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Science

China Planning For Sustainable Cities 529

TapeCutter writes "In a BBC article William McDonough says, 'The Stone Age did not end because humans ran out of stones. It ended because it was time for a re-think about how we live.' The Chineese appear to agree with him and have commissioned McDonough's company to create an environmentally sustainable village as a pilot project for the more ambitious idea of sustainable cities. McDonough and chemist Michael Braungart have also written a book on the subject, Cradle to Cradle, previously reviewed here on Slashdot."
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China Planning For Sustainable Cities

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  • Book recommendation. (Score:2, Informative)

    by crhylove ( 205956 )
    The book was really dry, but very informative, and from an engineering standpoint fascinating. I recommend it.
    • by Burz ( 138833 )
      "Carfree Cities" [carfree.com] by J.H. Crawford was an excellent read. In it, you can see there is a great deal to be relearned from pre-automobile cities, which were themselves solar powered. There are picturesque and quantative comparisons between cities like Venice, Italy and Los Angeles with the former being closer to the author's ideal. Crawford describes a new type of districting and city planning that includes emphasis on mixed-use residential areas, ubiquitous rail transport, and intimate pedestrian-only street
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 17, 2005 @07:29PM (#13089605)
    China would have a much easier job of planning like this when the people there can't challenge the government.

    In a free country that lived by the rule of law, the people have a right to object and challenge such reshaping of the land. Not in China, sadly.
    • Chinese philosophy of not given its citizens many rights its one of the worst things about the country, but there ability to do good is also alot greater, I think that this is one of the examples of the advantages.

      If we are all going to live on this planet I don't think we can all do what we like or the planet is going to run out of resources. Sometimes we need to be told/made to do things that we dont want to (Like polution and population control) and china have acted quickly and sensibly on both these iss

      • by demachina ( 71715 ) on Sunday July 17, 2005 @10:46PM (#13090606)
        " Sometimes we need to be told/made to do things that we dont want to (Like polution and population control)"

        Uh, China might have an advantage in population control now though they were way late in starting, but its my understanding China is a disaster on pollution control. Thanks to central planning and the desire to industrialize fast, they've massively overbuilt coal fired power plants and coal fired steel mills and put them next to pretty much every city. As they abandon sensible bicycles for cars in an effort to catch up to American's in wasting energy and pollution, I think some cities have air so bad its not just a long term health risk, it is an immediate health risk.

        One reason they have so many mining disasters is they mine so much coal. They along with the U.S. are probably the two leaders at fueling CO2 buildup and global warming.

        Problem with central planning is if the central planners make bad choices they can do a lot of damage fast. For example they have almost always opted for economic growth over environmental protection. Thanks to central planning they can grow their economy really fast and destory their environment really fast too. They can also insure no tree huggers get in their way, in contrast to the U.S. The fact enivornmentalist have clout in the U.S., though less then they did thanks to Republicans being in power, is one reason U.S. economic competitiveness is falling while our environment is improving some. Though environmental protection is just one of many, others being out of control health care costs, uncompetitively high wage rates, bad education, and workers lacking motivation.
        • This is All Wrong (Score:4, Interesting)

          by tjstork ( 137384 ) <todd.bandrowskyNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Monday July 18, 2005 @05:28AM (#13092070) Homepage Journal
          The reason China's economy is growing really fast is because they stopped centrally planning it. Yes they do have a lot of state sponsored works but the real dynamo of China's economy is that a lot of a generals in the Chinese army took their military contract funds and opened up factories to produce goods bound for America. Chinese banks now underwrite this production dramatically, so that, anyone in China can get a loan to start a factory if they can convince the bank they have a buyer in America for the goods that it produces.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      I feel helpless about my government's behaviour too. Voting doesn't seem to work (my choice being crushed last election). The only thing that demonstrating to express my dissatisfaction against the current administration does is summon police with tear gas.

      I live in the USA.

      I'm upset with my government, but do understand that it was indeed the majority choice. I think the majority were easily-manipulated idiots, but that's another conversation.

      Anyway, the main hope that I have for China is that capitalis
      • Anyway, the main hope that I have for China is that capitalism is alive and well there. People are free to earn and spend money, with all that entails.

        Right, because Capitalism unfettered by a Representative Democracy would be awesome.

        Take every abuse you've ever heard of in a capitalist system. Then take every abuse you've ever heard of in a totalitarian system. Then combine them, and multiply the capitalist abuses by the lack of accountability the totalitarian system provides.

