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June 25, 2008

The great ecotown land grab

Glancey and Greer in The Guardian

Eco Whatever the government says, they will need to be served by even more cars and - this being England - out-of-town supermarkets. In any case, how can a town be called "eco" when its existence requires the loss of green land and a spread of new homes away from established towns, as so many of these proposals do?

June 04, 2008

Developers accused of pursuing gadgetry instead of saving planet

Ealfos Architects and developers are ignoring the threat of climate change and failing to address concerns over sustainability, according to the government's watchdog on urban planning and design.

"There are some architects and developers who really get climate change, but most don't or choose not to. As a result we get a lot of greenwash, such as green gadgets and microtechnology stuck on to buildings, rather than a proper approach to sustainable design."

April 21, 2008

FOOL'S GOLD

2012 Olympics will break 'legacy' promise unless rules are changed quickly.

Nef Fool's Gold, the new report from the New Economics Foundation, shows that unless cast-iron guarantees are built into plans for the 2012 Olympics, the Games will fail to leave the promised positive local legacy for the poorest residents of East London. The report identifies the ‘trickle down’ economics that underly the approach to regeneration at the heart of the Olympic bid as the root cause of the problem.

April 04, 2008

Cities are the new green

"It will not save life on Earth, but merely drive ever more people into hypermobility. "

The Housing Minister has announced a short list of locations for Brtian's eco-towns, and a period of consultation.

Ecot Simon Jenkins questions a strategy which ignores the eco-needs of existing towns and cities.

"Britain has plenty of potential eco-towns. They are called London, Birmingham, Manchester, Liverpool, Leeds, Sheffield and Newcastle, to name a few. They conform to every one of Flint's declared objectives. They have an infrastructure of utilities, schools, clinics, libraries, welfare services and public transport already built. People have shown themselves ready to live, work and play in them without using cars. They are settled communities able to absorb immigration and high-density living, without tearing the bonds of local leadership. "

March 26, 2008

Learning from Curitiba

Lerner Jaime Lerner's 'urban revolution' successfully transformed a congested, grimy, crime-ridden city into a world-renowned model of green living and social innovation.

'Taking care of a city is a process that you start, and then give the population space to respond.'

Guardian interview

Exemplar Open City talk at Somerset House Monday 31st March

March 10, 2008

"An unsuccessful city has closed its mind to the future."

Cities on the edge of chaos

Image1_2 Deyan Sudjic, co-editor of Endless City, asks if the city of the future will be a vision of hell or a force for civilised living?
"Cities are made by an extraordinary mixture of do-gooders and bloody-minded obsessives, of cynical political operators and speculators. They are shaped by the unintended consequences of the greedy and the self-interested, the dedicated and the occasional visionary."

"We need more than platitudes" Jonathan Meades reviews Endless City

February 13, 2008

Eco-towns plans become less ambitious

Eco   Urban myths? Plans for the prototype eco-towns have been scaled back, and local people are far from convinced. 'I am not sure that anyone actually knows what is meant by an 'ecotown', let alone a 'prototype ecotown'.

January 28, 2008

The regeneration game

Why cities' plans for renewal often sound strangely familiar

Fc_newcastle06_047_2 'Why do city councils have the same ideas about how to grow? One reason is that they have the same people advising them. '

'...it would be good if the government put some power back into the hands of the regeneratees themselves. '

Lord's debate Olympic legacy 17th January 2008

'Things imposed on people by central bodies or external agencies do not work, nor do the more cosmetic kinds of regeneration initiatives that we sometimes find. Local participation and ownership, the right kind of infrastructure, a good quality built environment, the best kind of public space; all of these help to build sustainable communities.' Bishop of Newcastle

November 30, 2007

Is it all coming together in Thames Gateway?

GateTHAMES GATEWAY DELIVERY PLAN LAUNCHED

The government has announced, More than £9bn is to be spent on projects along the Thames estuary on Europe's largest regeneration project,

Lucy Reynolds asks: Is it too ambitious?

Gatweay "Thames Gateway is clearly an ambitious project and is very challenging because there are a number of different sub-regions within it with different characters, and it is not helped by the fact that there is a plethora of agencies involved."

October 20, 2007

Yorkshire mill town tops environmental impact list

And the winner of the award for the greenest city in Britain is ... Bradford

Sustainablecities_0 The Yorkshire city more associated with dark satanic mills than rolling hills comes top of the environmental impact league table in the Sustainable Cities Index published today by Forum for the Future.

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