essential urbanism


Pecha Kucha Presentation: “Ecological Urbanism” a book for Crisis City
September 29, 2010, 3:57 pm
Filed under: Books, Crisis City, Pecha Kucha | Tags: , ,

While the first few slides are well annotated, the second part of the presentation consists mostly of scans from the book at which I intended to provide a verbal narration.

I begin this section of the presentation highlighting an article by Rem Koolhaas entitled: Advancement vs Apocalypse.

Following that is the entirety of an article by Pierre Belanger entitled “Redefining Infrastructure”.  I would argue this is an essential read for Nilus’ thesis as well as Crisis City as a whole.  It has some rich moments, but it gives an excellent summation of the history of infrastructure in America and how it has been drive by or relates to politics, economics, etc.  Additionally it includes some incredible visuals.

The following scans were included as provocations for other Crisis City members to alert them to some relevant articles in this anthology.

Finally I conclude with some imagery that I find exciting or provocative.  Beyond text, this book is packed with experimental and effective visuals.

The presentation concludes with the entirety of a manifesto entitled “Revolutionizing Architecture” that was presented at the 11th International Architecture Exhibition at the Venice Biennale.

The point of all this of course is to assert that Ecological Urbanism is well aligned with many of the interests of Crisis City and it will serve as a useful resource in our endeavors.

View this document on Scribd


Thesis Abstract 1
September 24, 2010, 5:20 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: , , , ,

On the left of my blog you will find a new menu entitled “A Crisis City Blog”.  Here you can access the Crisis City website to which this blog belongs, the Crisis City Manifesto, and my personal Thesis Abstracts.  Below you will find the first version of my thesis abstract.  Still rather vague, it is a first pass at defining the contention and site for which my thesis project will operate.  I had several other ideas including, a monument tosuperuse (architectural resuse), a museum of intermodal transit to be located at LA’s Alameda Trench, and Options for the People of Male (a city of 100,000 in the Maldive Atolls which is sure to go under water).  I would appreciate any feedback you might give.

A pdf version can be viewed here:  Nkwooten_Thesis_Abstract_submittal_1



Food Water and Urban Desertification
September 8, 2010, 5:53 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: , , ,

Beginning with the crucial statistics (skip if it is redundent):

As this national geographic interactive info-graph explains and many people already know, of the water available on this planet, a small amount is actually fresh (2.5%).  Of that 2.5 %, only 10% is easily accessible for human use (although I suppose more becomes available as glaciers melt).  So with our .25 % of earth’s water, humans only directly consume 8% (ie drinking) while we use 22% in industrial processes (waste water), and we use the remaining 7o% for agriculture and thus future indirect consumption.

While the above data is global and impersonal, a related article looks at global freshwater inequality and more specific regions that have particularly vulnerable agricultural systems in this context.  The article compares America’s 1.3 million gallons per person in storage to Sub-Saharan Africa’s 26,400 gallons per person in storage.  Additionally nearly 94% of Sub-Saharan crops rely on rainwater alone.  As desertification expands and climate change forecasts call for less rain, massive regional food shortages become inevitable.

While this is certainly a grim forecast for extreme locations such as Africa, it is interesting to juxtapose other extreme situations such as contemporary Pakistan where historical flooding (a freshwater event) has overwhelmed and destroyed much of the countries crops, creating yet another food crisis.

As the International Water Management Institute’s (IWMI) World Water Week drives on this week, director Colin Chartres is calling for an increase in small-scale water storage infrastructures, especially in places like Sub-Saharan Africa where available freshwater is certain to decrease.  Given the juxtaposition of Pakistani flooding, I cannot help but imagine that large scale infrastructures should also be considered.  Imagine a temporary pipeline running from the mouth of the flooded Indus to newly constructed or existing reservoirs on the African continent (a minimum distance of 1400 miles).  One person’s crisis could be another’s salvation. Who would build such a thing? In times of environmental stability where would such temporary infrastructures be stored?  How would something at this scale be mobilized in real-time?  Regardless of these answer the global search for human homeostasis is certain.

