Posts tagged "cities for people"
The Bike Show on Resonance FM - To Copenhagen City of Cyclists
Jack Thurston of The Bike Show interviews Mikael Coville-Anderson of Copenhagenize about his blog, the growth of cycling as a way of getting around in Copenhagen and his work with other cities  Well worth a listen!
Not sure I share Jack’s views on the principles being difficult to implement in London due to its narrow streets and historical development pattern…Amsterdam and Copenhagen also have many narrow streets where cars and people cycling co-exist beautifully - without sweat, fear and lycra!

A trip to the Danish capital of Copenhagen, city of stylish cyclists, where Jack Thurston meets Mikael Colville-Andersen, the force behind Cycle Chic and Copenhagenize. We talk about how a single street photograph set him on a new path of bicycle advocacy, fashion and city planning consulting. And lots and lots of blogging.

The Bike Show on Resonance FM - To Copenhagen City of Cyclists

Jack Thurston of The Bike Show interviews Mikael Coville-Anderson of Copenhagenize about his blog, the growth of cycling as a way of getting around in Copenhagen and his work with other cities  Well worth a listen!

Not sure I share Jack’s views on the principles being difficult to implement in London due to its narrow streets and historical development pattern…Amsterdam and Copenhagen also have many narrow streets where cars and people cycling co-exist beautifully - without sweat, fear and lycra!

A trip to the Danish capital of Copenhagen, city of stylish cyclists, where Jack Thurston meets Mikael Colville-Andersen, the force behind Cycle Chic and Copenhagenize. We talk about how a single street photograph set him on a new path of bicycle advocacy, fashion and city planning consulting. And lots and lots of blogging.

RUDI: Place Making 2012:  Sharing innovation in urban life
Great read with some good examples!

In creating PLACEmaking, we aimed to put together a publication offering food for future thought: the creation of social cities, the use of Big Data for civic benefit, the articulation of economic and social value, and the development of tools and processes that enable everyone to participate in the design and shaping of place.

RUDI: Place Making 2012:  Sharing innovation in urban life

Great read with some good examples!

In creating PLACEmaking, we aimed to put together a publication offering food for future thought: the creation of social cities, the use of Big Data for civic benefit, the articulation of economic and social value, and the development of tools and processes that enable everyone to participate in the design and shaping of place.

IM VIADUKT - Zurich (April 2012)

I thought this was a really nice reuse of space in a cross section of mainly residential streets in Zurich.  It’s a great example of how hard infrastructure can be made permeable and integrated into the local neighbourhood, converting it from a dead, border vacuum type of space (of the type Jane Jacobs discussed) into a living part of the neighbourhood.

The only thing I felt was disappointing about the development was the tenant mix. Although for the most part it consisted of independents, the majority of them sold high end, high price products and the whole thing had an air of exclusiveness.

There is a good series of photos, plans etc on the architect’s website here, some great shots of the arches during the day and night on the IM VIADUKT website here and a brochure for the development here.

In large cities like London where land is expensive, the spaces created by viaducts provide an ideal place for the more awkward, less commercially attractive but vital businesses in the city - catering companies, bakeries, hardware shops, car, bike or motorbike shops, car parks, pop-up clubs, restaurants and bars. Their size and slightly off the beaten track location also makes them cheaper to rent. However in London there aren’t many that have a coherent strategy like IM VIADUKT that could make them more identifiable places that positively contribute to local neighbourhoods and streetscapes. There are informal examples like Maltby Street/ Druid Street/ Spa Terminus which are getting a foodie reputation, with many arches being occupied by traders leaving Borough Market and the arches in Brixton but there is still a lot more potential to strengthen this. In Vauxhall for example where there is no main high street or focal point, a more considered strategy for their occupation could have been useful… But perhaps it is better that there isn’t a strategy - it leaves space and opportunity for the enterprises mentioned above that need cheap space, large footprints and central locations? What do you think?

Cycling Embassy of Denmark - Collection of Cycle Concepts 2012

Bicycle traffic is healthy, environmentally friendly, and makes cities more livable. Cycling is a fast and efficient urban transport mode and requires less space than motor vehicle traffic.
The Collection of cycle concepts 2012 presents a number of ideas to help generate more bicycle traffic and reduce the accident rate among cyclists.

