Monday, November 29, 2010

Urban and Regional Ecologies: Notes

Urban and Regional Ecologies:

Edward Soja


The Future of Urbanism


"Shifting from the term ecologies to geographies".


ecology: the study of the relation of living organisms to each other and their surroundings.

- life processes and adaptations

- distribution and abundance of organisms

- the movement of materials and energy through living communities

Cities as socially constructed geographies/spaces...


Look at cities as 'geographies'.


Socially constructed built environments.


Interaction of scales....local to global

- body to planet


"The Spatial Turn"

- A process in which spatial thinking has been 'let loose from the disciplines of architecture, design, urban planning to everything (art, accounting, theology, law, etc.)


"Since 1971, the very nature of urbanism and urbanization itself has been experiencing a radical change."


The Metropolitan model of urbanization:

- Since the late 19th century, we've been seeing this kind of urbanization.


In the early 19th century there was a very different, centralized kind of model. No suburbs!


Metropolitan model:

- a nice core city with dynamic heterogenous populations, buzz of activity, crime, drugs, museums, everything.

- suburbia that is dull, homogenous, boring, single family houses.

- 2 worlds:

- Urbia & Suburbia

A new urbanization process is now happening:

- effecting every major metropolis in the world.


Regional Urbanization:

- producing a new kind of city.

- the era of mass suburbanization as we knew it is coming to an end.

- Suburban growth declining. The hegemony of our suburban models of city growth largely through suburbanization,

- This model of a simple division between urbia and suburbia is being changed very drastically.


Change in density gradient:

- Traditionally we have steep gradient around central city, then low density suburban sprawl.


- Now we have density gradient dropping in most places, flattening out. A filling in of the entire metropolitan region.

- It is no longer "large in center, low in periphery"

- Now, the entire area is becoming more dense...flattening out! No more gradation.

- Instead of 100 - 0, it is more like 100 - 50


- City Region: new term


- Urbanized region:

- densest city is now Los Angeles

- In 1950, it was the least dense in the US!

- Over the last 30 years, it's experienced the regional urbanization process intensely.


- New York has fallen behind because its suburbs are so sprawling and not dense.


The suburbs are becoming "outer cities"


- The suburbs are becoming urbanized!


Suburban Cities


- A paradox...contradiction in terms.


- Transformation of suburbia...no longer what it used to be.

- multiple urban centers developing.

- A network of cities


- The city region is a network of cities, multiple cities in kind of an expanded region.


- Mega-City Regions


- Megalopolitan


- Tokyo, Yokohama, 100 million people region


- Urbanized regions


- We have to plan for these regions ecologically, landscape, architecture, etc.


- Leads to a differentiation of suburbia.

- Multiple new topologies emerging in suburbia.

- used to be homogenous, now becoming highly differentiated.


- The inner city is much less predictable...

- a significant emptying out, a reduction in density in some areas.


- It's creating massive governance problems.

- The need for institutional changes to adapt to the regional urbanization process.


- Some form of regional regulation is needed...



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