a spontaneous study of sustainable signage

A non-scientific, yet international study of signage in cities and towns shows the commercial, the walkable, a focus on public transportation–but the winner is–restrooms!!

The small town: Commercialism on a sustainability sign
The French village: Focus on the sustainable canine restroom
The world city: Urban green, culture, walkability, royals, and human restrooms (the WC)
The ski village: Public transit, recreation and, well, human restrooms anew...

the myurbanist reader: essays on provocative urbanism

What better way to commemorate one year of myurbanist than to compile ten chapters and play Gutenburg?

Using an online publishing program, and organizing around the theme of “provocative urbanism” from December 5, a paperback and an e-book were born.

For those who want to freely view the myurbanist reader or download a .pdf, see the scrolling, embedded entry below.

For those interested in a paperback rendition, view more information here.

The Myurbanist Reader

urbanism evolving, with law in mind

Here, updated, is an embedded link to a selection of the top 12 posts in myurbanist, beginning last March. Please click “continue on” to review below, and, at the bottom of the first page, click “previous” for a second array.

Thank you, and enjoy!

what about “shapes of avoidance” on the landscape?

The form of urban settlements and appearance of constituent structures reflect underlying culture and regulation.

In times of change, such form can alter, to reflect the impact of new or modified policy or regulation. Resulting shapes of compliance, such as the pattern of height, bulk and density dictated by a new downtown zoning code, has the potential to reinvent the urban landscape.

But the urban landscape can also be dramatically altered by “shapes of avoidance”.

Consider, in the context of everyday urbanism, those shapes and patterns dictated by avoidance of regulation.

Here, I am discussing not just spontaneous parklets and sidewalk tables of “guerrilla urbanism” or “pop-up” cities, but examples of urban form that result when policy or regulation is creatively defied on a widespread basis.

Call it the urban landscape’s manifestation of French/American microbiologist Rene Dubos‘ classic discourses on human adaptation to environmental change, Man Adapting and So Human an Animal.

A compelling example is the alteration of a southern Italian landscape in the 15th to 17th centuries premised on the avoidance of taxes or fees–the apparent explanation for the unique shape of trulli houses in Puglia–and the resulting appearance of the Itria Valley and the town of Alberobello.

As the story goes, conical houses that don’t look like houses were built without mortar for easy destruction so the Counts of Conversano could avoid property tax payments on permanent structures (such as residences) to the King of Naples.

What are today’s trulli?

Are they merely a list of unenforced zoning violations (e.g. unpermitted home occupations, illegal accessory dwellings, unsanctioned tent cities, vehicles on lawns) or perpetual temporary uses?

Given the extent of land use regulation today, could spontaneous, repetitive trulli-like “shapes of avoidance” define a sustainable urban landscape more interesting than those that are planned?

Or are the most visible “shapes of avoidance” now limited to freedom of expression in the ballot box and on urban walls?

After all, some might argue that graffiti and the recent electoral landscape are the trulli of our times.

This article was republished in SustainableCitiesCollective on November 14, here.

revealing the nocturnal urban landscape

Quotations can often frame characteristics of successful cities, where five important qualities combine to create 24-hour, magnetic places.

When evening light and crowds merge to create a sense of safety, where walking and transit define mobility and proximity, if commerce goes on without the sun, then interaction of human personality and the built environment will succeed…

“Cities, like cats, will reveal themselves at night,” said the English poet, Rupert Brooke.

From around the world, consistent with Brooke, and indicative of safety, mobility, proximity, commerce and interaction, here is imagery which reveals the city at night.

[showtime]

An earlier, abbreviated perspective on “legendary darkness of a city night” appears here. For a related post on “Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design (CPTED),” click here, and, as republished in Crosscut, here.