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Enjoy!
Proposed suburb in China, via http://burb.tv
Now, I grew up in the American suburbs and I have fond memories of it all—playing with the neighborhood kids, rummaging through the backyard forests, the Friday Night Lights—all of it good, clean fun. Okay, so maybe it’s not as clean as we thought after all, huh? While the relative merits of the concentrated vs. the dispersed city are constantly being debated, it is mostly agreed upon that “sprawl “, generally defined as suburban style, auto-dominated, zoned-by-use development spread thinly over a large territory, especially in an untidy or irregular way, has produced incredibly negative impacts on the environment. Other arguments against sprawl and unruly suburban development often include aesthetic (god…it’s so…ugly!!), sociological (isolationist tendencies), lifestyle (god…it’s soooo…boring!) and rising issues of health concerns (god..they’re sooo…fat!), but the environmental arguments tend to remain the most compelling and the most marketable (who doesn’t want ot be a little more green these days, right?).
Now, before I run off into pedantry, (oh wait, I just did), let me get to my point. Worldwide suburban development is happening at breakneck speed. The polar ice caps are melting almost as fast. I suggest that before all of our ice caps are but a distant memory of a bygone era, we architects and urban designers put on our thinking caps and start coming up with new ideas for the suburbs. Hopefully with the impending recession in the US there will be some architects with more time on their hands willing to look into this (except there is always another icon to be designed in the middle east I guess). Because at the moment there are too many architects focused on high end luxury condos and not enough on real issues of housing and development—what are the new prototypes of high density, mixed use, (sub)urban development that contend with emerging conditions of the 21st century? Who will be the Victor Gruen's of the 21st Century, developing new typologies that respond to the new social, cultural, and physical contexts of the developing world?
There are of course people doing this—the Smart Growth, Transit Oriented Development, and New Urbanist advocates in the US have been studying these issues for some time. But their efforts tend to be either too retroactive or too focused on the American context. And to be honest, too little too late. There are some interesting explorations in the Netherlands as well, by people like MVRDV, et al. The Integrated Urbanism group at Arup recently designed Dongtan in China to be the world’s first sustainable city. But I think that globally there need to be more people studying the phenomenon in a more nuanced way—focusing on the unique cultural, ecological, and historical characteristics of a given locale to develop sensitive, yet prototypical, responses to these issues.