This document discusses the concept of temporary use of vacant urban space. It defines temporary use as the planned or unplanned use of vacant spaces for a period of weeks to 10 years. Temporary use can serve programme, communicative, physical, social and financial functions. It provides value through improving public spaces, creating experiences, increasing functionality and economic utilization. The document analyzes examples of temporary uses in station areas and discusses factors for success. It contrasts top-down and bottom-up approaches to temporary development and their impacts on urban design.
Hear insights from Jim Heid as presenter in the inaugural ULI 2013 Mixed Use Development School. What is Mixed Use? Why did it fall out of favor with developers for a period? And why is it in vogue again? What are the benefits and impediments of Mixed Use? What makes Mixed Use great?
I-75 / University Drive: An Interchange Under Pressure Becomes a DiamondOHM Advisors
John Katers, PE and Pat Wingate, PE present I-75 / University Drive: An Interchange Under Pressure Becomes a Diamond at the 2016 Ohio Transportation Engineering Conference.
Hear insights from Jim Heid as presenter in the inaugural ULI 2013 Mixed Use Development School. What is Mixed Use? Why did it fall out of favor with developers for a period? And why is it in vogue again? What are the benefits and impediments of Mixed Use? What makes Mixed Use great?
I-75 / University Drive: An Interchange Under Pressure Becomes a DiamondOHM Advisors
John Katers, PE and Pat Wingate, PE present I-75 / University Drive: An Interchange Under Pressure Becomes a Diamond at the 2016 Ohio Transportation Engineering Conference.
Additional characteristics of an Urban Space urban morphologySomesh Siddharth
This document provides information on urban morphology and urban design techniques from a course at Amity School of Architecture and Planning. It defines key characteristics of urban spaces like permeability, variety, and legibility. It also outlines the process of urban design, including problem identification, goal setting, situational analysis, synthesis, evaluation, and implementation. Finally, it discusses components and techniques for conducting a visual survey of an urban area, including mapping physical features, activity patterns, and problem areas.
Service Design Berlin / Prototyping Public Services at Gov Jam Berlin 2015 Service Design Berlin
This slide deck ‘Prototyping Public Services’ was created by Katrin Dribbisch and presented at the GovJam 2015 in Berlin. It covers examples of design thinking and service design in the public sector and the use of prototyping in particular.
Public spaces are areas that are open and accessible to all members of the public without discrimination. They play an important role in urban areas by providing space for social interaction, activities, and events. Ensuring high quality public spaces creates social, economic, and environmental benefits for both individuals and communities. This document discusses methods for analyzing existing public spaces, identifying issues, and informing the planning and design of public spaces to make them diverse, accessible, and supportive of community life.
This document provides information and instructions for Assignment 1 of the DIS Architecture and Design course. Students are asked to design a temporary public space intervention in Copenhagen's Fuglekvarteret neighborhood. The assignment has three phases: Phase 1 involves observing and documenting existing space usage patterns. Phase 2 uses this analysis to program potential new functions for the space. Phase 3 involves developing conceptual design proposals for a temporary installation at a 1:1 scale, to be built on site. Submissions are due at the end of September and will be evaluated based on daily studio work and the final presentation materials.
Lessons learned from the Design Exchange Programme, working as an embedded designer for 1 year at the Ministry of the Environment. Examples from Vacant Spaces project that was run within the DEP programme. Lecture held at Design for Government course, Aalto University / Creative Sustainability, 31 March 2015
Design thinking applied in Smart City contextdelestre.org
Description of the principles of design thinking as a key to an inclusive Smart City process
- bottom up and an iterative process involving the different citizens and players in the city to come to an integrated approach
- helps moving moving from a silo organized city to a platform based city
Presentation made by Tanguy De Lestré at Kuala Lumpur Marcus Evans event - 8th annual meeting city development: cities and digital transformation on 16th November 2018
The document outlines a project to create a tool to determine the most suitable vacant land locations for residential development targeted towards young urban professionals in Amsterdam. It will analyze factors like accessibility to services, travel times by different modes of transportation, and preferences of different subgroups. The tool will use ArcGIS to model service areas and residential suitability. Based on the analysis, the most suitable vacant lands were found to be in the city center 'West' district and southern Amsterdam areas, due to high accessibility and safety. The tool can help determine suitability of locations for this demographic group.