        Western companies have
  • Living (Score:2, Interesting)

    by mboverload ( 657893 )
    If this were anywhere but China I doubt this would do anything but fail. Once people have tasted a style of living they do no want to go back down. As evidenced by bank robbers you need to keep on robbing because they are burning tens of thosands of dollars a week on drugs.
    • Re:Living (Score:4, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 17, 2005 @07:54PM (#13089730)
      As a bank robber, I take offense. I much prefer well-crafted wines to crude street drugs.
    • You're right. China is about the only place they could pull this off socially/politically/culturally... And even then they will need to be quick about it. They have caught the car culture bug. This planet cannot cope with another billion people consuming like us Americans.
  • by rdean400 ( 322321 ) on Sunday July 17, 2005 @07:31PM (#13089616)
    Sorry to sound like a cynic, but it's this kind of innovation that our IP laws will obstruct. Someone in the U.S. and the E.U. will get a patent on the very idea of sustainable cities and cause the whole thing to get bogged down in licensing.
  • They'll need them (Score:5, Insightful)

    by winkydink ( 650484 ) * <sv.dude@gmail.com> on Sunday July 17, 2005 @07:31PM (#13089620) Homepage Journal
    seeing as most of there current cities are polluted beyond repair. Clean drinking water from the tap? I guess if you're cholera-resistant.
    • Re:They'll need them (Score:3, Informative)

      by LadyLucky ( 546115 )
      Hmm, I've just come back from China myself. The tap water is heavily chlorinated. I wouldn't drink it, but it won't kill you.

      Yes, the cities are dirty, but no more so than European cities of 100 years ago. If they need to be cleaned up they can be. It just requires money and/or willpower, neither of which China has in abundance.

  • by kc32 ( 879357 ) on Sunday July 17, 2005 @07:32PM (#13089621)
    You mean like the ones the Greeks had over 2000 years ago?
    • You mean like the ones the Greeks had over 2000 years ago?

      The ones where somewhere between 70 and 90% of the population were slaves, where only free-born, sane, non-criminal, adult males were enfranchised, empires routinely extorted vast tributes out of their "allies", that is to say when they weren't enslaving them or committing genocide, foreigners had no rights, respectable women were rarely allowed to go outdoors, folks were happy to take water from cholera-infested public wells, and people someti

    • by Roger_Wilco ( 138600 ) on Sunday July 17, 2005 @08:04PM (#13089784) Homepage

      The Greeks are a bad choice of example. Here's what Plato had to say about a once fertile region, destroyed by the kind of irrigation now being heavily practiced in California, among other places:

      What now remains compared with what then existed is like the skeleton of a sick man, all the fat and soft earth having wasted away.... Mountains which now have nothing but food for bees ... had trees not very long ago. [The land] was enriched by the yearly rains, which were not lost to it, as now, by flowing from the bare land into the sea; but the soil was deep, and therein received the water, and kept it in the loamy earth ... feeding springs and streams running everywhere. Now only abandoned shrines remain to show where the springs once flowed.

      (Quoted in A Short History of Progress by Ronald Wright. Go read it. A complete English translation of Critas is here [mit.edu].)

      Has it never seemed strange to you that the area called the "Fertile Crescent", mostly Iraq and Israel, is now anything but fertile? It's that way because of too little long-term vision in farming practices. We have been stressing our environment for a long time.

      • by SQL Error ( 16383 ) on Sunday July 17, 2005 @09:55PM (#13090306)
        The problem in Greece, the formerly fertile crescent, northern Africa (the bread basket of the Roman Empire) and similar areas is deforestation. Clear the trees for your pastures, and sooner or later you'll find that the land has degraded to the point that your pasture is too poor to support cattle anymore. So you bring in sheep, and they degrade the land even further. You end up herding goats, which can live on anything, but prevent the land from ever recovering.

        The solution is to come up with something that does for goats what myxomatosis did for rabbits.

        • The solution is to come up with something that does for goats what myxomatosis did for rabbits.

          The solution is to come up for somthing that does to people what Calicivirus did for rabbits. I think the Australians are working on it.
          • The solution is to come up for somthing that does to people what Calicivirus did for rabbits. I think the Australians are working on it.

            We call him "Steve Irwin".