Color enhanced Nasa before-and-after images of Pakistan's Indus River Valley

Aerial images showing a decrease in vegetation during a 2003 drought in southwest Africa

Additionally I wonder what role the city plays in this global equation.  The city is increasingly the habitat in which most humans live.  As a whole they have lots of people, but little naturally occurring fresh water and little if any agriculture.  Add the heat-sink effect in which cities are 2-8 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than natural and suburban hinterlands and, ecologically speaking, our cities seem like paved deserts, hot with little water or plant life… urban desertification

Image created for the Aigües de Barcelona in response to a 2008 drought in Barcelona

For more information on Barcelona’s water importing click here

While most citizens have mobility, cities remain quite fixed geographically.  Indeed we are stuck with our cities location, but not with their designs or ecologies.  Cities can change, be retrofitted and re-purposed and they must be, they always have been.  While this is certainly the responsibility of urban governance and citizenry, the architect/urban designer is poised to participate as the realizer of built form.  Formally and ecologically, how do our buildings respond to increasingly radicalized needs of water and food?  Do we simply add vending machines to all our buildings and call it a day? Can architecture (and thus the city) provide for the gamut of human needs.




One Prize: Mowing to Growing: Winners Announced
August 16, 2010, 1:52 am
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: ,

Hosted by Mitchell Joachim’s Terraform ONE, This One Prize competition asked:

How can we break the American love affair with the suburban lawn?

Can green houses be incorporated in skyscrapers?

What are the urban design strategies for food production in cities?

Can food grow on rooftops, parking lots, building facades?

What is required to remove foreclosure signs on lawns and convert them to gardens?

Responding to urban crisis was an essential premise of this competition and it is fascinating to see the range of results (both conceptual and graphical) from a diverse international group of designers and thinkers.  Generally the projects are a mix of design and research vizualization, and offer a lot of current data and ideas regarding ecological urbanism.  The work ranges from small front yard modifications, to a global system of productive levees to combat rising sea levels caused by climate change. I highly recommend spending some time looking at the winner, finalists, and semifinalist project pdf’s available on the site.  Each project includes 5 large boards.  Here are a few teaser images to spark your interest: 

1039: Converts highway berms into agricultural and socially productive landscapes

1029: Converts strip malls into cultural and agricultural hubs

1103: An urban levee system that protects and produces

1052: Farms and Parks along Toronto's drainage trenches

1042: Spiraling buildings designed for continuous gardens

1151: A networked loop of agricultural architectures

1153: Agricultural parks that leach off of New York City's tunnel exhausts



De-evolving: The Green City Forgotten
July 16, 2010, 4:31 am
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The Moment and Future of Architecture
June 22, 2010, 12:57 am
Filed under: Quotes | Tags: , ,

I will be attending the New York City book launch for Ecological Urbanism tomorrow evening with my good friend Nilus Klingel at the Storefront for Art and Architecture.  In preparations for the event I have been trying to learn more about Ecological Urbanism as an emerging pedagogical project.  Through a Harvard GSD blog I came across this telling quite below, where the author responds to her thoughts on the project:

“…to the more cynical, architectural fascination with this new concept has yet another significance: the concept of sustainability gave architecture a new purpose. According to this point of view, sustainability emerged not a moment to soon…just when the profession’s search for meaning (e.g. historicist trends of the late 20th c.) or the egocentrism of the signature designer (e.g., the legacy of modernism) had led to dead ends.” – Panayiota Pyla,” Counter Histories of Sustainability”, Volume #18


Books: Ecological Urbanism
June 10, 2010, 2:09 am
Filed under: Books | Tags: , ,

Ecological Urbanism

If you are interested in either ecological urbanism, landscape architecture, architecture, or environmentalism this is the ultimate field guide. Published as a summary and a continuation of conference held at Harvard University’s GSD April 3-5, 2009.  Naturally the conference, like the book, features nearly every critical figure in this rapidly growing field/mantra. While podcasts of the conference can be found at: http://ecologicalurbanism.gsd.harvard.edu/, this book takes the discussion a step further.  At about 600 pages Ecological Urbanism is a required stepping stone into the growing wealth of knowledge regarding the heath of our past/current/and future cities.  Expect to hear me quoting this books many times!

http://www.amazon.com/Ecological-Urbanism-Mohsen-Mostafavi/dp/3037781890/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1276135512&sr=8-1




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