This document provides a design project report for a collaborative workspace in Chow Kit, Kuala Lumpur. It includes sections on site context and analysis, design intentions and strategies. The project aims to connect creative workers and the local community through a mix of work, live and create spaces. Site studies identified a lack of greenery and leisure areas. The design was influenced by precedents like Uncommon in London, incorporating green spaces, flexible work areas and a fashion-focused program. The spatial layout clusters user groups by floor and integrates landscape elements to address the surrounding context.
The document discusses the development of different form-based codes for two distinct areas in Simsbury, CT - the historic town center and a large corporate office park property. For the town center, a charrette was held to develop an illustrative plan and form-based code to guide higher density, high-quality development while preserving the historic character. For the corporate office park, a different approach was needed due to the setting and the property being an economic driver; this resulted in a code focused on place-driven job creation through a public-private partnership. Both codes required unique skillsets and processes to develop but achieved successful outcomes like increased development certainty and community acceptance.
Project brief 2 architecture studio 5 march 2016 v3Preston Liew
1. Students will design a community library within an urban infill site over the course of the semester. The design must address the urban context and user needs through its formal design, spatial programming, and environmental and technological systems integration.
2. The project will go through sketch design, design development, and design visualization phases to explore the massing and layout, finalize the design, and complete presentation materials. Students must consider legislative requirements and design a library between 1,800-2,000 sqm spanning 3-5 storeys.
3. The design will be evaluated based on its response to the urban context, compliance with requirements, spatial programming, and integration of environmental and technological aspects to create an inspiring community space.
The document discusses a tool called the RFSC (Regional Framework for Sustainable Cities) which allows cities to create profiles showcasing their strategies, projects, and achievements. Cities can use the tool to share information, learn from others, and check how their plans align with key objectives of sustainable development. The document provides examples of a city profile created for a harbor modernization plan in Blue City, demonstrating how cities can use the tool to interpret results, identify priorities, and get support from the RFSC secretariat to strengthen their plans.
1. Urban design deals with the arrangement and design of buildings, public spaces, and services that make up cities and aims to create places that are good to live and work in, conserve heritage, and are attractive and secure.
2. Urban design operates at an intermediate scale between architecture and urban planning. It focuses on the spaces between buildings and how they are used and experienced by people.
3. Good urban design creates places that are socially and economically successful by carefully designing urban environments and spaces to reduce crime and support better access to public services.
1A_1_Location Intelligence: an innovative approach to business location decis...GISRUK conference
This document discusses the development of a location intelligence tool to help guide foreign investors in their business location decisions in London. It aims to 1) characterize London's diverse business neighborhoods, 2) formalize investors' location decision making processes, and 3) support site selection through an integrated toolset. A prototype was created combining a spatial database that classified neighborhoods with an analytical hierarchy process model. User testing found the tool provided relevant recommendations and consistent decision making between experts and non-experts. Opportunities for improving data and reducing complexity were identified.
FINAL B.ARCH THESIS PRESENTATION IIT ROORKEE:
City Centre ,Rohini ,Delhi ,Thesis project (2013)
A Mixed use development project comprises of diverse activities and functions located at the
sprawling District centre in Rohini with site area of 16 acres.With a AIM to explore the symbiotic
character of COMMERCE and CULTURE and to evolve a contemporary model of conventional
Indian market.
2.People Changing Places. David WarburtonKate Watson
The document outlines a vision for York City Centre to maximize its economic potential and preserve its historic character. It notes that the city center is the economic heart of York, supporting 30,000 jobs and £360m in annual tourism spending. A new City Centre Area Action Plan will provide a 20-year strategy and public realm improvements to enhance the city's competitiveness. The plan will link to projects improving gateways, riverside areas, and the Castle-Piccadilly zone, as well as the proposed York Central development.
The document discusses various types of public realm spaces, including corporate spaces, domestic spaces, consumption spaces, civic spaces, and in-between spaces. It provides examples and characteristics of each type. Corporate spaces include office parks and shopping malls, dominated by surrounding corporations. Domestic spaces are near residential areas for neighbors to socialize. Consumption spaces feature retail and markets. Civic spaces represent a city's history through monuments. In-between spaces are residual areas that can be integrated or derelict. Good public realms consider streetscapes, built form, and urban design to invite various uses through continuous pedestrian routes and active spaces.