            "The affected rabbits show symptoms of depression, sadness, anorexia dysnea, incoordination, crying, shaking and other nervous signs just before they die."
  • Peak Oil (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 17, 2005 @07:34PM (#13089631)
    I guess China is preparing for the peak oil event. We should be doing that same in North America.
    • I for one am glad I'm not the only one thinking about Peak Oil [wikipedia.org]. I read a local newspaper article with a man stating that Peak Oil would happen around Thanksgiving this year! And although, IMO it won't happen until 2007 or by at the latest of 2020 but it's something we should seriously consider being the gas prices are going up and up.

      The question each of us must ask is:

      What will you do when gas reaches $5 per gallon?

      What will you do when it reaches $10?

      I guess I'll be taking the bus instead of driving b
      • Re:Peak Oil (Score:4, Insightful)

        by SQL Error ( 16383 ) on Sunday July 17, 2005 @08:44PM (#13089997)
        There's good reason to believe that "Peak Oil" is already here. This is it. These are the painfully high gas prices we were warned about. (Historically speaking, gas prices today are horrifying. Ask your parents.)

        The question each of us must ask is:

        What will you do when gas reaches $5 per gallon?


        Move to Alberta and get rich?

        As of now Japan, China, and the EU are dumping tons of resources into this, but I've yet to hear anything about the US government acting on it.

        There's one big problem: There is no viable alternative to oil, even at current prices. But if the price keeps going up, there will be. Gas will never hit $10 per gallon, because even without subsidies biofuels cost less than that to produce. We don't need to dump tons of resources into it, because the situation will correct itself automatically. From the perspective of biofuel producers, Peak Oil is just a business opportunity.

        When we run out of oil, it doesn't mean we run out of fuel, it means we run out of cheap fuel. We use oil because it's cheap. When it's cheaper to use alcohol produced from corn, we'll use that instead.

        This will slow economic growth, of course, but there's not going to be any economic collapse outside of Saudi Arabia and Venezuela. In the big picture, oil doesn't really matter that much.
        • Re:Peak Oil (Score:5, Insightful)

          by WazzTheWizz ( 877408 ) on Sunday July 17, 2005 @10:15PM (#13090411)
          It simply amazes me when Americans talk of gas (petrol) being expensive at $2.20. You guys are practically getting the stuff for free. Try comparing your price with the UK ($7.00 a gallon, pretty much anywhere in Europe or even Australia (where driving distances are also very large). At the ridicuolously cheap US prices, it's no wonder the stuff is wasted in big gas guzzlers.
          • Re:Peak Oil (Score:3, Informative)

            by SQL Error ( 16383 )
            In Australia, I think it currently works out at $3.30 a gallon. More expensive than the US, but far cheaper than Europe. (The difference is basically taxes. Fuel taxes in Europe are horrifying.)
          • Re:Peak Oil (Score:4, Insightful)

            by dabigpaybackski ( 772131 ) on Monday July 18, 2005 @12:56AM (#13091247) Homepage
            It simply amazes me when Americans talk of gas (petrol) being expensive at $2.20. You guys are practically getting the stuff for free.

            Sure, if you don't consider the 400-plus billion we spend annually on "defense." It's a collossal subsidy.

          • Cheap Oil (Score:3, Insightful)

            by amightywind ( 691887 )

            It simply amazes me when Americans talk of gas (petrol) being expensive at $2.20. You guys are practically getting the stuff for free. Try comparing your price with the UK ($7.00 a gallon, pretty much anywhere in Europe

            We in the US are equally amazed that you in Europe are willing to pay 80% fuel taxes to your rapacious socialist governments.

            • Re:Cheap Oil (Score:3, Insightful)

              by Knuckles ( 8964 )
              Because, you know, it might actually be better to not change your whole life and culture to confirm to the needs of cars, car culture, and car economy, but the other way round
        • Re:Peak Oil (Score:4, Informative)

          by ArmorFiend ( 151674 ) on Sunday July 17, 2005 @11:08PM (#13090718) Homepage Journal
          There's good reason to believe that "Peak Oil" is already here. This is it. These are the painfully high gas prices we were warned about. (Historically speaking, gas prices today are horrifying. Ask your parents.)


