mayor2
کاربر فعال
Nikos A. Salingaros
University of Texas at San Antonio
Chapter in: Crossover: Architecture, Urbanism, Technology, Edited by Arie
Graafland & Leslie Kavanaugh (010 Publishers, Rotterdam, Holland, 2006), pages 100-
115.
Abstract: The compact, geometrically integrated city can and should replace suburban sprawl as the dominant development pattern in the future. This approach to
urban planning and design is well established among proponents of the New Urbanist and Smart Growth movements. However, the more radical scenario I propose in this
paper is that the compact city should also replace the high-rise, ultra-high-density megacity model. I will present arguments for the compact city from both directions,
criticizing both conventional suburbia and the hyper-intensity of the urban core. A radical intervention is required on the part of concerned urbanists. We need to rethink
the positioning of individual buildings to form a coherent urban fabric, as well as the role of thoroughfares, parking, and urban spaces. New zoning codes based on the rural-tourban
Transect and the form of the built environment are now available to assure predictable densities and mixed use for the compact city.
University of Texas at San Antonio
Chapter in: Crossover: Architecture, Urbanism, Technology, Edited by Arie
Graafland & Leslie Kavanaugh (010 Publishers, Rotterdam, Holland, 2006), pages 100-
115.
Abstract: The compact, geometrically integrated city can and should replace suburban sprawl as the dominant development pattern in the future. This approach to
urban planning and design is well established among proponents of the New Urbanist and Smart Growth movements. However, the more radical scenario I propose in this
paper is that the compact city should also replace the high-rise, ultra-high-density megacity model. I will present arguments for the compact city from both directions,
criticizing both conventional suburbia and the hyper-intensity of the urban core. A radical intervention is required on the part of concerned urbanists. We need to rethink
the positioning of individual buildings to form a coherent urban fabric, as well as the role of thoroughfares, parking, and urban spaces. New zoning codes based on the rural-tourban
Transect and the form of the built environment are now available to assure predictable densities and mixed use for the compact city.