Millennium Mills Redevelopment - Group 5...pptxJeimieBobadilla
The Millennium Mills Redevelopment Project aims to redevelop the historic Millennium Mills site in London into a creative hub. The site has sat vacant since a fire in 1917. The redevelopment will celebrate the site's industrial heritage and contribute to the economic growth and cultural enrichment of the surrounding area. Three options were proposed for one plot: commercial, leisure/cultural, or residential. Based on an analysis of sustainability, infrastructure, and financial factors, the group's proposal is for a leisure/cultural facility to boost tourism and community engagement while providing jobs and enhancing quality of life. The redeveloped site would require transportation and public transit integration to overcome access challenges.
Additional characteristics of an Urban Space urban morphologySomesh Siddharth
This document provides information on urban morphology and urban design techniques from a course at Amity School of Architecture and Planning. It defines key characteristics of urban spaces like permeability, variety, and legibility. It also outlines the process of urban design, including problem identification, goal setting, situational analysis, synthesis, evaluation, and implementation. Finally, it discusses components and techniques for conducting a visual survey of an urban area, including mapping physical features, activity patterns, and problem areas.
Service Design Berlin / Prototyping Public Services at Gov Jam Berlin 2015 Service Design Berlin
This slide deck ‘Prototyping Public Services’ was created by Katrin Dribbisch and presented at the GovJam 2015 in Berlin. It covers examples of design thinking and service design in the public sector and the use of prototyping in particular.
Public spaces are areas that are open and accessible to all members of the public without discrimination. They play an important role in urban areas by providing space for social interaction, activities, and events. Ensuring high quality public spaces creates social, economic, and environmental benefits for both individuals and communities. This document discusses methods for analyzing existing public spaces, identifying issues, and informing the planning and design of public spaces to make them diverse, accessible, and supportive of community life.
This document provides information and instructions for Assignment 1 of the DIS Architecture and Design course. Students are asked to design a temporary public space intervention in Copenhagen's Fuglekvarteret neighborhood. The assignment has three phases: Phase 1 involves observing and documenting existing space usage patterns. Phase 2 uses this analysis to program potential new functions for the space. Phase 3 involves developing conceptual design proposals for a temporary installation at a 1:1 scale, to be built on site. Submissions are due at the end of September and will be evaluated based on daily studio work and the final presentation materials.
Lessons learned from the Design Exchange Programme, working as an embedded designer for 1 year at the Ministry of the Environment. Examples from Vacant Spaces project that was run within the DEP programme. Lecture held at Design for Government course, Aalto University / Creative Sustainability, 31 March 2015
Design thinking applied in Smart City contextdelestre.org
Description of the principles of design thinking as a key to an inclusive Smart City process
- bottom up and an iterative process involving the different citizens and players in the city to come to an integrated approach
- helps moving moving from a silo organized city to a platform based city
Presentation made by Tanguy De Lestré at Kuala Lumpur Marcus Evans event - 8th annual meeting city development: cities and digital transformation on 16th November 2018
The document outlines a project to create a tool to determine the most suitable vacant land locations for residential development targeted towards young urban professionals in Amsterdam. It will analyze factors like accessibility to services, travel times by different modes of transportation, and preferences of different subgroups. The tool will use ArcGIS to model service areas and residential suitability. Based on the analysis, the most suitable vacant lands were found to be in the city center 'West' district and southern Amsterdam areas, due to high accessibility and safety. The tool can help determine suitability of locations for this demographic group.
This document provides a design project report for a collaborative workspace in Chow Kit, Kuala Lumpur. It includes sections on site context and analysis, design intentions and strategies. The project aims to connect creative workers and the local community through a mix of work, live and create spaces. Site studies identified a lack of greenery and leisure areas. The design was influenced by precedents like Uncommon in London, incorporating green spaces, flexible work areas and a fashion-focused program. The spatial layout clusters user groups by floor and integrates landscape elements to address the surrounding context.
The document discusses the development of different form-based codes for two distinct areas in Simsbury, CT - the historic town center and a large corporate office park property. For the town center, a charrette was held to develop an illustrative plan and form-based code to guide higher density, high-quality development while preserving the historic character. For the corporate office park, a different approach was needed due to the setting and the property being an economic driver; this resulted in a code focused on place-driven job creation through a public-private partnership. Both codes required unique skillsets and processes to develop but achieved successful outcomes like increased development certainty and community acceptance.