          In 1981 the cost of a gallon of gas was $3 in 2005 dollars. See "The Oil Uproar that Isn't." [nytimes.com]

          So we pretty much know that the threshold for economic shit hitting the fan is between $2 and $3 per gallon in 2005 dollars, eh?
      • At $5/gal I will continue my 27 mile commute at 50MPG 3 times a week. at $10/gal I will consider moving closer to work, and probably decide against it. High gas prices will not stop people from commuting or travelling or shipping*, it will stop frivolous car travel like twice-a-day trips to the corner market and 5-times-a-day trips to school/daycare/practice/etc to pick up or drop off the kids. Tally up your gas usage (use simple estimates of short and long trips and city or highway efficiencies) and you
      • What will you do when gas reaches $5 per gallon?

        ...I'm a european. $5 per gallon would be considered cheap over here...

    • Re:Peak Oil (Score:3, Funny)

      by Sir_Real ( 179104 )
      I guess China is preparing for the peak oil event. We should be doing that same in North America.

      We'll get to it. Right after we're done converting to metric.
  • Inevitable (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Bullfish ( 858648 )
    If we are going to survive this type of development is what is required. The rate of development in the world with former developing countries not only approaching western levels of living, but western levels of consumption, in accelerating not slowing. While people make not want to "go backwards" in terms of how they live, it may be the only alternative if they want to live.

    Whether or not this particular project will succeed, sustainable cities are coming and it's a good thing. Right now, it runs contrary
    • Re:Inevitable (Score:3, Interesting)

      by SB5 ( 165464 )
      What is really annoying is 60% of a cities space is dedicated to cars.

      That could be easiler utilized by small farms...

      Sustainable cities have been dreams since the 60s. Even a half-assed one, but well done in existence, especially since it hasn't received much funding.

      http://www.arcosanti.org/ [arcosanti.org]
      • http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0179641/ [imdb.com]

        "Some movies of the seventies seem to have been made yesterday;not this one.It's in fact one of the most dated works of its era.It's some gentler version of "Themroc" ,less pretentious, funny (in places) but not necessarily more palatable .

        There's no story,but a spate of minisketches ,some of them witty,("There's no more property,so there're no more thieves" the warden says while opening the cells ),a lot of them tedious and repetitive.There was enough material to make
      • Re:Inevitable (Score:4, Interesting)

        by SQL Error ( 16383 ) on Sunday July 17, 2005 @09:12PM (#13090111)
        That could be easiler utilized by small farms...

        No.

        No no no no no no no no no.

        This is a really, really, really stupid idea.

        Small farms suck. We had small farms for about 8000 years, and they sucked. 90% of the population was trapped in back-breaking labour and poverty.

        Now we have big farms. Big farms allow us to use big machinery, which makes farming roughly one hundred times more efficient. The result of that is that I can get paid (by comparison) a small fortune to sit at a desk and fiddle with databases, and never have to look at the rear end of an ox. Food is good, cheap and plentiful because we don't have small farms.

        The reason people throughout the third world are heading to the city (even if they end up in shanty towns) is that small farms suck. Living in a slum on the outskirts of Bombay or Mexico City may suck, but living on a small farm is even worse.
        • Re:Inevitable (Score:3, Insightful)

          by pyat ( 303115 )
          > Living in a slum on the outskirts of Bombay or
          > Mexico City may suck, but living on a small farm
          > is even worse.
          Really?
          Thinking about this, I doubt that can be true. I know small farmers, and I know that mostly it's a fairly ok way of life. Depends what farming you're doing, but often there isn't as much work as you'd expect. Mostly it's very seasonal, so there are periods when it's very hard, and other times when you're not doing much at all (at which time you start mending fences and doing w
  • Boil water first... (Score:5, Informative)

    by HockeyPuck ( 141947 ) on Sunday July 17, 2005 @07:48PM (#13089698)
    I recently came back from China on a business trip... I stayed in a expensive hotel... and they warned me at the front desk that I should use bottled water for everything. Not just drinking, but brushing my teeth, washing my face etc..

    If I needed more water for such activities all I had to do was call the front desk and they provide it free of charge.
    • by Feyr ( 449684 ) on Sunday July 17, 2005 @08:02PM (#13089776) Journal
      not to say that some sources are not contaminated with whatever, but that's not the reason most of the time.

      that advice is usually given to all foreigners going anywhere but the most developped countries. the fact is, the water is not cleaned (if it is) the same way as what your system is used to.

      locals can drink and abuse it without getting sick because they're used to it. your system, weakened by years of overtreated water, simply can't cope with it.

