Tuesday 26 March 2013

Neighbourhood life

We had Jane Jacobs who wrote “Cities have the capability of providing something for everybody, only because, and only when, they are created by everybody.” The Death and Life of Great American Cities- and we now have...

Decoding how cities work: street level observations

"The promise of gathering the whole spectrum of information traces of city life and managing this amount of data dominates the new utopian views. This pursuit for a complete understanding of what happens in cities takes the form of a seductive approach to urban design and urban governance, and tries to take advantage of ubiquitous computing and situated technologies. Thus, the intersection of code and space emerges as a deterministic paradigm".

http://www.ciudadesaescalahumana.org/2013/02/decoding-how-cities-work-street-level.html?goback=.gde_2212683_member_217703217

Avoiding a Middle Class Revolution


Feed in tariff schemes for small scale renewable generation have been heavily criticized for being reverse Robin Hood – taking from the poor and giving to the rich (see George Monbiot’s polemic in the Guardian for a good example) but is this characterization fair?

Wednesday 13 March 2013

Couple Buys a Sewerage Plant with Lottery Win ?!


In November Mark and Cindy Hill of Dearborn Missouri won $587 million in the lottery. Did they buy a private island or a Ferrari each? No they bought their community a new sewerage treatment plant.

Friday 8 March 2013

A treasure trove of presentations


Thriving Neighbourhoods is a public space where – like all inspiring, vibrant places – there is a mixture of many different types of people and organisations: policy-makers, researchers, consultants, developers, social enterprises, community activists, content developers, communicators, sustainability companies, non-profit organisations, and local, regional, national, and international.

Each year, this diverse group gathers at the Thriving Neighbourhoods conference in Melbourne. In 2012, the presentations covered:

Monday 4 March 2013

More mapping - the next front in neighbourhood approaches?


Toronto's 140 neighbourhoods have a massive and growing data set being developed for use by anyone free of charge - and provides a visual and accessible way to think about neighbourhoods:
Wellbeing Toronto is a new web-based measurement and visualization tool that helps evaluate community wellbeing across the city's 140 neighbourhoods. Using geographic information software, Wellbeing Toronto allows you to select, combine and weight the significance of a number of indicators that monitor neighbourhood wellness. The results appear instantly on easy to read maps, tables and graphs. This free tool supports decision making and seeks to engage citizens and businesses in understanding the challenges and opportunities of creating and maintaining healthy neighbourhoods. You can also find detailed demographic information about each neighbourhood, prepared by the City's Social Policy Analysis & Research Unit
Now this is what we need in Australia.... 

The Axis of Community Energy


Community as a tag has been attached to a number of very differently organized energy projects with varying levels of community involvement. Some projects have the community largely as a passive beneficiary, while in other projects - such as those run as cooperatives - the community acts as initiator, investor and project manager, while in other projects again the ‘community’ constituent can be rather dubious altogether. So what counts as a ‘community’ energy project?

Friday 1 March 2013

Timing a walk as incentive


The excellent blog Polis reports on how the city of Pontevedra in northwest Spain has become a leader in walker-friendly urban policy over the past 15 years. One particular innovation of interest to neighbourhoods is their mapping of walking times between places:
To further improve walkability, Pontevedra's city council produced a map that visualizes the distances and travel times between key places on foot at an average speed of five kilometers per hour. Known as Metrominuto, the map has color-coded lines that resemble those of a subway guide. The pink line from Peregrina Square shows that it takes about 14 minutes to walk from there to the train and bus stations. Free parking areas are marked to encourage visitors to leave their cars outside the city center. According to the map, someone who parks in the free lot near the police station can get to Peregrina Square in less than eight minutes via Santiago Bridge. Metrominuto reminds residents and visitors that many automobile trips can be made in a more convenient, environmentally friendly and healthy way by walking.

Tuesday 26 February 2013

Dreaming of fat maps


Eau Claire County in Wisconsin USA is a typical case of the increasing use of mapping to identify trends in neighbourhoods which can lead to practical action (but could they really have nearly two-thirds of their population overweight or obese? Really?):
To see if there’s a possible connection between obesity and the physical environment, the city is considering making a map showing areas where obesity is high...(and) if these neighborhoods have inadequate recreational amenities, a lack of nutritious food options or other physical barriers to fitness.
A roadblock to creating this map is that local-level data could be hard to come by...
The draft plan states the measure of this would be body-mass-index -- a ratio comparing height to weight. A BMI of 25 to 29.9 is considered overweight, while 30 and above are classified as obese.
A quarter of Eau Claire County residents are obese, according to surveys done between 2000 and 2010 by the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Another 37 percent of county residents are overweight and 37 percent of county residents have a BMI below 25...

Wait, does Tarzan even have a neighbourhood?


The LA Times in the USA has a fantastic attempt at describing neighbourhoods, which uses interesting maps technology and their readers' direct involvement: to create an "objective" approach that takes into account local views. Some of the comments, though, were a little strange...
Powered by Leaflet — Map data: Copyright Google, 2011
This is how I always envisioned my Tarzana plantation.
— Edgar Rice Burroughs
about Tarzana
posted February 19, 2009 at 5:36 p.m.

Monday 25 February 2013

What is Community?


Community has become increasingly central as a focus for sustainability action in Australia with numerous initiatives and policies targeting the community as both the beneficiary and the agent of change; for example there is the Sustainable Communities Initiative, the National framework of Green Star Communities and the Community Energy Efficiency Programme to name but a few, In short community is currently somewhat of a catch phrase within the field of urban sustainability policy - and intuitively it feels good. 

Community focused action seems to represent a positive step-change away from traditional top-down legislation towards policy that aims to empower people and give them ownership over their future - something rare in a world dominated by big business interests and in which the citizen is viewed largely as a passive consumer. But what is this unit we are aiming to empower? If we pause for a minute to consider what a community actually is, it all starts to get a little foggy.