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Over 450 participants from fifteen countries participated in the Urban Age South America conference in São Paulo, Brazil. Presentations and in-depth discussions about strategies which enhance mobility, balance environmental pressures, create social cohesion and improve the physical form of the environments in which half the world’s population now live are available for download from the Urban Age South America conference programme. Conference highlights, commentary, photos, videos and a profile of the 2nd annual Deutsche Bank Urban Age Award winner, Edifício União offer a snapshot of the challenges and opportunities facing São Paulo and other South American cities. In other news, The Endless City was recognised by Business Week and Planetizen as their best books for the year.

Ricky Burdett
Director, Urban Age
Centennial Professor
in Architecture and Urbanism
London School of Economics

Wolfgang Nowak
Managing Director
Alfred Herrhausen Society

 

SÃO PAULO, BRAZIL, 3 - 5 DECEMBER 2008
Contributions from a cross-section of architects, planners, sociologists, economists, policymakers and activists shaped a lively debate about pioneering urban solutions to the challenge of city-making in the twenty-first century. This latest investigation into the future of cities provided an important sounding board about how to address today’s global urban pressures, including how to retrofit city centres to allow for new growth and implement a variety of policies and projects which support sustainable design priorities. Presentations and discussions available for download from the online conference programme.

CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS
Governor José Serra
, State of São Paulo, discusses his vision for São Paulo and the large-scale impact of cooperative urban governance.

Alejandro Aravena
, Executive Director of Elemental, presents innovative schemes for designing and financing low-income housing on central locations in Santiago de Chile.

Mayor Luis Casteñada Lossio, describes how the creation of 150 km of new stairs have transformed the lives of 2½ million residents in Lima.

Transportation and transformation in New York. Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan, New York City Department of Transportation, presents the city's sustainable transport agenda.

Richard Sennett
, Professor of Sociology, LSE and New York University, discusses the design logic of selected architectural projects and their impact on climate change.


Governor José Serra, State of São Paulo





NYC Transport Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan

São Paulo photo portrait gallery
Urban Age delegates joined for site visits to Paraisópolis (shown above) and Heliopolis, São Paulo’s largest favelas, the city centre and Cidade Tiradentes, the largest planned social housing complex in Latin America among other areas undergoing transformation in the city. Participants saw how investment from the Municipality of São Paulo in schools, open space, and low-income housing, are helping to stabilise low income communities.

EXCERPTS
Economic crises and cities
‘When cities are in crises,’ explains Saskia Sassen, ‘like the 70s when London was bankrupt, New York was officially bankrupt, and Tokyo was also bankrupt, that’s right before the new era begins. That was the time when they had the least inequality.’

Regulation, regulation, regulation
Gilberto Kassab, Mayor of São Paulo, explains the results of the Cidade Limpia, or ‘Clean City’ initiative to remove billboards and regulate visual communication: ‘The Citizens have discovered their own city. They have recovered their self esteem and the fact that they are proud to live here…the state and local governments will spare no effort to improve regulations to provide the wellbeing of everyone and to organise urban space.’

Urban protest
Graffiti in São Paulo, in the eyes of Teresa Caldeira ‘is one of the most common signs all over the city. All diverse spaces have become uniform. These public descriptions are violence that expresses itself in a city divided by walls. Graffiti identifies walls, cities and areas as a space for protest rather than separation.

Public space as a metaphor for democracy
For  architect  PK  Das   ‘Mumbai is  growing and


Pedestrian streets in São Paulo's Centro.

expanding in many spheres, yet its public space is continuously shrinking. The city has less than ¼ of an acre of public space per 1,000 people in contrast to London, which has 7.28 acres for the same number of residents…We often look at cities from the point of view of real estate opportunities. Can we look at our cities and its development plans from the point of view of public spaces? I believe that public dignity is reflected in the state of public spaces and vice versa.’


Hundreds of Vai Vai samba school members
assemble in the street for weekly practice sessions.

