Urban Design Lesson 1

Summary

This document describes different aspects of urban design, including accessibility considerations, building types, and characteristics of urban areas. It covers various concepts such as built form, density, and community.

Full Transcript

LESSON 1 Cul-de-sac- only one inlet/outlet Culture- aspects of life that people value and enjoy, URBAN DESIGN defining charac...

LESSON 1 Cul-de-sac- only one inlet/outlet Culture- aspects of life that people value and enjoy, URBAN DESIGN defining characteristic of humanity A Community- social group that are bound together by geography, profession, lifestyle Accessibility- travel speed and distance to the number of locations (‘destination opportunities’). Travel costs, D route safety, and topography gradient Design response- Explanation and demonstration of Adaptability or Adaptive Re-use- changing social, how a proposed building development technological, economic and market conditions Development- infrastructure for education, health, Amenity- parks, playgrounds, green spaces, parking justice, solid waste, markets facilities, public wi-fi facilities, public bus transport, bus shelters,etc... Density- number of people inhabiting a given urbanized area. Arterial road- high-capacity urban road. Demolition- tearing-down of buildings B E Built Form- function, shape and configuration of buildings Enclosure- which buildings, walls, trees and other vertical items frame a street and public space. Background Buildings-Buildings that lack individual architectural Efficiency- output of something in comparison to its maximum potential. Building line-set with respect to the frontage of a plot of land Encroachment- r Urban sprawl “the spreading of urban developments on undeveloped land near a city’ Build-to-line- zoning device which controls the location of buildings F Building Cap- Maximum allowable construction in a designated area or city Façade-wall of a building that is usually facing the street Blue Space- visible water. Attractive blue spaces such as waterfront parks, harbors, ports, marinas, rivers, Form follows nature- uses shapes and forms found in nature such as plants, animals, insects, geological and Brownfield- land that has been previously used for astronomical shapes. industrial or commercial purposes Fabric or Urban Fabric- describes the physical C characteristics of urban areas, that is, cities, and towns. City -A city is a large human settlement. FAR (floor area ratio)- determining permitted building Circulation spaces - are part of the common area of a volume as a multiple of the area of the lot commercial, mixed use or higher density residential Fenestration- Design elements of the exterior building (architectural) window treatments such as patterns, Connectivity- counting the number of intersection rhythm, and ornamentation equivalents per unit of area. G M Gentrification- transformation of a city neighborhood mixed-use building- combine three or more uses into from low value to high value. one structure such as residential, hotel, retail Genius loci -spirit of a place. classical Roman religion Master Plan- document and policy guide designed to and the belief that districts of Roman had their own help communities create a vision of what they want to protective spirits. look like in the future Green Wall- A green facade is a wall covered in Map- Its usefulness hinges on its perceived climbing vegetation with soil at the base of the wall truthfulness and objectivity in the representation of reality. garden city movement-20th century urban planning Morphology- study of urban forms and of the agents Grid plan- streets run at right angles to each other, and processes responsible for their transformation forming a grid. over time Growth Management- regulating the pace and character of development in a community O H Urban open spaces (UOS)- publicly accessible open places designed and built from human activity and Human Scale- f building physical things such as enjoyment buildings to a scale that is useful to people Higher density residential buildings-five or more P storeys in height. They may be residential only or Public space- open and accessible to people residential combined with other uses such as retail, offices or car Placemaking- design of public spaces in close consultation with the residents of a city or I neighborhood. Parallel street plan- layout in which the principal Infill- categorise the increase of densities in a streets are approximately equidistant. townscape Planning Authority- government agency which is L responsible for land use and planning. Urban land use- comprises which activities are taking R place where and their level of spatial accumulation resilient city- endure physical, social and economic urban landmark- defined as an object that provides shocks and stresses “external points of orientation, usually an easily identifiable physical object in the urban landscape” Urban regeneration- repair the social and economic problems of an urban area linear park- considerably longer than it is wide Urban redevelopment- conceptually similar to land living street- mixed-use pedestrian street that may readjustment provide social space, greenspace and play areas View corridor-open air space on a lot affording a clear S view Slum- people who lack the basic necessities to sustain a healthy and safe livelihood W Sustainable design- primarily means that designs Urban wetlands-within city limits where water and minimize environmental impact and improve quality soils mingle. of life Walkable Urbanism- The major current development sponge city- designed to passively absorb, clean and trend use rainfall in an ecologically friendly way that reduces dangerous and polluted runoff. Z Streetscape- combination of street width, curvature, paving, street furniture, plantings and the surrounding Zoning- divides land into areas built form and detail. Zoning regulations- specifications regarding lot size, Street and park furniture- includes seats, waste bins, density or bulk, height, and floor area ratio (FAR). drinking fountains, café furniture, bicycle parking zoning ordinance-applicable to land within a hoops….. municipality. It also sets the legal framework Sense of place- personal experiences, social interactions, and identities T Transportation infrastructure- foundational structures and systems for transporting people and goods. Transit-oriented development (TOD)- is a planning and design strategy that consists in promoting urban development that is compact, mixed-use, pedestrian- and bicycle friendly, and closely integrated U Urbanism- way of living or characteristics of lifestyle of people living in urban areas. Urban Reforestation- effort to return an area closer to its original state by planting large numbers of trees urban heat island- hotter than the countryside surrounding them V Vernacular architecture- defined as a type of local or regional construction, using traditional materials

Use Quizgecko on...
Browser
Browser