Rod Simpson: Strategic Urban Design, Planning and Remaking the City

Calls for a greater emphasis on strategic planning beg the question of how the public can be better engaged, and how one possible future for a place can be compared to another. Rod Simpson outlines the idea of 'strategic urban design' as the basis for integrating planning, design and community engagement, using 'real-time' modeling of scenarios.
The lecture describes how the approach has been integrated into the Urban Design and Urban Planning programs at the University of Sydney for a number of Sydney case studies.
Associate Professor Roderick Simpson is Director of the Urban Design Program at the University of Sydney and principal of simpson+wilson whose work ranges across architecture, urban design and strategic planning. In 2007 and 2008 he led the urban design and spatial planning for the Sustainable Sydney 2030 Strategy which showed how the City of Sydney could significantly improve its environmental performance and liveability. Since co-authoring Greenpeace's Strategy for a Sustainable Sydney in 1992, he has been an active advocate of ecologically sustainable design principles.
He was instrumental in the formulation of BASIX, and more recently worked with Kinesis on the PRECINX sustainability assessment tool for Landcom: which has received both state and national planning awards. He also has an interest in cultural planning and is a board member of the Historic Houses Trust, Australia and is a member of the UrbanGrowth NSW project review panel.
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Пікірлер: 9

  • @wendysbertrand3008
    @wendysbertrand3008 Жыл бұрын

    Heartwarming to hear urbanism, architecture and history powerfully and clearly expressed via a feminist lens and with a priority on paying attention to social issues that are so neglected and under estimated in our society and by professions shaping the way we live and work and care for each other. Bravo to Hayden and The National Building Museum for this program on You tube for many to observe.

  • @deezynar
    @deezynar6 жыл бұрын

    Urban planning has brought us cities that are ugly, hard to get around in, cost huge sums to live in, and forcibly segregate people by economic status. Every problem that urban planners are supposed to solve are made worse.

  • @hamzamuhammad9005

    @hamzamuhammad9005

    4 жыл бұрын

    Urban planners are taught about the ideal cities planned by Ebenzer Howard, frank L. Wright and Le Corbusier but when these urban planners come out to the field then they realize that they have no power and authority at all, all those things they learnt at school were merely theories and nothing else because most of the "planning" is decided by the elites sitting in government and private sector. So in order to plan a faultless city, a planner need to have the utmost authority over all the stakeholders, then and only then a planner can be faithful to his education and practice.

  • @deezynar

    @deezynar

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@deanbrickland I'm willing to believe you if you provide proof.

  • @deezynar

    @deezynar

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@deanbrickland I made a statement that follows this logic: Modern cities are crap, modern cities were shaped by urban planners, therefore, urban planners are responsible for the crap cities. You claim that a mysterious group of people are actually responsible, not urban planners. I'm asking you to show who that group of people is. Reveal their motivation. And explain how they influence city leaders to ignore the supposed experts, urban planners, and follow their dictates instead. A related thing to think about is this: A group of trained professionals who claim to be responsible for city design, but really don't design cities, are paid to do what exactly?

  • @deezynar

    @deezynar

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@deanbrickland All you did was agree with me that modern cities are crap. Then you went on to defend urban planners, essentially saying that the poor babies are ignored so they can't be held responsible. You have won your case, I can agree with you on that. To put that into an actionable plan, since urban planners are ignored, we should fire them. Are we good now?

  • @deezynar

    @deezynar

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@deanbrickland You only think that my view is simplistic because I have not spelled out my entire philosophy of urban design. I work in the architectural field, I see what city laws do to plans. Some actually produce beneficial effects, but others cause enormous harm. Parking space minimums, and road design requirements, are two of the biggest city killers.