The porous city
Fernando de Mello Franco reflects on the opportunity to create an open city: ‘The Minhocão, the elevated highway in downtown São Paulo, is an urban disaster. On weekends, it’s used by pedestrians while formal squares are completely abandoned. We have to review the notion of public spaces…when you redefine structures in São Paulo – and that’s the public capacity to redefine that domain – infrastructure is no longer a border; they become pores, units of a porous city.’

REFLECTIONS
Climate Change and Cities Debate
Paty Romero Lankao reflects on the climate change and cities debate: Global warming has become one of the single most important challenges to our civilization, and cities play an increasingly important role as sources of both transformations in the global climate and innovations to reduce our emissions and make us more resilient. Although the Urban Age South America conference did not only focus on global warming, presenters offered diverse and insightful perspectives that can help us understand the multiple dimensions of the relationships between cities and climate change.

Taking the Train
José de Souza Martins muses in Estado do Sao Paulo how public transport inspires exploration and a sense of solidarity with fellow citizens: ‘In the beginning of December, I participated in the Urban Age South America Conference, organized by the London School of Economics, in Sala São Paulo. In what was once the ‘hall’  of the ticket  windows  of the Júlio  Prestes train  station,  with its  beautiful stained glass windows presenting an allegorical history of the Sorocabana, was an amphitheatre transformed for the conference.'


Massive investment in public transport will extend
metro service and regional rail in São Paulo.


School children visiting São Paulo's Centro.

Living in an Urban Age
In an insightful commentary on the prevalence of urban crime in Latin America, Darryl D’Monte compares poverty and social exclusion in India and Brazil: ‘São Paulo is arguably the most violent city in the world, with 120 murders per 100,000 inhabitants in the poorer areas of the city. Participants at the Urban Age South America conference in São Paulo discussed the problems of crowded urban areas and looked for ways to make  these  spaces   less violent  and more

inclusive. As Indians, Latin America may, for all practical purposes, be our Area of Darkness, almost another planet. We are hardly aware that we are part of BRIC -- an acronym that includes Russia, ourselves and China as large, emerging economies which will dominate the world in a few decades. For that very reason, we draw our urban knowledge from the West, while Latin American cities have much to teach us. For that matter, we can teach them a thing or two.

RELATED ACTIVITIES
São Paulo: From Megacity to Metropolis
An Academic Workshop organised by LUME of the Faculty of Architecture and Urbanism at the University of São Paulo (FAU/USP) brought thirty academics together to focus on the historical formation of the City of São Paulo and the challenges it will confront in the future as it attempts

to consolidate its growth. Presentations introduced a new panorama of urban development in São Paulo, with discussion about how planning can once again be an effective tool for policymakers and the public sector. Read more…

Mumbai and São Paulo Share Strategies for Community Intervention

Following the Urban Age South America Conference, Deutsche Bank’s Alfred Herrhausen Society brought winners from last year’s Deutsche Bank Urban Age Award in Mumbai together with this year’s winners in São Paulo to participate in the first Net-Work-Shop, a platform to share community intervention strategies. This annual workshop supports award winners by giving them new references to stimulate further development and collective learning. Within this context, new ideas, experiences and solutions were shared. The next workshop will coincide with the Urban Age Istanbul conference in early November.


Edificio União, winner of the 2nd Annual Deutsche Bank Urban Age Award

2nd ANNUAL DEUTSCHE BANK URBAN AGE AWARD WINNER

Winners of the 2nd Annual Deutsche Bank Urban Age Award with jury representatives, Wolfgang Nowak, Managing Director of the Alfred Herrhausen Society, Governor Jose Serra and Mayor Gilberto Kassab.

