Exploring our neighbourhoods and the ways that we can enable them to become thriving
Tuesday, 30 April 2013
How are communities raising serious money for green energy projects?
This article by Chris Goodall from The Guardian UK highlights the importance of community champions in raising funds for community energy projects. Read it here: http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2013/apr/29/community-raising-money-green-energy
Tuesday, 23 April 2013
My Neighbourhood
Create an animation of your own neighbourhood with this little app from the New South Wales Government property developer Landcom at:
http://www.landcom.com.au/mini-sites/my_neighbourhood/index.htm
Sunday, 7 April 2013
Neighbourhood on vimeo
Two contrary places that are connected by stylistic features. It is about the metropolis New York City (USA) and the provincial Dessau (GER). Based on the topic "neighborhood", the films about the both cities are shown in a double projection. This short film was created in the framework of the cooperation between the Anhalt University of Applied Sciences, Department of Design Dessau, and the NYU. Watch it.....
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
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 UnitNow 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.
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