FutureCityLab (ftr.ct.lb)

Future City Lab (ftr.ct.lb) is an open-source initiative for designing our future urban environments. ftr.ct.lb is generating with the means of crowd sourcing a positive utopia for 2050.

ftr.ct.lb is a collaboration of leading engineers, universities and scientists worldwide in or- der to elaborate a (positive) urban vision for the next generations.
This vision should help to establish the planning directions that we need to take today.

See more visions and join the discussion here ftrctlb.com


We love 2050!

EAT MORE CARROTS!

Are you interested in urban farming and worried about the future food supply? Then you should definitely listen to this 6min interview with Prof. Dr. Mark Gorgolewski. Mark is not only concerned about how in future we will be able to meet demands in food of a 9Billion population in 2050 but he is also interested in giving somepossible answers in his “Carrot City” initiative.

We are happy that Mark is a supporting member of the FutureCityLab family and is willing to share his knowledge with all of you.  

If you liked his short introduction please let us also know what is your vision for a sustainable future vision. Think the un-thinkable. Think 2050.

Source: ftrctlb.com

We wish for you to join the open-source platform Future City Lab and collectively THINK THE UNTHINKABLE. Participate, share knowledge, establish synergies and create a sustainable roadmap to give rise to the future city 2.0 by 2050.

Climate Change, rapidly growing megacities and the need for new energy sources are challenges we can leverage to develop cities that are vibrant, energy-efficient and sustainable. In the spirit of TED, ftr.ct.lb is a platform for open discussion; using the power of collective ideas to shape a future vision of the city 2.0.

Future City Lab is an open-source initiative created by a worldwide collaboration of leading engineers, universities and scientists using crowd sourcing in order to launch a sustainable future by 2050.

Cities all over the world are facing the biggest challenge in history to immediately and drastically reduce CO2 emissions to combat climate change. Cities need to respond to increasing temperatures, frequency of storms and limited resources. The trend of people moving from rural to urban areas makes cities the focal point in the search for solutions.

City 2.0 adapts to the climate, is built sustainably realizing a CO2 neutral building stock, and is liveable for 2 billion new inhabitants. Increased density is addressed through the optimized use of façades as vertical parks or for energy generation.

This requires a massive change within a short time. To meet these challenges leading engineers, universities and scientists worldwide collaborate to initiate the Future City Lab. By sharing their knowledge and leading discussions about possible solutions, a comprehensive roadmap takes shape. This roadmap will function as a springboard for planners to find solutions and establish the planning directives needed today.

Future City Lab is aiming to revolutionise the design of our future living and city environment. Visions, research results and specialized knowledge are made public for students and experts. By using a web-based platform everyone in the world can participate to investigate, design and illustrate visions in selected cities solving their specific problems. The visions are created for a real site in a city; first the current conditions are shown and then transformed to a sustainable concept of the site. Users may comment and contribute to the visions as a starting point for professional discourse within a mosaic of ideas accessible to everyone.

Urban planning is the design of the unfinished; it is a process that is driven by change. Focusing on collective participation all authors and web users may participate in the development of City 2.0. Take part in shaping the future – join ftr.ct.lb

Universities already in the ftr.ct.lb network: Alghero Italy, ESA Paris, ETH Zürich, UPenn, TU Delft, Syracuse NY, Ryerson Toronto, IUAV Venezia, ANCB Berlin.

humanscalecities:

That´s it, Human Scale Cities tumblr and blog owe so much to this man.

citybreaths:

JAN GEHL ON THE HUMAN SCALE OF CITIES

Inspiring talk by Danish architect, author and urban consultant Jan Gehl, one of the very few out there that study human behaviour in relation to the urban environment on the small scale. Every time, his words impress me.

He sees the city as being built at a city scale, site scale, and people scale, but feels that most architects and urban planners completely ignore the people scale. They create cities from an aerial view and ignore the life between buildings that truly makes the space work. In his practice he seeks to re-orient the city away from cars and towards the pedestrian and cyclist in order to make healthy and happy cities. 

Related post:
Cities for people 

Source: citybreaths

Interview with Christos Passas.

Christos Passas Architect , London, Great Britain

Christos is an Associate Director at Zaha Hadid Architects. He has worked in the firm as a Senior Designer since February 1998. He was the Project Director and Lead Designer for numerous projects and winning competitions, including most notably the Sterling Prize nominee, the Phaeno Science Centre Wolfsburg, completed in November 2005. The Phaeno was nominated by the Guardian Newspaper as one of the 50 best buildings of the 20th century, together with the Sidney Opera House, the Fallingwater the TWA terminal and others.

about Guests critics from final presentation

Alessandro Melis/Universita di Sassari
Martin Bechthold/GSD Harvard University
Peter Magyar/Kansas State University
Ulf Meyer/Berlin. Kansas State University

about this Talk

Comments and suggestions of critics DIA studio ftr.ct.lb* on final presantation

-How will density increase CO2
-Density can’t be measured like population
-Better to have more info on effect of area
-Talk about how things relate
-Make a functional environment that has a good Quality of Life
-Make everything edible!
-Look at the bigger picture
-Talk back to the architecture
-Think about structure
-Relate issues to your city specifically
-Think of new typologies to deal with climate change
-Talk about density and how to infrastructure relates
-How do we deal with historical buildings and how to transform them to respond to the climate
-Think about different solutions
-A vision should be radical and propose something more than what is existing
-The vision should be something that goes beyond what is done today… make it radical
-Make sure the system is applicable to your city
-Great research!

 

about Daniel Dendra

In 2007 anOtherArchitect [aA] was founded by Daniel Dendra as a multidisciplinary platform for digital design with a focus on sustainable strategies, connections between virtual networks and real tectonics and urban design processes. Ever since aA has served as a cooperative platform for architects, artists, fashion designers, landscape architects, environmental specialists and structural engineers.