      • I heard a really interesting theory that locals can cope with the local water because of the bacteriophage in their stomaches. If a local in an area with bad water moves to a far removed area with bad water, they get sick themselves since they don't have the right phage to protect them.

        It offers an interesting, as yet unutilized solution for 'montezuma's revenge.' There's a clinic in N. Mexico on the border based on S. Georgian technology from Tblisi which is the closest I've seen to offering this stuff to
    • Did you shower in bottled water too?
    • In Singapore the hotels have signs telling people that the tap water is in fact safe to drink. In China, it depends on where you are. I happen to know that there are safe drinking water projects going on in many places. However, it is not just a matter of filtering and chlorinating the water - you also need to establish test labs for quality control. In most places, the water is actually generally safe, but untested.
    • I recently came back from China on a business trip... I stayed in a expensive hotel... and they warned me at the front desk that I should use bottled water for everything. Not just drinking, but brushing my teeth, washing my face etc..

      If I needed more water for such activities all I had to do was call the front desk and they provide it free of charge.


      I also recently came back from a visit to china. The only reason you do this is to prevent travellers diahria. Even brushing your teeth introduces foreign b
  • Separation? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by millennial ( 830897 ) on Sunday July 17, 2005 @07:50PM (#13089710) Journal
    Would such a society benefit from being separated from the outside world? Obviously a city can't be self-sustainable if its citizens wants things from outside the city. It seems to me that this concept just isn't practical, mainly because of the level of interdependence and globalization we've developed in the more modern nations.
    • Re:Separation? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Jeremi ( 14640 ) on Sunday July 17, 2005 @08:12PM (#13089825) Homepage
      Obviously a city can't be self-sustainable if its citizens wants things from outside the city.


      It's not about what citizens want, it's about what they need. A city can sustain itself with or without access to neat gadgets from Japan. A city cannot sustain itself without water and food.


      It seems to me that this concept just isn't practical, mainly because of the level of interdependence and globalization we've developed in the more modern nations.


      Practical compared to what? Compared to the status quo, where there is plenty of fossil fuel to go around? Probably not. Compared to starving to death because you didn't plan ahead for clearly forseeable problems? Very practical.

    • What if all your citizens desires could be transported from the outside via the internet. Movies, games, music and various other etertainment. You don't really need those SUVs and pretty trinkents of jewlrey to occupy your time but more or less for status symbols.

      The thing about Eastern cultures is they are more about conforming or at least not standing out as they are about status symbols.

      Or perhaps they are more pratical about wants and needs seeing MMOGs are more popular over there.
  • Penn Jillette and Raymond Teller's (Penn & Teller) great show Bullshit did a great show last season on recycling. In short, recycling does allow reuse of some resources, but does not appear to damage less environment, or use less energy, or even consume much less space than just throwing everything away.

    As far as the pure basis for modern cities are concerned, would this lead to a truly successful competitive society as a first priority? I'd certainly hope so - and applaud China for looking into it,
    • The problem I had with that particular episode of Bullshit! was that they seemed to miss the point that some recycling has to be done since the materials we use are non-renewable, such as plastic. I don't claim to be an expert, but plastic is a by-product of oil. When the oil runs out, no more plastic.

      Sure, it's cheaper to throw it away _now_, but it will be more expensive to dig up old plastic later on than to recycle what we have now.

      • people who make the "when the oil runs out" argument always presume that the current known deposits of oil are the only ones in the world. That, of course, is stupid. Not only have we not tapped all the known oil wells, we havn't even begun to find the vast number of ocean located oil deposits. Finally, should we actually run dry all the crude oil wells, we can still make plastic by manufacturing plants.. just like we can make biodiesel and other hydrocarbons. Hell, with advanced genetic engineering we
      • I certainly agree - I'm more than a bit of a liberal in terms of environment, and environmental policy (and almost everything else). But until the market will sustain the active recovery of used materials, a non-socialist capitol-based society just won't realistically reward such action. That makes it quite inneficient to recycle plastics and the like, even for the more socialist nations.

        What would be probably most efficient, under those circumstances, would be to work on policy to limit the use of unsus
      • I don't claim to be an expert, but plastic is a by-product of oil. When the oil runs out, no more plastic.

        Nope, wrong.

