Merhav - the Movement for Israeli Urbanism (www.miu.org.il)
Presented as part of the Urban Empowerment Lab that seeks to develop tools for the transformation of aging and decaying Israeli public housing complexes - built in the 1950s-1970s - into places with a high quality of life.
Atividade de criação desenvolvido nas aulas de Educação Tecnológica através de desafio criado à partir da leitura do texto “O Pequeno Dragão”, de Pedro Bandeira.
In deze presentatie leggen Tom Claus en Stijn Janssen uit hoe dat je jezelf transformeert van luie nerd tot actieve runner. We vertellen ons verhaal hoe we trainen voor een marathon en hoe wij (en jij dus ook!) ons motiveren om elke keer opnieuw te gaan lopen met behulp van onze smartphone.
Van de Geijn Partners.
Wij richten ons op fundamentele vernieuwing van diensten, organisaties en ketens ten behoeve van de participatie van kwetsbare doelgroepen.
Daarvoor doen wij in opdracht van maatschappelijke organisaties onderzoek, ontwikkelen we nieuwe concepten, zorgen voor haalbare businesscases en brengen partijen bij elkaar om het mogelijk te maken.
Onze specifieke kennis van ketenvorming, logistiek, technologie en innovatiemanagement staat garant voor originele ideeën en krachtige implementaties.
Atividade de criação desenvolvido nas aulas de Educação Tecnológica através de desafio criado à partir da leitura do texto “O Pequeno Dragão”, de Pedro Bandeira.
In deze presentatie leggen Tom Claus en Stijn Janssen uit hoe dat je jezelf transformeert van luie nerd tot actieve runner. We vertellen ons verhaal hoe we trainen voor een marathon en hoe wij (en jij dus ook!) ons motiveren om elke keer opnieuw te gaan lopen met behulp van onze smartphone.
Van de Geijn Partners.
Wij richten ons op fundamentele vernieuwing van diensten, organisaties en ketens ten behoeve van de participatie van kwetsbare doelgroepen.
Daarvoor doen wij in opdracht van maatschappelijke organisaties onderzoek, ontwikkelen we nieuwe concepten, zorgen voor haalbare businesscases en brengen partijen bij elkaar om het mogelijk te maken.
Onze specifieke kennis van ketenvorming, logistiek, technologie en innovatiemanagement staat garant voor originele ideeën en krachtige implementaties.
LED in the urban context for Mayors Institute - HebrewNachman Shelef
Presented to the Israeli Mayors Institute on City Renewal Sep 2011
Abstract: After more than 50 years of massive investment in Local Economic Development (LED) worldwide, what has been learned regarding what works and what does not? If in the past economic development was focused on employment generation, today the accepted definitions of LED are much more intricate – they define the purpose of LED as achieving “quality of life for all” and the process as a collective effort of “public, business and non-governmental sector partners“. This sober view has developed over decades of huge but mostly fruitless investments in LED worldwide, in three waves, that where kicked off by the success of the Marshal Plan.
Have the lessons of the past been learned or do we keep investing in approaches that have failed in the past? Unfortunately not, we still see; Top down efforts by central government to lead LED programs, instead of a participatory approach, including all stakeholders and sectors, led by local government. A focus on outside big business transplant, instead of support of innovation, entrepreneurship and policies focused on the success of local businesses. Attempts to jumpstart and support LED over entire regions, instead of focusing on cities as the true engines of economic growth.
Why have the leading LED practitioners worldwide focused on cities and urban economic development over the last decade? Urbanization matters - economic growth and urbanization are bi-directionally causally connected - “no country in the industrial age has ever achieved significant economic growth without urbanization.”. 1.2 billion people living in the 40 mega-metro regions worldwide produce around 70% of world output and 85% of all innovations. 5 billion people living in 191 countries produce the rest. A resident of a mega-metro is 8 times as productive in goods, and 24 times as productive in innovations. Cities are engines of economic growth, they manufacture wealth. Why is this so?
Cities have natural economic advantages that include internal scale economies and external agglomeration economies. But poor city design can undermine these advantages and create barriers to economic development, whereas good city design can enhance these advantages. How can we leverage the natural economic advantages of cities with good city design? Compact mixed-use development that focuses on pedestrian and public transport access is key.
