Peter Calthorpe: 7 principles for building better cities
Through his writing and his realized projects, Peter Calthorpe has spread the vision of New Urbanism, a framework for creating sustainable, human-scaled places. Full bio
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for climate change,
for three billion people.
of the urban environment.
in the world will save mankind,
on how we shape our cities:
is a manifestation
can help us solve climate change,
to be driving the problem.
and oil companies.
and I'll be upfront about that.
you think of, or many people think of,
of the metropolitan area.
anywhere, at any density.
is that it isolates people.
into economic enclaves
what we all need to be thinking about,
this massive construction project.
for the state of California
with reducing carbon emissions.
for how the state could grow,
overly simplified one.
through the year 2050,
in our state of California.
shopping malls, subdivisions,
not everybody moving to the city,
as streetcar suburbs,
mixed-used environments.
for the scale of the difference
in our city-making habit
a special interest group,
that used to advocate for their concerns
"co-benefits" of urban form
concerned about this,
that want open space nearby.
physical footprint.
carbon emission comes from cars,
on cars as much
that's what I was just talking about.
per household per year,
in the mid-26,000 per household,
not just on air quality and carbon
how do you fix it once we broke it --
of cities that we shape.
industry running amok.
too many of the wrong kind of housing:
middle-class family to afford
to their lifestyle anymore.
and get it sold.
the median is 50,000 --
who often sit off in their silos
separate from the politicians,
is what really brings about the change.
of bonds for transit
desirable land, the strip,
what you think of as an oxymoron,
everything isolated in superblocks,
that was just spoken to.
in China now is spent
of Chinese cities is robust.
interacting with your neighbors.
5,000 units in them,
because nobody knows anybody else.
a sidewalk, no ground floor shops --
here in one of the superblocks
shops in their garages
of local service economy.
to get it right is there.
on board and the politicians.
the alternative to sprawl
million people.
is a walking radius
called for green space
ecological features.
are auto-free streets.
leveling the site
that really wasn't normative in China
I dearly love.
of our streets to cars?
could move well for them,
so they could bike?
cities would function better.
they build in Beijing,
complete gridlock.
mixed use along the edge.
autonomous vehicles,
to talk about that later.
that have now been adopted
in the Chinese government,
I think, universal principles.
the natural environment, the history
but when I say mixed,
that you don't enjoy walking in.
are places you can walk.
means of transportation we know.
that put six meters of bike lane
to their biking history.
that allows many routes
instead of just one.
going to solve this for us.
to generate more traffic, more VMT,
based on transit
have to get reconnected
the structure of the city.
these changes are well accepted.
we can bring to bear now
political coalitions
the kinds of communities we all need.
autonomous driving, self-driving cars.
are very excited about them.
or issues about them?
there's almost too much hype here.
we're going to get rid of a lot of cars.
to get a lot more vehicle miles.
cars moving on streets.
people will travel greater distances.
that people won't share them.
increase in vehicle miles traveled.
a 30 percent increase in VMT.
having multiple people riding at once
without a steering wheel.
of vehicles -- you can do it
it doesn't matter.
that are going to be efficient electric,
is that walking, biking and transit
in their private bubbles,
to McDonald's to pick up a pack
kind of random errands
and I have to say, the images you showed
were really inspiring, really beautiful.
CA: Thank you for your work.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Peter Calthorpe - Urban designerThrough his writing and his realized projects, Peter Calthorpe has spread the vision of New Urbanism, a framework for creating sustainable, human-scaled places.
Why you should listen
Peter Calthorpe’s 30-year design practice is informed by the idea that successful places -- whether neighborhoods, towns, urban districts or metropolitan regions -- must be diverse in uses and users, must be scaled to the pedestrian and human interaction, and must be environmentally sustainable.
In the early 1990s, Calthorpe developed the concept of Transit Oriented Development (described in his book The Next American Metropolis: Ecology, Community and the American Dream) -- an idea that is now the foundation of many regional policies and city plans around the world. His 2010 book is Urbanism in the Age of Climate Change. Calthorpe Associates' work in Europe, Asia and the Middle East has demonstrated that community design with a focus on sustainability and scale can be adapted throughout the globe. His current work throughout China is focused on developing standards and examples of Low Carbon Cities in Beijing, Chongqing, Kunming, Zhuhai, Jinan and other major cities.
Peter Calthorpe | Speaker | TED.com