Project brief 2 architecture studio 5 march 2016 v3Preston Liew
1. Students will design a community library within an urban infill site over the course of the semester. The design must address the urban context and user needs through its formal design, spatial programming, and environmental and technological systems integration.
2. The project will go through sketch design, design development, and design visualization phases to explore the massing and layout, finalize the design, and complete presentation materials. Students must consider legislative requirements and design a library between 1,800-2,000 sqm spanning 3-5 storeys.
3. The design will be evaluated based on its response to the urban context, compliance with requirements, spatial programming, and integration of environmental and technological aspects to create an inspiring community space.
The document discusses a tool called the RFSC (Regional Framework for Sustainable Cities) which allows cities to create profiles showcasing their strategies, projects, and achievements. Cities can use the tool to share information, learn from others, and check how their plans align with key objectives of sustainable development. The document provides examples of a city profile created for a harbor modernization plan in Blue City, demonstrating how cities can use the tool to interpret results, identify priorities, and get support from the RFSC secretariat to strengthen their plans.
1. Urban design deals with the arrangement and design of buildings, public spaces, and services that make up cities and aims to create places that are good to live and work in, conserve heritage, and are attractive and secure.
2. Urban design operates at an intermediate scale between architecture and urban planning. It focuses on the spaces between buildings and how they are used and experienced by people.
3. Good urban design creates places that are socially and economically successful by carefully designing urban environments and spaces to reduce crime and support better access to public services.
1A_1_Location Intelligence: an innovative approach to business location decis...GISRUK conference
This document discusses the development of a location intelligence tool to help guide foreign investors in their business location decisions in London. It aims to 1) characterize London's diverse business neighborhoods, 2) formalize investors' location decision making processes, and 3) support site selection through an integrated toolset. A prototype was created combining a spatial database that classified neighborhoods with an analytical hierarchy process model. User testing found the tool provided relevant recommendations and consistent decision making between experts and non-experts. Opportunities for improving data and reducing complexity were identified.
FINAL B.ARCH THESIS PRESENTATION IIT ROORKEE:
City Centre ,Rohini ,Delhi ,Thesis project (2013)
A Mixed use development project comprises of diverse activities and functions located at the
sprawling District centre in Rohini with site area of 16 acres.With a AIM to explore the symbiotic
character of COMMERCE and CULTURE and to evolve a contemporary model of conventional
Indian market.
2.People Changing Places. David WarburtonKate Watson
The document outlines a vision for York City Centre to maximize its economic potential and preserve its historic character. It notes that the city center is the economic heart of York, supporting 30,000 jobs and £360m in annual tourism spending. A new City Centre Area Action Plan will provide a 20-year strategy and public realm improvements to enhance the city's competitiveness. The plan will link to projects improving gateways, riverside areas, and the Castle-Piccadilly zone, as well as the proposed York Central development.
The document discusses various types of public realm spaces, including corporate spaces, domestic spaces, consumption spaces, civic spaces, and in-between spaces. It provides examples and characteristics of each type. Corporate spaces include office parks and shopping malls, dominated by surrounding corporations. Domestic spaces are near residential areas for neighbors to socialize. Consumption spaces feature retail and markets. Civic spaces represent a city's history through monuments. In-between spaces are residual areas that can be integrated or derelict. Good public realms consider streetscapes, built form, and urban design to invite various uses through continuous pedestrian routes and active spaces.
Millennium Mills Redevelopment - Group 5...pptxJeimieBobadilla
The Millennium Mills Redevelopment Project aims to redevelop the historic Millennium Mills site in London into a creative hub. The site has sat vacant since a fire in 1917. The redevelopment will celebrate the site's industrial heritage and contribute to the economic growth and cultural enrichment of the surrounding area. Three options were proposed for one plot: commercial, leisure/cultural, or residential. Based on an analysis of sustainability, infrastructure, and financial factors, the group's proposal is for a leisure/cultural facility to boost tourism and community engagement while providing jobs and enhancing quality of life. The redeveloped site would require transportation and public transit integration to overcome access challenges.