How does the urban economy develop? How can we jumpstart economic development, when it is missing, in Israeli cities? Viewing economic development in the context of a network of interrelated towns and cities clarifies that different types of towns and cities, within the network, require different approaches to LED. Great cities that generate more wealth than they consume require one approach for continued development. Towns and cities within the region of a great city require a second approach. Towns that are outside the region of a
LED in the urban context for Mayors Institute - EnglishNachman Shelef
Presented to the Israeli Mayors Institute on City Renewal Sep 2011
Abstract: After more than 50 years of massive investment in Local Economic Development (LED) worldwide, what has been learned regarding what works and what does not? If in the past economic development was focused on employment generation, today the accepted definitions of LED are much more intricate – they define the purpose of LED as achieving “quality of life for all” and the process as a collective effort of “public, business and non-governmental sector partners“. This sober view has developed over decades of huge but mostly fruitless investments in LED worldwide, in three waves, that where kicked off by the success of the Marshal Plan.
Have the lessons of the past been learned or do we keep investing in approaches that have failed in the past? Unfortunately not, we still see; Top down efforts by central government to lead LED programs, instead of a participatory approach, including all stakeholders and sectors, led by local government. A focus on outside big business transplant, instead of support of innovation, entrepreneurship and policies focused on the success of local businesses. Attempts to jumpstart and support LED over entire regions, instead of focusing on cities as the true engines of economic growth.
Why have the leading LED practitioners worldwide focused on cities and urban economic development over the last decade? Urbanization matters - economic growth and urbanization are bi-directionally causally connected - “no country in the industrial age has ever achieved significant economic growth without urbanization.”. 1.2 billion people living in the 40 mega-metro regions worldwide produce around 70% of world output and 85% of all innovations. 5 billion people living in 191 countries produce the rest. A resident of a mega-metro is 8 times as productive in goods, and 24 times as productive in innovations. Cities are engines of economic growth, they manufacture wealth. Why is this so?
Cities have natural economic advantages that include internal scale economies and external agglomeration economies. But poor city design can undermine these advantages and create barriers to economic development, whereas good city design can enhance these advantages. How can we leverage the natural economic advantages of cities with good city design? Compact mixed-use development that focuses on pedestrian and public transport access is key.
How does the urban economy develop? How can we jumpstart economic development, when it is missing, in Israeli cities? Viewing economic development in the context of a network of interrelated towns and cities clarifies that different types of towns and cities, within the network, require different approaches to LED. Great cities that generate more wealth than they consume require one approach for continued development. Towns and cities within the region of a great city require a second approach. Towns that are outside the region of a
Urban Economic Development Conference Call for presentations Nachman Shelef
Urban Economic Development Conference Call for presentations
Merhav – the Movement for Israeli Urbanism and the city of Ashkelon, are putting together a conference on November 2011 on Urban Economic Development – " The City as an Engine of Economic Growth". This will be the first conference in Israel to focus on Economic Development in the context of cities.
Local Economic Development in the urban context a missed opportunityNachman Shelef
Presented to the Milken-Koret fellows program 2011
Abstract: After more than 50 years of massive investment in Local Economic Development (LED) worldwide, what has been learned regarding what works and what does not? If in the past economic development was focused on employment generation, today the accepted definitions of LED are much more intricate – they define the purpose of LED as achieving “quality of life for all” and the process as a collective effort of “public, business and non-governmental sector partners“. This sober view has developed over decades of huge but mostly fruitless investments in LED worldwide, in three waves, that where kicked off by the success of the Marshal Plan.
Have the lessons of the past been learned or do we keep investing in approaches that have failed in the past? Unfortunately not, we still see; Top down efforts by central government to lead LED programs, instead of a participatory approach, including all stakeholders and sectors, led by local government. A focus on outside big business transplant, instead of support of innovation, entrepreneurship and policies focused on the success of local businesses. Attempts to jumpstart and support LED over entire regions, instead of focusing on cities as the true engines of economic growth.
