3 Flashcards

1
Q

7 properties fundamental to understanding the urban phenomenon:

A

PRODUCTION

PROXIMITY

REPRODUCTION

CAPITALIZATION

PLACE

GOVERNANCE

ENVIRONMENT

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2
Q

Preconditions of cities

A

Ecology

Power

Technology

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3
Q

Production

A

Attracts people to cities

Cities need to produce goods or services

Cities were built around production, trade and an economy

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4
Q

Proximity

A

Cities are made of numerous overlapping markets of frequently repeated exchanges

Labour market plays a predominant structuring role

Without proximity, travel + time cost would rule out many exchanges

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5
Q

Reproduction

A

The different conditions needed for the availability of a labour force that is well suited to the needs of the production sector of an urban area.

Everything in cities needs to be reproduced on a consistent basis.

Immigration

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6
Q

Capatilization

A

Refers to all investments in the built environment of cities

Has taken on two forms:

  1. Suburban development
  2. Inner city intensification
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7
Q

Place

A

Place is about feelings (positive or negative) associated with different locales in the urban evnironment

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8
Q

Governance

A

Cities require interventions suited to their reality

Specialized forms of administrations are needed to formulate and
deliver interventions

Governments should protect us and our collective interests

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9
Q

Environment

A

Historically, cities had to respect their environments to survive. Today, cities can draw resources from every -longer distances

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10
Q

Urban Resiliency

A

A system’s ability to absorb disturbance and reorganize to retain original basic function and structure.

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11
Q

Sustainability

A

Meeting the needs of today’s populations without compromising the needs of future generations.

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12
Q

7 FACTORS OF CHANGE

A

ECONOMY

DEMOGRAPHY

TECHNOLOGY

VALUES

GOVERNANCE

PLANNING MODELS

CHANGES IN THE SIZE OF URBAN REGIONS

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13
Q

Garden City

A
  • Implemented in 1898
  • contained proportional areas of residencies
  • was a response to the industrial city
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14
Q

Tower in the Park

A
  • Implemented in the 1920’s
  • Designed by french architect
  • Separated out buildings, towers
  • On paper looks ok, but street level not ok.
  • antithesis of the garden city
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15
Q

New Urbanism

A
  • late 1980’s
  • Structuring cities with concern for street level access, greenery
  • Density done right
  • Spaces for informal interaction and capital formation

(Think Jane Jacobs)

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16
Q

Jane Jacobs quote

A

Cities have the capability of providing something for everybody, only because and only when, they are created by everybody.

17
Q

Canadian Urban Transformation (1945-1975)

A

Urban dispersion to the max

Model T ford car altered the way cities were built

Suburbia after WWII and consequent baby boom (3.4 fertility rate)

18
Q

Canadian Urban Transformation (Post 1975)

A

There was a dissatisfaction with modern urban expansion

  • identified need for better density
  • building new infrastructure on top of old infrastructure
19
Q

Cambie corridoor plans

A

Plan to rezone and redevelop over the next 30 years. Adding public spaces, more amenities and community facilities.

20
Q

Money planned to be put into the cambie corridoor plans

A

$450 million over the next 10 years