Unit I - Introduction To Urban Design
Unit I - Introduction To Urban Design
Unit I - Introduction To Urban Design
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School of Architecture
Meenakshi College of Engineering
Unit I
1. Components of Urban Space and their
Interdependencies
2. Outline of issues/ aspects of urban space and
articulation of need for urban design
3. scope and objectives of urban design as a
discipline
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The
neighborhood
district and
corridor
the block
street and
building
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Unity
Contrast
Balance
Context
Proportion
Detail
Scale
Texture
Hierarchy
Harmony
Symmetry
Beauty
Rhythm
Order
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Urban Design weaves together these elements into a coherent, organized design structure
The urban design structure defines the urban form and the building form
Washington DC
Cartagena,
Columbia
Siena, Italy
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A new City
Strasbourg, France
Aleppo, Syria
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Defining Space
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Defining space
Much of greek architecture was designed to infuse
spaces with a spirit, and to serve as a link between
man and the universe by establishing a firm
relationship with natural space.
Volume of spaces that are in scale with the need
of present time and defined by means which are
harmony with modern technology.
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Articulating spaces
Architectural forms, textures, materials,
Modulation of light and shade, color all combine
to inject a quality or spirit that articulate space.
Urban design there should be skillful deployment
of architectural
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Urban Issues
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Landuse
Traffic
Pedestrian
Vehicular movement
Open space
Urban elements
People
Infrastructure
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Reference
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Reference Material
Urban
Design
Mahender Vasandani
CNU-A, MRICS, FIUDI
President
RICS India: International City Conference, Taj Palace, New Delhi, October 8, 2012
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Urban
Design
Good Urban Design
Is Good for Cities
Especially Indian Cities!
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Urban
Design
What We Will Cover
3. Are We on Track?
4. Conclusion
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Infrastructure Overload
(New Roads Will Provide Only Temporary Solutions)
RICS India: International City Conference, New Delhi, Oct 12
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Infrastructure Overload
(Need More Transit Service)
+8.25 m
+7.50 m
+2.0 m
+1.2 m
+1.2 m
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110
7.3 x
15
Car Ownership per 1000: 2010 vs. 2030
Source: freakonomics.com/2011/05/24
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Urban
Suburban
Walk-to-Work
Integrated Diversity
Benefits to Developers,
Customers, Community
and City
Benefits to Developers,
Customers, Community
And City
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Creative Landscape
and Art in the
Public Realm:
Enhanced
City Life
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Civic
Betterment
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Urban
Design
Plan
Tower Placements & Slender Footprints, Height Limits: Maximum Views + Better Urban Ventilation
High Quality Urban Life; High Demand for In-City Living
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What Sells
Urban Design and What Makes a Place
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Urban
Suburban
Walk-to-Work
Integrated Diversity
Benefits to Developers,
Customers, Community
and City
Benefits to Developers,
Customers, Community
And City
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Urban
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: Current Conditions
Vital:
Need Better
Infrastructure,
Services &
Governance
New
Solutions
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: Systematic Transformation
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New
Solutions
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Urban
New
Solutions
Urban
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: Systematic Transformation
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: Systematic Transformation
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New
Solutions
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Urban
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: Systematic Transformation
Suburban
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: Current Conditions
Current Focus:
Primarily Single-Use Townships
RICS India: International City Conference, New Delhi, Oct 12
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New
Solutions
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Suburban
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KEY PRINCIPLES:
Integrated Diversity
Walkability
(Best Form of Sustainability)
Affordable Housing
Provide Integrated Uses for Walking to Work, Schools, Stores, Restaurants ,etc.
New
Solutions
Suburban
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Public Realm:
More Important
Skylines Less So!
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New
Solutions
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Suburban
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Place-making
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Urban
Suburban
Benefits to Developers,
Customers, Community
and the City
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3. Are We On Track?
Current Urban Planning
(JNNURM Funds)
Vital Givens:
Key Planning Concepts of VUDA Plan:
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4. Conclusion
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Urban
Design
Thank You!
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Janmarg - Ahmedabad
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New Delhi
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LATER APPROACHES TO
URBAN DESIGN
LATER URBAN PLANNING
THEORIES AND PRACTICES
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Boulevard Planning
Industrial revolution had a similar process in France but
led to different results.
In England the concern was with health and good living
conditions; in France and especially in Paris the concern
was with preventing another revolution. Thus, after the
Revolution in 1848 in France, Napoleon wanted Paris to
be redeveloped in such a way that no barricades would
be able to be built in the streets.