In 2002, twenty students from the school of architecture at the University of São Paulo Paulo began an investigation of innovative alternatives to precarious housing conditions throughout the city. At the end of the semester, students and community representatives organised a ‘slum living’ workshop with residents of an unfinished building on Solon Street which housed 73 families. The workshop produced preliminary designs to help residents improve their housing conditions. In 2008, the Deutsche Bank Urban Age Award awarded US $100,000 in recognition of their efforts and the impact the upgrading has had in the Bom Retiro neighbourhood of São Paulo. Learn more about Edifício União and the 2nd Annual Deutsche Bank Urban Age Award. In addition to prize money bestowed on the Award winner, Gary Hattem, Managing Director of the Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation, awarded the three finalists: Instituto ACAIA, Cooperativa de Reciclagem Nova Esperança e BioUrban, each with US $5,000 in recognition of their innovative approach to improving the urban environment for city dwellers and promoting new partnerships between the city’s local actors and its institutions.

Edifício União in São Paulo, Brazil recognised with $100,000 international prize
(Click to view the Award Video)

URBAN AGE SOUTH AMERICA NEWSPAPER
Feature essays from local and international experts paired with extensive research on the social, economic and physical contours of the five largest metropolitan regions in South America – São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Bogota, Lima and Buenos Aires – document and analyse the region’s major urban trends. A detailed focus on São Paulo brings its urban growth into perspective with global trends to reframe how South America’s largest and most dynamic city is understood.

REPORT RELEASED SPRING 2009
A forthcoming research report will summarise findings from the Urban Age South America investigation. Analysis of the worldwide   context  of  urbanisation  in  South  America  will

include emphasis on how regional economies function and which mechanisms can address paralysing traffic congestion and the high levels of inequality in South America.

URBAN DOCUMENTARIES
São Paulo City Stories narrate the daily texture of urban life in São Paulo. Produced by Outros Filmes for the Urban Age South America conference, these films illustrate the city’s ongoing transformation and its recovery from once horrific levels of crime, as well as the formal and informal mechanisms which collectively support the city’s thriving communities. Testimony from poor and middle-class residents, the unheard voice at the Urban Age conferences, depict day-to-day experiences living and working in South America’s fastest growing and largest city.


Juliana spends 2½ hours commuting each way from her home in Cidade Tiradentes.


NEWS
Business Week recognises The Endless City as one of the best innovation and design books for 2008
Praised for ‘arguing that the growth of cities is not just a problem for local government agents or urban planners but is inseparable from such major political and economic forces as globalization, immigration, employment, and sustainability,’ Business Week highlights the books themes and issues which were at centre stage of the U.S. Presidential election.

Planetizen’s best books for 2009 includes The Endless City. This annual list of the ten best books in the planning field gives readers an overview of the best ideas and writing in the field.

Among other factors, the 2009 list considers a book's potential impact on the urban planning, development and design professions. Noting the trend in the growth of ‘hypertext’ books, Planetizen praised The Endless City along with Century of the City by Neal Peirce, Curtis Johnson and Farley Peters for mimicking the feel and content of the web in their presentation. Rockefeller Foundation has been a key participant in the Urban Age programme, and Century of the City – available at no charge – shares creative approaches to harnessing the vast opportunities of urbanization for a better world alongside diverse perspectives of the leading urban innovators who gathered at the latest Global Urban Summit at the Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Centre.

Media Coverage of Urban Age
‘If only a few of the ideas discussed at the Urban Age conference could reach the man or woman in the street, we would be one step closer to coping with the immense urban challenges we face.’ O Estado do Sao Paulo, one of the leading newspapers in São Paulo, featured Governor José Serra’s remarks about the Urban Age South America conference. Extensive media coverage of the Urban Age South America conference and a range of urban issues in São Paulo is archived on Urban Age’s online press clippings.

EVENTS - UPCOMING


Forty units of Elemental’s new housing in Santiago
include public space and a community centre.

Architecture as Investment
Monday 27 April, Alejandro Aravena
, Executive Director at Elemental in Santiago de Chile, Urban Age Director Ricky Burdett and Tyler Brûlé, Editor in Chief of Monocle magazine. At a time when market forces are eclipsing architecture’s social value, Elemental’s pioneering approache to designing and financing low-cost architecture is transforming urban communities in South America.

