristian Bowen - Vice-Rector for Postgraduate and Research of UDD / Sergio Hernández - CEO Telefónica / Claudio Muñoz - J. M. Ezquiaga - Luis Bettencourt - Closing Remarks - Director Metropolitan Transportation Santiago / Guillermo Muñoz Coffee Break

Keynote Speech : PLENARY 2 - Auditorium 114 - Opening: Executive Director of Digital Country Foundation / Pelayo Covarrubias - Belinda Tato - Yury Grigorian - Tong Ming - Closing Remarks - Pablo Allard - FAA UDD Dean Break for lunch

SESSION 1 - SMART CITIES - Auditorium 114

Pannel 1 - Environment - Introduction - Paper 22 / Green Roofs and Surfaces: closing the gaps between cities and ecosystems, Juan Pablo Moreno and Alis Daniela Torres. - Paper 23 / Ecotonal Strip: On the path to new green infrastructures, Cristina Felsenhardt and Margarita Jans. - Paper 28 / Community garden as a tool of social development and healthy urban planning: experience report in 2015, Ana Maria Girotti Sperandio, Lauro Francisco Filho, Sidney Bernardini, Adriana Rosa, Danielle Montrezor, Fernanda Carvalho and Carolina Carmo. - Paper 37 / Recent developments for the assessment of air pollution exposure of urban population under the TECNAIRE-CM research project, Rafael Borge, Christina Quaassdorff, Julio Lumbreras, Miguel Picornell, Pedro García-Albertos and David de La Paz. - Questions Coffee Break

Pannel 2 - Case Studies - Introduction - A Day of your Days, Estimating Individual Daily Journeys Using Mobile Data to Understand Urban Flow, Eduardo Graells-Garrido (Telefónica I+D Chile). - Paper 6 / New civic architecture for a circular society, Saverio Massaro. - CICS / Social Complexity Research Centre UDD CICS, Carlos Rodriguez and Rodrigo Troncoso - Paper 5 / Implementation of the NAMA Support Project of New Housing of Mexico, Igor Kroneberg. 11 - Questions


Friday 17 : 8:30 - 9:00

9:00 - 9:05 9:05 - 9:25 9:25 - 9:45

9:45 - 10:05

10:05 - 10:25 10:25 - 10:45 10:45 - 11:15 11:15 - 11:20 11:20 - 11:40 11:40 - 12:00 12:00 - 12:20 12:20 - 12:40 12:40 - 13:00 13:00 - 14:30

14:30 - 14:35 14:35 - 14:55 14:55 - 15:15 15:15 - 15:35 15:35 - 15:55 15:55 - 16:15 16:15 - 16:20 16:20 - 16:40 16:40 - 17:00 17:00 - 17:20 17:20 - 17:40 17:40 - 18:00

Conference

Registration and Welcome

SESSION 2 - INFRASTRUCTURE - Auditorium 114

Pannel 3 - ICT´S - Introduction - Paper 18 / 5G and the city: how the fifth generation network will impact our cities, Lorenzo Massimiano, Thibaud Dubrule, Ana Gavilanes Vallecillo and Iria Lopez Carreiro. - Infrastructure for Cities based on IoT and Real Time Analytics, Pablo Cesar García Briosso (Telefónica I+D Chile) - Paper 26 / Sustainable urban freights: introduction of ICT to manage traffics flows in cities, Juan Pablo Moreno. - Paper 24 / Open data portals assessment of Spanish cities, Javier Garcia Lopez, Raffaele Sisto and Javier Dorao. - Questions Coffee Break

Pannel 4 - Shared economy - Introduction - Paper 4 / A Social Media Data-Based Platform for Urban Data Analysis, Marcos Manuel Muraro. - Paper 12 / Knowledge Planning in Cyberenvironments: An Analysis of the Impacts of Open Data in Chicago, Claudia Vicentelo. - Design of Dinamic Sensing Systems for Air Quality, Camilo Rodriguez. - Paper 38 / Airbnb vs. Hotels: A spatial analysis perspective, Gustavo Romanillos Arroyo, Javier Gutiérrez, Juan Carlos García-Palomares and María Henar Salas-Olmedo. - Questions Break for lunch

SESSION 3 - CITYZENSHIP - Auditorium 114

Pannel 1 - New Architecture and Urban planning - Introduction - Paper 21 / City and Cinema. The conceptualization of the smart city in recent film history, Alejandro de Miguel Solano. - Paper 27 / Methodology for material selection for public spaces after thermal parameters, Alberto Gomez Tello and Alejandro de Miguel Solano. - Paper 32 / Anti-stuck Thinking Tools: mending the process towards a seamless discipline, Tono Fernández. - Questions Coffee Break

Pannel 2 - Case Studies - Introduction - Land Use estimations with CDRs + OpenStreetMap, Eduardo Graells-Garrido (Telefónica I+D Chile). - Paper 17 / New technological district in Ancón, Lima-Perú, José García Calderón. - Paper 20 / Reorganization of the modus working in the society, Maria Sastre, Ana Gavilanes, Iria Lopez and Jose Antonio López. - Questions Closing remarks