Baron Haussmann brought a straight, pragmatic
solution to a highly practical problem by destroying
many existing buildings and building up wide
boulevards with the intention of focusing visually
and functionally on the great monuments of Paris
which were connected to one another by these
boulevards.
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Looking South across the Grand Plaza towards the Machinery Hall at the
World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago.
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The influences of
the City Beautiful
Movement can be
observed in
England, especially
in the City Hall and
Law Courts at
Cardiff, the Civic
Center in
Southampton, and
the Civic Offices in
Portsmouth.
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Neighborhood Planning
Clarence Perry developed the idea of the neighborhood
unit by analyzing the things he found good - including
gardening and community participation - about living in
a Long Island suburb named Forest Hills Gardens.
The neighborhood unit was focused on a community
centre, a place for debate and discussion.
Crucial to Perrys concept was the idea of day-to-day
facilities: shops, schools, playgrounds, etc. should be
within walking distance of every house. This in itself the
overall size of a neighborhood, while heavy traffic was
kept out, confined to arterial roads which skirted around
the neighborhood.
Perry estimated the optimum size for a neighborhood to
be around 5000 people; large enough to provide for
most peoples day-to-day needs, yet small enough for a
sense of community to develop.
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As its name emphasizes the proposal of Wright was for a lowdensity development of detached buildings. He envisioned a
city of small farms or garden home-steads. His scheme
eliminated roads as much as possible and attempted to bring the
country into the city rather than create parks.
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Two major themes were found in the Postmodern reaction to the hegemony associated with
modern architecture:
New Rationalism - Neo-Rationalism
New Empiricism Neo-Empiricism
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New Rationalism
Neo-Rationalism
TEAM 10 (a young group of second-generation
of European Modernists who moved towrad a
more contextual approach at least in concept
and attempt to re-define the underlying principles
and formal expression of urban space) --------REDEFINITION OF PRINCPLES AND FORMAL
EXPRESSION OF URBAN SPACE in 1950s
NEO-RATIONALISTS:
ALDO ROSSI (ITALY)
LEON & ROB KRIER (LUXEMBOURG)
RICARDO BOFILL (SPAIN)
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New Empiricism
Neo-Empiricism
HIGHLIGHTING PERCEPTUAL AND
SPATIAL QUALITIES OF THE URBAN
ENVIRONMENT
REPRESENTATIVES:
KEVIN LYNCH
ROBERT VENTURI
GORDON CULLEN
COLIN ROWE
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KEVIN LYNCH
URBAN ANALYSER IN EMPRICAL TERMS
PRESENTED HIS PRINCIPLE RULES FOR
DESIGNING CITY SPACES AS:
LEGIBILITY: THE MENTAL PICTURE OF THE CITY
HELD BY THE USERS ON THE STREET
STRUCTURE AND IDENTITY: RECOGNIZABLE
COHERENT PATTERN OF URBAN BLOCKS,
BUILDINGS AND SPACES
IMAGEABILITY: USER PERCEPTION IN MOTION
AND HOW PEOPLE EXPERIENCE THE SPACES
OF THE CITY
ACCORDING TO LYNCH:
SUCCESSFUL URBAN SPACE MEET THESE
REQUIREMENTS
PARTS OF THE CITIES - ELEMENTS OF URBAN
FORM SHOULD BE DESIGNED ACCORDING TO
THESE REQUIREMENTS
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ROBERT VENTURI
MOST OF THE OUTDOOR SPACES
CREATED BY MODERN MOVEMENT
ARE LOST SPACES ISOLATED FROM
ITS TOTAL SURROUNDINGS.
GORDON CULLEN
A TOWNSCAPE ARTIST
EXPLORED THE EXPERIENCE OF
SEQUENCE THROUGH URBAN SPACE
UNIQUE SENSE OF PLACE FROM
STREET LEVEL
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE
OBJECT & MOVEMENT
THE EVENT OF ARRIVING AT /
LEAVING CITY SPACES
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COLIN ROWE
A LEADING URBAN DESIGN EDUCATOR
DILEMMA OF TEXTURE COMPOSITE URBAN
PATTERN OF STREETS, BUILDINGS, AND OPEN
SPACES THE FABRIC OF THE CITY
The problem: Building as a free-standing object and
its disruptive effects on the continuity of these urban
patterns.
He put forward a pluralist view of urban form, a collage
city that accomodates a range of ideas and visions.
His urban design work is based on cubist geometries
and historic models of Rome and Florence etc. where
buildings as articulated solids are designed to create
positive voids.
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