Cycling Embassy of Denmark - Collection of Cycle Concepts 2012

Bicycle traffic is healthy, environmentally friendly, and makes cities more livable. Cycling is a fast and efficient urban transport mode and requires less space than motor vehicle traffic.

The Collection of cycle concepts 2012 presents a number of ideas to help generate more bicycle traffic and reduce the accident rate among cyclists.

The High Line - New York (December 2011)

I love this place.  Such a simple idea - a disused rail line turned into a park!  It is now so successful that at times they have to close it due to overcrowding! An inspiring example of what communities and city halls can do together!  Visit their website here.

The High Line is a public park built on an historic freight rail line elevated above the streets on Manhattan’s West Side. It is owned by the City of New York, and maintained and operated by Friends of the High Line. Founded in 1999 by community residents, Friends of the High Line fought for the High Line’s preservation and transformation at a time when the historic structure was under the threat of demolition. It is now the non-profit conservancy working with the New York City Department of Parks & Recreation to make sure the High Line is maintained as an extraordinary public space for all visitors to enjoy. In addition to overseeing maintenance, operations, and public programming for the park, Friends of the High Line works to raise the essential private funds to support more than 90 percent of the park’s annual operating budget, and to advocate for the preservation and transformation of the High Line at the Rail Yards, the third and final section of the historic structure, which runs between West 30th and West 34th Streets.

The High Line is located on Manhattan’s West Side. It runs from Gansevoort Street in the Meatpacking District to West 34th Street, between 10th & 11th Avenues. The first section of the High Line opened on June 9, 2009. It runs from Gansevoort Street to West 20th Street. The second section, which runs between West 20th and West 30th Streets, opened June 8, 2011.

The Guardian - Big Picture:  Copenhagen bikes, by Mikael Colville-Anderson
The guardian has published a great selection of Mikael Coville-Andersons pictures of people getting around their city (Copenhagen) on bikes.  Shows how cycling in the city can and should be - easy, convenient, safe, door to door, stylish…

The Guardian - Big Picture:  Copenhagen bikes, by Mikael Colville-Anderson

The guardian has published a great selection of Mikael Coville-Andersons pictures of people getting around their city (Copenhagen) on bikes.  Shows how cycling in the city can and should be - easy, convenient, safe, door to door, stylish…

Amsterdam Cycle Chic - Amsterdam through Hungarian Eyes

This is my hope for London - a liveable, accessible, inclusive, healthy, safe city!

Evening Standard: Cycling in the city: can London go Dutch?
Excellent positive write up in the Standard about LCC’s Love London Go Dutch Campaign, the big ride this saturday and cycling in cities!



Spotting a man on a bike with a dog in the front basket and a child in the back trailer seems an unlikely occurrence in London. So too a chap pulling a suitcase along beside his two wheels, or a child travelling the city by standing on the back rack of her mother’s bicycle.
Of course, I saw none of these people spinning their way through our capital but in Amsterdam — a city just an hour’s easyJet flight away from London yet worlds apart when it comes to cycling.
This Saturday, the London Cycling Campaign (LCC) is holding its Big Ride — a cycle ride through central London supporting its “Love London, Go Dutch” campaign. It calls on the mayoral candidates to bring Amsterdam-style safer cycling streets to London.
Londoners are often incredulous when the idea is raised of dedicated cycle lanes along all main roads — commonly stating that our road layouts are too old and streets too narrow.
Yet Amsterdam, with many equally narrow streets, did not begin its development as a cycling city until the Seventies, before which the UK’s and the Netherlands’s cycling profile looked similar. Today, when around just three  per cent of journeys in London are made by bike, that figure is 47 per cent in Amsterdam — 14 per cent more than in 1991. So I went to Amsterdam to see whether we could head in the same direction as its cyclists…
…Funding is always the biggest issue. The Amsterdam Cycling Strategy 2007-2010 committed nearly 70 million to cycling over four years.
“The past couple of years the budget has been lower, because of the economic situation and since some of the larger and expensive projects have been completed,” explains de Lange.
Money comes from several funds including an air quality plan, national subsidies for infrastructure and from individual boroughs, but the largest proportion (more than 35 million) comes from the Amsterdam Mobility Fund. De Lange explains that this pot of money, to fund public transport and cycling, is generated from car parking charges. So although parking in Amsterdam costs around 4 an hour in some places, drivers can see that their money is going to improving other forms of transportation.
The London Cycling Campaign works out that whereas in Amsterdam £20 per head is spent on cycling, in London Boris Johnson’s 13 “biking boroughs” — part of his “cycling revolution” — provides just 75p-95p per head in those areas.
But it does not expect large sums of money upfront and an immediate overhaul of London roads. Rather it sees cycling infrastructure being built into new road and junction developments over time.
“We estimate that including proper provision for cycling at Blackfriars Bridge would have added only one or two per cent to the total cost of the rail/road interchange project,” it says.
In Amsterdam, de Lange explains:  “Most often new bicycle paths are made when a street has to be renovated anyway. This is about every 25 years. Then it is not a lot more expensive to make a bicycle path than to make a pavement or parking places.”