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Keynote Speech :

Belinda Tato and Jose Luis Vallejo are founding members ofecosistema urbano, a Ma-

drid based group of architects and urban designers operating within the fields of urbanism, architecture, engineering and sociology. Vallejo and Tato define their approach as urban social design, by which they understand the design of environments, spaces and dynamics in order to improve the self-organization of citizens, social interaction within communities and their relationship with the environment. Ecosistema urbano has used this philosophy to design and implement projects in Norway, Denmark, Spain, Italy, France and China. Ecosistema urbano’s principal members were educated in several different European universities and come from many diverse urban environments (Madrid, London, Brussels, Rome, Paris). They have taught as visiting professors and have given workshops and lectures at the most prestigious institutions worldwide (Harvard, Yale, UCLA, Cornell, Iberoamericana, RIBA, Copenhagen, Munich, Paris, Milan, Shanghai, to list a few). They did this while implementing urban action and intervention in cities in Europe, the Americas and Asia. Since 2000, their work has been nationally and internationally awarded on more than 30 occasions. In 2005 ecosistema urbanoreceived the European Acknowledgement Award from the Holcim Foundation for Sustainable Construction. In 2006, they were awarded the Architectural Association and the Environments, Ecology and Sustainability Research Cluster award. In 2007 they were nominated for the European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture / Mies van der Rohe Award for emerging European architects. They were also selected out of more than 400 teams from around the world to receive an AR Award for Emerging Architecture in London, 2007. In 2008 ecosistema urbano won the Arquia/Próxima prize, awarded by the Caja de Arquitectos Foundation to the best project drawn up by young architects from 2006-2007. In 2009, they were nominated from more than 500 teams to be a worldwide finalist and recipient of the Holcim Award for Sustainable Construction, Silver Award.

Tong Ming

receivedhisBachelor and Master degree of architecturefromthearchitecturaldepartment of SoutheastUniversity, Nanjing respectively in 1990 and 1993, and a Doctoratedegree of UrbanPlanningfromCollege of Architecture and UrbanPlanning, TongjiUniversity in 1999. Afterthen, he begantoteach in TongjiUniversity and currentlyisanassociateprofessor in thedepartment of urbanplanning.

Dueto a diverseeducationbackground, Tong Ming focusesonboththeoreticalresearch and practicalwork in architecture and urbanplanning, and has publishedover 30 academicpapers and books. He teachesdesignstudio and giveslectures in theuniversity, participatesactively in variouscommunicationprograms of internationalteaching and researchwork. Theworks of Tong Ming mainlyinclude:

TeachingBuilding of WenzhengCollege, SuzhouUniversity(1998); Dongs’ HouseTeahouse (2004); International Club of Hi-TechDistrict, Nanjing(2004); Park Block Renovation,Taizhou(2007);TM Studio workspace(2004); Su QuanyuanTeahouse(2006); Ten CourtyardHouses(2006). Theparticipatedexhibitionsinclude: Biennale of ShenZhen(2006); Contemporary China, Rotterdam(2006); Biennale of ShanghaiQingpuextension(2007); Biennale of Hong Kong(2007); Architopia 2, Brussels(2008).

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Luís Bettencourt is a Professor of Complex Systems at the Santa Fe Institute. He was trained as a theoretical physicist and obtained his PhD from Imperial College (University of London, UK) in 1996, for research in statistical and high-energy physics models of the early Universe. He has held postdoctoral positions at the University of Heidelberg (Germany), Los Alamos National Laboratory (Director’s Fellow and Slansky Fellow) and at MIT (Center for Theoretical Physics).

He has worked extensively on cities and urbanization. His research emphasizes the creation of new interdisciplinary synthesis to describe cities in quantitative and predictive ways, informed by the growing availability of empirical data worldwide. His research interests also include the modeling of innovation and sustainability in developing human societies, the dynamics of infectious diseases and aspects of general information processing in complex systems. He is particularly interested in the interplay between information, structure and scale in setting the properties of diverse complex systems.

Yury Grigoryan

Founder of Meganom architectural bureau, Director of Education at the Strelka Institute for media, Architecture and Design, teacher at Moscow Architectural Institute (Markhi). For the past 14 years the bureau has successfully implemented more than twenty projects. During this time, the range and scale of the solutions have grown – from private houses to urban planning concepts. But the basic method of operation has always been a careful analysis of the urban and natural landscape and integration of design projects in it. “Project Meganom” is an active participant of the Moscow Biennale of Architecture and the Biennale of Architecture in Venice. It is engaged in many art and exhibition projects. Grigoryan also runs international research “Archeology of periphery”. Born on August 13, 1965 in Moscow. Graduated from Moscow Architectural Institute. Member of the Moscow Union of Architects since 1994, Professor of Moscow Architectural Institute since 2006. Professor (since 2010) and Educational Program Director (since 2011) of Strelka Institute for Media, Architecture and Design. Together with partners Ilya Kuleshov, Alexandra Pavlova and Pavel Ivanchikov, Yury Grigoryan founded “Project Meganom” Architectural Bureau in 1999.