Similar to 2013.05.21 studentenplannen spoorzone presentaties rick & alexandra (20)
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive functioning. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help boost feelings of calmness, happiness and focus.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive functioning. Exercise boosts blood flow and levels of neurotransmitters and endorphins which elevate and stabilize mood.
2. Let us introduce ourselves..
Rick de Boer
Graduate student RE&H and Urbanism
Internship at NS Stations (National
Railway)
Masterthesis:
Interim Area Development: The
potential value of temporary use during
the trans-formation of Stationareas
Alexandra de Jong
Gratuated July 2012
RE&H: field of Housing
Masterthesis:
The socioeconomic value of temporary use
4. Introduction
Need for space is constantly changing
Always periods of transition
Recent contextual changes causing
vacancy:
• Demographic,
• Economical &
• Functional changes
8. Definition
Temporary use:
The planned or unplanned
use of vacant spaces,
with the intention of using the space
on a temporary basis
(from a few weeks up to 10 years).
9. Functions
The function of temporary use may be:
• Programme related
• Communicative
• Physical
• Social
• Financial
22. What is important in this area?
• Stakeholder analysis
• Urban analysis
23. What is important in a station area?
Other
stakeholders?
Stakeholder analysis:
24. Zwolle
Urban analysis
Area scale:
• Monofunctional
• Low ‘experience’ factor (NS, 2012)
• Introvert building blocks
• Historical value is currently unused
26. Analysis framework
for mini-case
studies
4 focus points for stationarea Zwolle:
• Public space
• Experience (beleving)
• Functionality
• Economic utilization
Next: Measuring the influence of
existing examples of temporary use
Public space Experience
Functionality Economic
Utilization
27. Public Space
Safety and protection (Gehl, 2006):
• Social contol, lighting
Comfort and enjoyment (Gehl, 2006):
• Possibilities to see (sightlines), sit (furniture)
33. Economic Utilization
Direct:
• Generating financial profit by the exploitation of the temporary function
Indirect:
• Creating future value (improving/creating an image; increasing land value)
• Reusable/portable temporary use
46. Zuidas, Amsterdam
Station entrance: Before
• Entrance: Hole under the highway
• No facilities for train traveler
Future developments:
A10 under ground
48. Interim area development &
urbanism
Possible influence of temporary use on the urban lay-out?
• Improving public space
• Creating sightlines
• Introducing or emphasizing urban axes (connections) and building
volumes
• Testing functions
• Guiding and drawing people
50. Current situation
• Appropriate end of ‘Berlage axis’
• New facade added to the square
• Improved mix of functions
• Improved social control & safety
• Setting the standards for the future
51. To take in consideration
Role of temporary use:
What are your goals specifically for this location?
What role do the temporary functions play in the urban lay-out of the area?
Development:
Top down of Bottom up? How much control do you want in which area?
Which stakeholders would you involve? Local parties?
Other succesfactors…
54. Sustainable temporary use
Temporary use may be very sustainable, if you keep in mind..
Hergebruik van gebouwen en materialen
Kans om in te spelen op behoeften van mensen
Financieel zichzelf bedruipend
Moet deze sheet er wel in of is dit iets te Jip & Janneke?
Hier moet nog wat meer komen, moet ik nog bedenken.In ieder geval kort iets vertellen over allerlei soorten tijdelijke initiatieven, het lijkt wel een hype.
Over dat tijdelijkheid een relatief begrip is en dat tijdelijk de potentie kan hebben om semi-permanent of zelfs permanent te worden. En thenagain: wat is permanent?Met als voorbeeld BK faculteit.NB. Als je je irriteert aan die plaatjes zo opgemaakt, voel je vrij om ze aan te passen. Ik ben niet zo’n layout held..
Vind jij dit okee als definitie? Heb mijn eigen definitie toch weer een beetje aangepast ;)
Misschien wil ik dit nog anders opmaken, om ook de mogelijke negatieve uitwerking te laten zien. Misschien dat ik uiteindelijk alle voorbeelden toch weg haal en alles mondeling toelicht.
Uitleggen dat het altijd gaat om evenwicht van people-planet-profit en dat hier best een spanningsveld zit bij tijdelijkgebruik.
Tips en lessen die wij hebben getrokken die toepasbaar zijn bij de game.