Evening Standard: Cycling in the city: can London go Dutch?

Excellent positive write up in the Standard about LCC’s Love London Go Dutch Campaign, the big ride this saturday and cycling in cities!

Spotting a man on a bike with a dog in the front basket and a child in the back trailer seems an unlikely occurrence in London. So too a chap pulling a suitcase along beside his two wheels, or a child travelling the city by standing on the back rack of her mother’s bicycle.

Of course, I saw none of these people spinning their way through our capital but in Amsterdam — a city just an hour’s easyJet flight away from London yet worlds apart when it comes to cycling.

This Saturday, the London Cycling Campaign (LCC) is holding its Big Ride — a cycle ride through central London supporting its “Love London, Go Dutch” campaign. It calls on the mayoral candidates to bring Amsterdam-style safer cycling streets to London.

Londoners are often incredulous when the idea is raised of dedicated cycle lanes along all main roads — commonly stating that our road layouts are too old and streets too narrow.

Yet Amsterdam, with many equally narrow streets, did not begin its development as a cycling city until the Seventies, before which the UK’s and the Netherlands’s cycling profile looked similar. Today, when around just three  per cent of journeys in London are made by bike, that figure is 47 per cent in Amsterdam — 14 per cent more than in 1991. So I went to Amsterdam to see whether we could head in the same direction as its cyclists…

…Funding is always the biggest issue. The Amsterdam Cycling Strategy 2007-2010 committed nearly 70 million to cycling over four years.

“The past couple of years the budget has been lower, because of the economic situation and since some of the larger and expensive projects have been completed,” explains de Lange.

Money comes from several funds including an air quality plan, national subsidies for infrastructure and from individual boroughs, but the largest proportion (more than 35 million) comes from the Amsterdam Mobility Fund. De Lange explains that this pot of money, to fund public transport and cycling, is generated from car parking charges. So although parking in Amsterdam costs around 4 an hour in some places, drivers can see that their money is going to improving other forms of transportation.

The London Cycling Campaign works out that whereas in Amsterdam £20 per head is spent on cycling, in London Boris Johnson’s 13 “biking boroughs” — part of his “cycling revolution” — provides just 75p-95p per head in those areas.

But it does not expect large sums of money upfront and an immediate overhaul of London roads. Rather it sees cycling infrastructure being built into new road and junction developments over time.

“We estimate that including proper provision for cycling at Blackfriars Bridge would have added only one or two per cent to the total cost of the rail/road interchange project,” it says.

In Amsterdam, de Lange explains:  “Most often new bicycle paths are made when a street has to be renovated anyway. This is about every 25 years. Then it is not a lot more expensive to make a bicycle path than to make a pavement or parking places.”

Potterstraat, Utrecht - A lesson for many cities!

A really inspiring video by Mark Wagenbuur illustrating how the city of Utrecht has repaired some of the damage done in the 50s/60s when the city attempted to accommodate the ever increasing levels of car traffic.  It has embarked on a programme of works to restore its street quality, narrowing roads to achieve a better modal split, improve the living environment and making a return the original humanscale city.

Mark also writes the excellent BicycleDutch blog which is always a good read! 

Momentum Mag on cycling in cities:

A nice video in Momentum Mag highlighting the pleasure and benefits of cycling in cities!

Streets for People - Amsterdam!

Some shots of local Amsterdam street life from a selection I captured over a 15 minute period in one location!

When it comes to liveable cities, Amsterdam has it down to a fine art. What’s more, the city and it citizens, have made a conscious effort to make space for everyone - pedestrians, cyclists, cars, trams and buses.