Jose María Exquiaga is professor of Urbanism at Universidad Politécnica de Madrid

from 1995. Visiting professor in the Universities of Turin, Rome (La Sapienza), Instituto Universitario di Architettura di Venezia, TU Delft, Dortmund, Oxford Brooks, Brasilia, Nacional de Colombia (Bogotá and Medellin), Los Andes y Pontificia Universidad Javeriana (Bogotá), Buenos Aires, Montevideo and Shanghai. He has been linked to the city and the urban project from the very beginning of his professional career, taking on diverse urban responsabilities in Local and Regional Administrations in Madrid: Head of the Planning Department of the Gerencia Municipal de Urbanismo of Madrid (1985-88), General Director of Urbanism of the Madrid Region (1988-91), General Director of Urban Planning and Concertation of the Madrid Region (1991-95). At present, as an independent professional, he manages the office of Ezquiaga Arquitectura Sociedad y Territorio.

Director of the Bases of the Regional Plan of the Territorial Strategy of Madrid (1995) and Director of `Madrid Centro´ Strategic Project 2008-10. Furthermore, he is author and director of the Regional Plans of Menorca, Lanzarote, Gernika, Durango, East Almeria, Urban Agglomeration of Huelva, Metropolitan Area of Murcia, León, Ávila, International Tajo, Alqueva Reservoir, Gata Mountain Range and Pasiego Territory; the Master Plans of: Córdoba, Burgos, Guadalajara, Logroño, Segovia, Talavera de la Reina, Puertollano, Parla and the Urban Projects of: Castellana Prolongation, Regeneration of the military installations of Campamento in Madrid, North Alcorcon (Madrid), Madrid´s Green Railway Corridor, Manzanares Lineal Park and of the public initiative residential areas of Valdelbernardo (Madrid), Fuentelucha (Alcobendas, Madrid) and El Bojar (Cantabria).

Of architectural note is the project for one hundred and sixty social dwellings in Madrid with the architect Rogelio Salmona for the Municipal Land and Housing Office (2007).

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Thursday 16 Friday 17

Poster Session

- Poster 5 / Implementation of the NAMA Support Project of New Housing of Mexico, Igor Kroneberg. - Poster 7 / Free system: configuration and appropriation, Juan Cabrera.

- Poster 9 / Considerations on how innovations in the use of copper can make a social and economic impact and offer a healthier public infrastructure, Paula Aillón and Consuelo Acha.

- Poster 25 / Infrastructure in the city as health promotion instrument : Report of villages’ experience Taubate, Maria Lúcia Silva, Ana Maria Sperandio and Fernanda Carvalho. - Poster 35 / Holistic Relational Lab prototype [HRLab mark1], Ignacio Ontiveros and Sergio Del Castillo Tello.

COMMITTEES

José María de Lapuerta Pablo Allard

Claudio Feijoo

Xiangning Li

José Manuel Paez

Francisco Jariego

ORGANIZING COMMITTEE Technical University of Madrid Universidad del Desarrollo

Technical University of Madrid / Tongji University Tongji University

Technical University of Madrid / Harvard University Telefónica Spain

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COMMITTEES Claudio Feijóo

Xiangning Li

Javier García Germán Óscar García

Julio Lumbreras

Ajit Jaokar

Sergio Ramos Xuefeng Yin

José Manuel Páez

José María De Lapuerta

Ivo Cré

Hongwei Tan

Jan Markendahl

José Luis Gómez Barroso

Youngsun Kwon

Knud Erik Skouby

Michael Batty Javier Uceda

Narciso García

Pablo García Briosso

Carlos Rodríguez Sickert

Alex Godoy Faúndez Iris Galloso Linxue Li

Feng Yuan Zhenyu Li

Rafael Borge García

Gianluca Misuraca Javier Dorao

SCIENTIFIC COMMITTEE Technical University of Madrid / Tongji University Tongji University - China

Technical University of Madrid - Spain Technical University of Madrid - Spain Technical University of Madrid - Spain Oxford Institute

Technical University of Madrid - Spain Tongji University - China

Technical University of Madrid / Harvard University Technical University of Madrid - Spain Polis - Belgium

Tongji University - China KTH - Sweden

National Distance Learning University - Spain KAIST - Korea Rep.

Aalborg University - Denmark

University College London - UK

Technical University of Madrid - Spain Technical University of Madrid - Spain Telefónica Chile

Centro de Investigación en Complejidad Social - Chile Universidad del Desarrollo

Technical University of Madrid - Spain Tognji University - China

Tongji University - China Tongji University - China

Technical University of Madrid - Spain European Comission

Technical University of Madrid - Spain

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