Before founding aA Daniel Dendra was working at various design offices in London, Moscow, Düsseldorf and Rotterdam such as A.M.O. (Rem Koolhaas) and Zaha Hadid Architects.

In 2008 Daniel was nominated for the International Chernikhov Prize. His work was widely exhibited at locations such as the Royal Academy Summer Show 2008 (London), the International Model Festival in Budapest in 2008, Milan Furniture Fair 2009, Furnex Cairo 2009, Parametric Prototypes (Xian – China) 2009, +20 Cairo 2010 and the Venice Architecture Biennale 2010.

After leading a studio together with Dr. Jenny Lowe at Brighton University (UK) Daniel Dendra was appointed visiting professor at DIA (Dessau Institute of Architecture | Bauhaus Dessau) in 2007 where he is leading a design studio. Since 2010 Daniel has become a studio master of GREENlab together with Thomas Auer (Transsolar) at the Ecole Spéciale d ́Architecture in Paris (ESA Paris).

In 2008 Daniel was curator of CANactions 2009 – a festival for young architects in Kiev, Ukraine.

Daniel Dendra is a founding partners of the OpenSourceDesign Network: OpenSimSim (OpenJapan), ftr.ct.lb*.

about this Talk

Daniel Dendra talks about relationship between the topics of projects of ftr.ct.lb*

Interview with Stefan Tischer.

Teacher and landscape architect. Born in Ausburg (German), he graduated from Munich Polytechnic and has studied at Munich, Versailles and Italy. He has taught at the Munich Polytechnic, The W.. art academy in Berlin, and in other Italian faculties as a temporary lecturer. From 2002 to 2006 he was director and associated professor of the Landscape architecture department of the University of Montreal.

He collaborates with CUPEUM, Chaire Unesco of Paysage et Environment for their international activity and research in to suburban landscapes. He has partecipied in the Bolzano Habitat research (2001), he directed the group Napoli Campi Flegrei of the international research Urban Catalyst of the EU. He collaborates with Sardinian region Landscape Observatory and has been president of the jury for Sardinian Landscape Prize (2007).

He has written several articles on contemporary and historical landscape architecture which have been published in the journal GGGGG…, and in the several books. He participated in 1992 in foundation of Topos Journal. Since 2008 he is a member of scientific committee of the “Città con vista” series. From 1995 to 2002 he ha directed the Berlin office of Burger-Tischer and later the Tischer studio in Montreal (2202-2006).

His projects include: the exterior of Dresden University, the garden exhibition park at Potsdam, experimental garden at Metis and Montreal and Padula (for Ortus Artis). Prizes include: Fontana Candida park in Rome (1st prize 2006) , Kaisaniemi in Helsinky (1st 2001) garden city of Hellerau (1st prize 1998), ex female concentration camp in Ravensbruck (1st 1998) Hannover expo (4th 1996) and K… quarter in Berlin (1995).

Petrova Ksenia 

Introduction

Future Cities:

- In  search of  the  best, the  urban population will travel to the  planet.

- Cities will be able to  move along, with their inhabitans.

-City NOMADS.

Interview with Polina Plotkina

Source: http

Dr.Omar Akbar is a German urbanist and architect, and the Executive Director of the Bauhaus Dessau Foundation. He was born in Afghanistan and attended primary school in Kabul, and undertook university and graduate training in architecture and urban design at the Technical University in Berlin. His Master’s thesis (1976) concentrated on the process of urbanization in developing countries, using India as an example, and his doctoral thesis (1981) was a comparison of the social behaviour and the construction and spatial organization of mahals, which led to the development of the theory of Islamic living quarters. Professor Akbar worked as an architect in several offices in Germany while at the same time teaching in Berlin. He was the team leader (1981-82) of the development project for Al-Karkh (an area of Baghdad), and a consultant to GTZ (German Agency for Technical Development) from 1987 to 1993 for urban development projects in Banjul (Gambia), Sana’a (Yemen), and Aswan (Egypt). He also served as a UNESCO consultant on Cairo in 1991 and 1992. From 1993 to 1998, he was professor of urban design and the theory of architecture at the Technical University for Applied Sciences in Dessau, before taking up the position of Executive Director of the Bauhaus Dessau Foundation in 1998.

At present Urban Curator and Professor for Theory of Architecture and Urban Design at the University for Applied Sciences in Dessau.

2008- Present the University for Applied Sciences Professor for Theory of Architecture and Urban Des Dessau, Germany

2002-2008-IBA 2010 Saxony Anhalt Executive Director Dessau, Germany

1998-2008-Bauhaus Dessau Foundation Executive Director Dessau, Germany

1994-1998-University for Applied Sciences Professor for Theory of Architecture and Urban Des Dessau, Germany

1992-1994-University of Arts Berlin Associate Professor Berlin, Germany

1981-1992-Self-employed Architect and Urbanist Bagdad, Afghanistan

Interview with Olga Kovrikova about her topic for Ftr.ct.lb. She tells about the site, her predictions and her most important element for the future.

 

Maksym Yurovnikov is a student of DIA, and is currently studying in Masters of Architecture.

Maksym Yurovnikov, of DIA Dessau, talks about his topic for ftr.ct.lb* He tells about the site, his predictions and his most important element for his future.

Interviewer

ftr.ct.lb*

Prabidhi Dixit is from Nepal and is currently studying Master Degree Program at DIA Dessau. 

about this Talk

Here, she talks about her site in Paris, her future predictions and important element in her vision in terms of Urban Heat Island effect.

Interviewerft.rct.lbYear2011