Sunday 12 May 2013

Smart cities in China


$70bn allocated for China’s ‘smart cities’
April 12, 2013, 8:32 am

[Xinhua]
The government has set up 90 smart city demonstration areas [Xinhua]
China’s ministry of housing and urban-rural development (MOHURD) has announced that banks and investors have promised a major credit line of at least $70.3 billion for China’s “smart city” projects.
After the China Development Bank announced in January that it would offer at least 80 billion yuan in credit for building smart cities over the next three years, two other commercial banks promised at least the same amount of credit for such projects, according to information released at a MOHURD seminar held on Wednesday.
Other institutional investors also signed an agreement in early April to extend another 200 billion yuan in credit for building smart cities, the ministry said.
The names of the institutions or the banks are not yet revealed.
China has promoted the concept of smart cities, including the application of information technology in urban management and the construction of low-carbon architecture, amid the country’s renewed urbanisation drive.
The government has set up 90 smart city demonstration areas and more applications are under review, the MOHURD said.
Investment in smart city projects might exceed 1 trillion yuan ($159 billion) by 2015, smart city specialist Jiang Defeng said.
Source: Xinhua



Beijing prepares to get smart

By Hugh Langley and Chen Nan ( China Daily)
For manythe term "Smart Citydenotes eco-friendly urban spaces with streets of driverlesselectric cars and houses powered by used drink cansBut as the recent Beijing Design Weekdemonstrated it's much more than thatSmart City is about completely open innovation.
While the week brought a vast array of ideas from designers around the worldGeo-City SmartCitycurated by the China Millennium Monument Museum of Digital Artswas the focus feature,displaying 82 projects from 14 countries.
GeoPulse Beijingthe Beijing-focused pilot demo by ARS Electronica of Austriawas one of theChinese applications of this model on displayand its overall message was clearSmart citiesare the way of the futureand now is Beijing's time to embrace it.
Some predict that by 2050, between 70 and 85 percent of the global population will live incitiesbut the problems of over-urbanization — pollutiontrafficovercrowding — are alreadystarting to showThe idea of GeoCity is to put government and citizensfingers on the urbanpulseand show how they can solve these problems.
The solutionBig DataIn the modern worldthe magnitude of open data from social networks,smartphones and other means is phenomenalyet barely any is being harnessedAccording tothe GeoCity initiativeif this data is collectedprocessed and understoodthe possibilities forhelping urbanization are huge.
"The first time we had it developed for the city of Linz (in Austriain its first phaseit was a toolfor the citizens," said Michael Badicsdirector of AE Solutions at ARS Electronica."From kids tothe elderlyeveryone could access this dataBut we saw there was so much more potential init."
Smart Cities will also give governments the ability to access information about the city and solveproblems more efficientlyBut to be understoodthe data must be visual and accessibleandthat's where the project's second proposal comes inBig DesignARS Electronica has pairedwith the Academy of Arts and Design at Tsinghua Universityamong othersto find ways ofmapping urban mobility that's visually stimulating and easy to understand.
"Visually telling stories gives us the possibility to explain things and make them open forpeople," Badics said during his keynote speech during the design week."Out of the data hiddenin the cityyou can tell storiesAnd you can tell stories in a way that people can reallyunderstand how the things are connected."
According to Fu Zhiyongvice-director of Information Art and Design Department at Academy ofArts and DesignTshinghua Universityinformation visualization has grown quickly in Chinaduring the past 10 years.
"It's all about navigating and delivering the messagewhich gets people participating andmakes the city smart," he says.
Oliver Senna senior research engineer with Singapore-MITgave an example of how datacollection could be used by taxi driversDrivers could be warned when it is going to rain andshown a visualization of where the most potential passengers are located.
But GeoPulse Beijing is more than a convenient idea - it's a way of understanding aninevitable futureThe question iswill Beijing embrace the idea with open armsYang Lei,curator of the GeoCity exhibitionseems to think so.
"It's already startedWe used this exhibition to launch some pilot demos," he says."In China,everything is happening so fastIn the next three to five years this data-based Smart Citymovement will really take off."
Contact the writer at chennan@chinadaily.com.cn


City of Zhenjiang, China and IBM Collaborate to Build a Smarter City

IBM Smarter Cities Solution Helps Zhenjiang Boost Economic Development and Tourism Plans
http://www-03.ibm.com/press/us/en/pressrelease/36883.wss

Wednesday 8 May 2013

Wildlife Crossings - Eco Bridges


12 Most Awesome Wildlife Crossings in the World

Humans aren't the only animals that need advanced systems of transportation. As we build more in and around the natural habitats of animals, planners are increasingly taking into account the need for wildlife to have their own roadways so as not to end up as roadkill. Studies have shown that roads and traffic affect animal populations detrimentally in four ways: "they decrease habitat amount and quality, enhance mortality due to collisions with vehicles, prevent access to resources on the other side of the road, and subdivide animal populations into smaller and more vulnerable fractions." 
So wildlife crossings have been built since the 1950s not only to protect animals and people from collisions, but also to ensure that roads, railroads, pipelines, etc. aren't hindering a population's growth or their way of living.

Wildlife crossings come in many shapes and sizes including underpass tunnels, viaducts, and overpasses; amphibian tunnels; fish ladders; tunnels and culverts; and green roofs. In Europe they are everywhere, with the Netherlands accounting for over 600 wildlife bridges. North America on the other hand, has some catching up to do to make sure our furry—and otherwise—friends have the freedom to roam. Here's a roundup of some of the best green passageways from around the world that connect animals to their natural surroundings. Are there any missing from this list that you've seen?

Highway A50, Netherlands; photos via Niels Verheul and Henri Cormont, RWS
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The first dedicated elephant underpass, Kenya
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Ecoducts, Banff, Alberta Canada; photo via Joel Sartore, and (cc) Flickr user Cmh2315fl
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Interstate 78 - New Jersey across the Watchung Reservation; photo via Wikimedia Commons
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Unusual overpass for crabs: Red crabs in action in Christmas Island National Park, Australia, during their migration; photo via Christmas Island National Park
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Underpass for crocodiles U.S. Highway 1 between Florida City and Key Largo, FL; photo viaMarcel Huijser

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Concrete barrier and planks guiding amphibians toward an underpass under the road, near the town Hilversum, The Netherlands; photo via Marcel Huijser

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Can Pagá, Vallés Oriental, Spain; photo via Google Maps
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Grevesmühlen, Germany; photo (cc) via Flickr user Bogdan
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Animal underpass, Finland; photo via Interestingplac.es
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Unrealized: Winning proposal for the ARC: International Wildlife Crossing Infrastructure Design Competition, I-70 near Vail, Coloroda; photo via Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates

Saturday 27 April 2013

Urban Plaza's - Great spaces

Federation Square, Melbourne
Rockefeller Plaza, NY
















Union Square San Francisco
Plaza del Torico - Spain
Sanmarco_alto
Yonge-Dundas Square, in TorontoCanada

Red Square, Moscow


Schouwburgplein, Rotterdam, Holland
millenium park chicago

Sunday 7 April 2013

Pedestrian-friendly Cities













Pedestrianised streets


3.2km longest Pedestrian Street -”Strøget”
Great success story since establishment in 1962
CopenhagenDenmark

http://kottke.org/photos/copenhagen0603/index.html



















Low Carbon Cities












What is a Low Carbon City?