        We make plastic from oil because that's the cheapest way to do it. We can make it from coal instead (which we have in sufficient quantity to last hundreds of years) or from plants. It will just cost more.
      • by jmichaelg ( 148257 ) on Sunday July 17, 2005 @08:55PM (#13090047) Journal
        I don't claim to be an expert, but plastic is a by-product of oil. When the oil runs out, no more plastic.

        Plastic can be made from lots of different oils, not just petroleum. George Washington Carver [about.com] managed to convert peanut oil to plastic.

    • In short, recycling does allow reuse of some resources, but does not appear to damage less environment, or use less energy, or even consume much less space than just throwing everything away.

      So you're saying that recycling allows reuse of resources, and takes up less space? Sounds like it's preferable to the other option then. Even if it came out the same, I'd rather be developing and deploying better recycling technologies (which might lead to something much further in the black in the future) than di
    • by bani ( 467531 ) on Sunday July 17, 2005 @08:52PM (#13090030)
      I'm with P&T on most of their "Bullshit" episodes, but P&T missed some of the most important points of recycling. You really don't want to be dumping used motor oil, mercury thermometers, and lead-acid car batteries into landfills.

      For the biodegradable stuff, fine. Dump it and let it rot. Or burn it as fuel. Whatever. But a lot of stuff isn't biodegradable -- plastics and glass for example.
    • Penn Jillette and Raymond Teller's (Penn & Teller) great show Bullshit did a great show last season on recycling.

      You know, I really wish Penn and Teller would do an episode of Bullshit about themselves. Seriously doubt it, though. One common characteristic I see in self proclaimed skeptics is that they rarely apply their craft to themselves.

      Sometimes I think they just have run out of ideas and just need to make filler shows. In the case of that particular episode, they were attacking a strawman the entire time. A ten year old could refute their argument. They constantly harped on the "recycling takes more energy" argument, while completely ignoring that lower energy usage is not the point of recycling. Not to mention that it's painfully obvious that, if you put effort into reusing a nonrenewable resource, you will expend energy in that effort. Duh.
  • Just checking (Score:3, Interesting)

    by mcc ( 14761 ) <amcclure@purdue.edu> on Sunday July 17, 2005 @08:15PM (#13089837) Homepage
    Would the "green"/"sustainable"/"quality of life" innovations of living in this city happen to include not being beaten when taken into police custody? [rfa.org]

    Just curious...
    • certainly the beatings and censorship of ideas and religion will be an integral part of any Chinese "sustainable city", since the sustainability of the The People's Government is always of foremost consideration
    • Re:Just checking (Score:3, Interesting)

      by king-manic ( 409855 )
      Would the "green"/"sustainable"/"quality of life" innovations of living in this city happen to include not being beaten when taken into police custody?

      Just curious...


      Hmm.... China is bad for such things. But generally you have as much a chance of being beaten by the police in the US [wikipedia.org] as in china. In china, if you follow the rules generally nothign happens to you. Very much the same for the states, except for the crime is worse.
  • The Stone Age did not end because humans ran out of stones. It ended because it was time for a re-think about how we live.

    You know Barney, this working with stone tools is so ice age. I mean, we are settled now. We have shoes and clothes. We are modern men.

    I know what you mean Fred. We are no longer uncivilized. My family does not have to eat whatever happens to walk or grow nearby. I have a farm and domisticated animals. I can't be using my father tools. I need more!

    And howdy. Instead of

  • It's a beginning... (Score:3, Informative)

    by userlame ( 885195 ) on Sunday July 17, 2005 @08:42PM (#13089984)
    This is the first time I've seen anyone really discussing this. I'm glad to see it. This is going to be an extrememly important issue in our lifetimes.

    Good reading: http://www.ishmael.com/Education/Writings/The_New_ Renaissance.shtml [ishmael.com]

    And some great books: http://www.newtribalventures.com/ntv/market/catego ry.cfm?Category=11#72 [newtribalventures.com]
  • Ages (Score:5, Funny)

    by Boronx ( 228853 ) <.evonreis. .at. .mohr-engineering.com.> on Sunday July 17, 2005 @08:55PM (#13090048) Homepage Journal
    The Stone Age did not end because humans ran out of stones.

    No, but the Age of Democracy might.
  • by tmortn ( 630092 ) on Monday July 18, 2005 @02:28AM (#13091566) Homepage
    I think more than anything a modern city needs to find someway to manage multiple means of travel and keep them seperated. IE have a pedestrian system that does not impinge or become obstructed by vehicle travel.