Monday 27 April, 6.30-8.00pm at LSE, Houghton Street, London. Contact urban.age@lse.ac.uk or call  020 7955 7706 for more information. Presented by Urban Age and the LSE Cities Programme in partnership with Monocle magazine.

LSE Cities Programme Students to Istanbul
Urban Age organised a study tour in Istanbul for LSE Cities Programme Master students in mid-February. As part of the Cities Studio Course ‘City Making – the Politics of Urban Form’, students will conduct a multi-scale urban analysis in preparation of a strategic framework for the re-development of Istanbul Haydarpasa, a prominent regeneration site located on the Bosporus. The students will be hosted by Istanbul’s Metropolitan Planning and Urban Design Centre with four local universities organising workshops as follows: Mimar Sinan University on urban design approaches; Istanbul Technical University on urban transport policy and projects; Sabanci University on urban governance and Bilgi University on socio-spatial policies in the city.


The compact and highly walkable Beyoglu
district on the European side of Istanbul.


Instant Cities: Landscape, Infrastructure and Urban Form
The annual conference of the Indian Society of Landscape Architects in New Delhi on 20 – 21 February will feature Urban Age Executive Director Philipp Rode speaking on “The challenge of city planning and energy, environment and resource conservation for tomorrow's urban landscape”. More info...

EVENTS - PAST


Good public transport systems that avoid low-
density sprawl helps to lower levels of greenhouse
emissions per capita.

Forum for Urban Design in New York City hosted The Endless City in a discussion with Ricky Burdett, October 2008 Members of the Forum for Urban Design joined at the Century Club -- where Philip Johnson famously held coveted dinner discussions with an inner circle of architects – to engage in a lively debate with Prof Burdett about the stark contrasts between contemporary projects and the urban population’s mostly ad-hoc existence. While  architects and   urban  designers almost exclusively work on behalf of  the  wealthy, Prof Burdett discussed the critical need for these professionals  and  public  officials  to  grapple with

half of the world’s population now living in urban areas at a time of global climate change. Forum member Robert Bruegmann, historian of architecture, landscape and the built environment, drew upon his own research to argue that sprawl is a historic development pattern and not necessarily all bad. For Bruegmann, living in the suburbs allows the working and middle classes to reap the benefits of urban life without having to pay exorbitant housing costs to do so. The impact this has on traffic congestion and the environment was left for a future discussion.

The Endless City utilised by LEAD International, November 2008

The international training session of Leadership for environment and sustainable development in Mexico City brought participants from over 40 countries together to explore the role of cities in tackling climate change. The workshop used Mexico City as a case study and Urban Age research to understand the international context and specific spatial qualities of cities.

Understanding Cities: Peter Hendy, TfL
Commissioner, November 2008
What’s worked? Peter Hendy explained how the London Mayoralty and Transport for London, one of the most comprehensive transit authorities in the world, have created a new era for transport in London. In an Understanding Cities public debate at LSE, The Politics of Mobility chaired by Tony Travers, Director of the Greater London Group, Hendy outlined how mobility defines the growth and nature of urban life. ‘The Mayor decides, and we deliver’ said Hendy, who further described the intersection of mobility and policy since the railroad age. More info...

Urban Age joined transport debate about 2014 World Cup in Brazil, December 2008
Urban Age advisers Enrique Peñalosa and Richard Brown discussed how to improve urban mobility in Brazilian cities in the lead up to the 2014 World Cup. Major Sporting Events Catalyze Transport Plans, organized by the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy (ITDP) and the International Union of Public Transport (UITP) with support from the Clinton Climate Initiative, featured plans for bus rapid transit, light rail, metro and bicycles in São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Belo Horizonte and Curitiba. More info...

FUTURE CONFERENCES
The Urban Age conferences are by invitation only, with a limited number of seats reserved for international guests. If you are interested in attending please contact urban.age@lse.ac.uk

Urban Age Istanbul, 4-6 November 2009, Istanbul, Turkey
Urban Age Summit, May 2010, Berlin, Germany

a worldwide investigation into the future of cities
 
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