The comprehensive network of fixed infrastructure for cycling (both in terms of provision of cycle lanes/paths on busy roads and on-street cycle parking) and public transport, coupled with reasonable speed limits on roads, are a visible commitment to creating a credible, comfortable and convenient alternative to car use.

It can be like this in every city. Declaring war on the motorist, cyclist or public transport user is unhelpful and unnecessary. Amsterdam’s approach demonstrates that a city with narrow streets and constrained by historical patterns of development (not dissimilar to London), can successfully accommodate many modes of transport. What is more important is the result that arises from the modal shift made possible by such commitment - a city that is humane, happy, economically robust, socially inclusive, accessible, equal, balanced, quieter, cleaner, safer, healthier…

A childs eye view

What a great project!  Interesting to see how children interpret the city! 

A documentary film made in collaboration with the Human Cities Festival 2012. Part of a project developed by http://www.turtlewings.be/

The film was made from a workshop where we gave children digital cameras and spycams and walk down 5 streets in downtown Brussels. The goal was just to document everything the children noticed. You can also follow on the ChildEyeView website here http://childeyeview.tumblr.com/ or the facebook page https://www.facebook.com/pages/Childeyeview/280423245320757

Canning Town Caravanserai Interesting meanwhile use project!  Looking forward to going to see it!

The Caravanserai project is a story in its own right. The starting point is in 2010, when the Mayors of Newham and London decided to launch a design competition as part of the regeneration of East London.  The aim was to find ‘meanwhile’ uses for three prominent brownfield sites – and the adjacent water – in the Royal Docks and Canning Town. The chosen sites lie on or close to the Olympic venues and were expected to have both local and global impact, before, during and after the Games…
…The Caravanserai is set around the idea of a protected courtyard, where people trade and network. Micro-enterprise units are placed all around this inner courtyard and face the main road opposite Canning Town Station. But the idea extends much further. The bigger picture is about building a local economy that can be quickly self-sustained and feed back to the local community. In this sense, a large area of the north site is transformed into an event space, that welcomes performances, shows, sport events and many more to financially make the project feasible. The south side supports the Caravanserai as it becomes a pop-up hotel for people from all over the world…

Canning Town Caravanserai

Interesting meanwhile use project!  Looking forward to going to see it!

The Caravanserai project is a story in its own right. The starting point is in 2010, when the Mayors of Newham and London decided to launch a design competition as part of the regeneration of East London.  The aim was to find ‘meanwhile’ uses for three prominent brownfield sites – and the adjacent water – in the Royal Docks and Canning Town. The chosen sites lie on or close to the Olympic venues and were expected to have both local and global impact, before, during and after the Games…

The Caravanserai is set around the idea of a protected courtyard, where people trade and network. Micro-enterprise units are placed all around this inner courtyard and face the main road opposite Canning Town Station. But the idea extends much further. The bigger picture is about building a local economy that can be quickly self-sustained and feed back to the local community. In this sense, a large area of the north site is transformed into an event space, that welcomes performances, shows, sport events and many more to financially make the project feasible. The south side supports the Caravanserai as it becomes a pop-up hotel for people from all over the world…

Dezeen Report:  The Richmond Weekender by Right Angle and Foolscap
Nice temporary use for an abandoned studio!

Melbourne design studios Right Angle and Foolscap have created a temporary canteen, market and cinema in a former piano factory that until recently was the home of Australian television broadcaster Channel 9.

Dezeen Report:  The Richmond Weekender by Right Angle and Foolscap

Nice temporary use for an abandoned studio!

Melbourne design studios Right Angle and Foolscap have created a temporary canteen, market and cinema in a former piano factory that until recently was the home of Australian television broadcaster Channel 9.

Gehl Architects: Time to reclaim the streets

…In 2007, Gehl Architects undertook an important study of Flushing Main Street in New York City. We found that 97,000 pedestrians walk along Main Street every day, but they are squeezed into only 30 percent of the street space. Some 56,000 motorists have access to 70 percent of the street space….

Gehl Architects: Time to reclaim the streets

…In 2007, Gehl Architects undertook an important study of Flushing Main Street in New York City. We found that 97,000 pedestrians walk along Main Street every day, but they are squeezed into only 30 percent of the street space. Some 56,000 motorists have access to 70 percent of the street space….

Liveable Cities | Communities | Urbanism | Cycling | Innovation | Collaboration | Culture

twitter.com/irishboyinldn

view archive



Ask me anything