    I would like to see a system that could allow for 4-5 types of right of way. Say

    1- Pedestrian. Except for residential there would be no mingling of pedestrian right of way and vehicle right of way. The pedestrian right of way would be non-powered only. Foot/pedal etc... Maybe powered in the class of segway/electric bike/scooter. Say 20/mph limitation.

    2- Light vehicle. I mean Golf Cart light. Strict HP/speed max limitation on the vehicle but not on the paths themselves. Use elevated and sunken tram ways as much as possible to avoid intersecting traffic. max of 40mph

    3- Regular Vehicle traffic. Highway through traffic, right of way to parking lots etc... Max 100mph. Again avoid intersecting traffic as much as possible.

    4- Frieght. Transfer trucks busses etc... access to industrial and commercial areas for delivery or perhaps central unloading zones that utilize lighter vehicles for last mile pallet delivery.

    5- Mass Transit. If mass transit were isolated and designed from the begining to have its own right of way then scheduling can be far more consistent and if designed from the get go far more possible to solve the point to point travel inefficiency most systems face.

    You would have to pretty much build a city from the ground up to manage something like this as it would require multiplane usage to enable roughly equivalent access to almost all points. You could probably have pedestrian and light vehicle more or less in the same plane and use tunnels and light strcutures for elevating the traffic out of each others way. Then utilize deeper/higher structures for the other. Mostly I would suggest burying the heavy/transit/regular vehicle traffic which would allow you to route the exhaust fumes for management. Require electric or other non-polluting method of power for light vehicles and keep it above ground.

    Regulate speed largely via hardware limitations rather than operator limitations and do as much as possible to avoid intersecting traffic. By this I don't mean regulators on the equipment. I mean keep like vehicles in similar zones of travel and keep them headed the same direction. If you have roughly equivalent vehicles together traveling at similar speeds and rarely if ever encountering intersecting traffic then speed isn't much of a concern.

    The primary idea would be to make light vehicle traffic the primary means of personal transportation around a city. Cars as we think of them would become more of a long distance/rural solution for personal travel essentially limiting them to primary arteries and as possible off ramps into common areas of commerce (ie the mall/grocery store etc...). The design limitations and requirements of the light vehicles would be the ability to survive most any concievable wreck possible. IE the intersection of technology to protect passangers in Head on/T-bone collisions. This should drasticly reduce the amout of traffic deaths. No more pedestrian/vehicle interaction. NO more massive inequality of mass interactions and largely reduced chances of intersecting traffic creating worst case scenario crashes. Also with keeping the light vehicles cheap and that much safer would reduce insurance and maintenece costs.

    Freight keeps the craziest mix of vehicle classes apart. No more massive 18 wheelers and honda civics mixing it up. Also should allow again for tighter schedules and create less congestion. Also having them on specific roadways would mean not having to over engineer general right of ways to handle their level of stress. Mass Transist systems almost HAVE to have their own right of way else they are useless (see most buss systems in any congested metropolis)
  • by KlaymenDK ( 713149 ) on Monday July 18, 2005 @02:54AM (#13091644) Journal
    ...both by Hundertwasser and by South American engineers. It's good to see scaling-up attempts.

    There was this Austrian chap (he's dead you see) who called himself Friedensreich Hundertwasser (his real name was Friedrich Stowasser) who had all sorts of wonderfully wonky ideas about how to design living spaces in synergy with nature.
    An absolute lack of square angles is definitely a trademark of his, along with an abundance of colours. There are a number of exhibits and presentations about the man and his works -- here is the home page of the official museum in Vienna, which is definitely worth a visit.
    http://www1.kunsthauswien.com/english/mainindex.ht m [kunsthauswien.com]
    As you can see, Hunderwassers ideas were revolutionary (perhaps too much so), but it has set a trail for other people to follow.

    "Other people" recently turned out to be architect Shah Jaafar and professor Kamaruzzaman Sopian of the Advanced Engineering Centre at Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, who have shown (sorry, no link available) that it is indeed possible to make housing that gets by exclusively on solar power and hydrogen, both of which are natural and infinitely renewable resources (okay, maybe not infinitely, but I'm sure you'll agree it's close enough). This is interesting reading, and sheds a positive light on the future. Maybe there's a way around the current energy- and pollution-related problems of our world after all?

Do you suffer painful hallucination? -- Don Juan, cited by Carlos Casteneda

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