Why have the leading LED practitioners worldwide focused on cities and urban economic development over the last decade? Urbanization matters - economic growth and urbanization are bi-directionally causally connected - “no country in the industrial age has ever achieved significant economic growth without urbanization.”. 1.2 billion people living in the 40 mega-metro regions worldwide produce around 70% of world output and 85% of all innovations. 5 billion people living in 191 countries produce the rest. A resident of a mega-metro is 8 times as productive in goods, and 24 times as productive in innovations. Cities are engines of economic growth, they manufacture wealth. Why is this so?
Cities have natural economic advantages that include internal scale economies and external agglomeration economies. But poor city design can undermine these advantages and create barriers to economic development, whereas good city design can enhance these advantages. How can we leverage the natural economic advantages of cities with good city design? Compact mixed-use development that focuses on pedestrian and public transport access is key.
How does the urban economy develop? How can we jumpstart economic development, when it is missing, in Israeli cities? Viewing economic development in the context of a network of interrelated towns and cities clarifies that different types of towns and cities, within the network, require different approaches to LED. Great cities that generate more wealth than they consume require one approach for continued development. Towns and cities within the region of a great city require a second approach. Towns that are outside the region of a great city require a third approach and lastly cities that are not great require a forth approach.
Merhav overview - The Movement for Israeli UrbanismNachman Shelef
The Movement for Israeli Urbanism
Improving affordable access to opportunities by - Creating sustainable and humane cities and communities in Israel
We, the members of the Movement for Israeli Urbanism, strive to improve the quality of urban life in Israel and actively promote the development of a sustainable and humane urban environment in Israel.
We founded MIU in order to transform the quality of urban life in Israel by applying:
People-oriented planning that prevents deterioration and atrophy of cities
Sustainable local development that enhances opportunities
Democratic urban planning processes
The Advantages of GTFS in Israel or Increasing Public Transport Use through O...Nachman Shelef
Increasing the use of public transport in Israel.
What needs to be done to get Google transit and 100s of other transit applications to be available in Israel?
*The GTFS transit feed specification defines a common format for public
transportation schedules and associated geographic information.
• GTFS is a lightweight specification to share data between a transit agency and
the general public or between transit agencies.
• GTFS data is shared openly and is available to all transit application developers
Tirat-Carmel Sharet ch1 Location and Residents 18Jan2011Nachman Shelef
Merhav - the Movement for Israeli Urbanism (www.miu.org.il)
Presented as part of the Urban Empowerment Lab that seeks to develop tools for the transformation of aging and decaying Israeli public housing complexes - built in the 1950s-1970s - into places with a high quality of life.
Tirat-Carmel Sharet ch2 Urban Network and Accessability 18Jan2011Nachman Shelef
Merhav - the Movement for Israeli Urbanism (www.miu.org.il)
Presented as part of the Urban Empowerment Lab that seeks to develop tools for the transformation of aging and decaying Israeli public housing complexes - built in the 1950s-1970s - into places with a high quality of life.
Bat-Yam North Vatikim ch3 Mixed Use and Populations 18Jan2011Nachman Shelef
Merhav - the Movement for Israeli Urbanism (www.miu.org.il)
Presented as part of the Urban Empowerment Lab that seeks to develop tools for the transformation of aging and decaying Israeli public housing complexes - built in the 1950s-1970s - into places with a high quality of life.
Bat-Yam North Vatikim ch1 Location and Residents 18Jan2011Nachman Shelef
Merhav - the Movement for Israeli Urbanism (www.miu.org.il)
Presented as part of the Urban Empowerment Lab that seeks to develop tools for the transformation of aging and decaying Israeli public housing complexes - built in the 1950s-1970s - into places with a high quality of life.
Urban renewal in France by Clemence PINEL
volunteer at Merhav - the Movement for Israeli Urbanism (www.miu.org.il)
Presented as part of the Urban Empowerment Lab that seeks to develop tools for the transformation of aging and decaying Israeli public housing complexes - built in the 1950s-1970s - into places with a high quality of life.
Movement for Israeli Urbanism ten principles for Good UrbanismNachman Shelef
Movement for Israeli Urbanism ten principles for good urbanism by Irit Solzi
www.miu.org.il
עשרה כללים לעירוניות טובה של מרחב
לראש העיר יש תפקיד משמעותי בעיצוב התפתחותה, עתידה
ויכולתה של העיר לשרת ביעילות את מטרותיהם של תושביה. המכון
לראשי ערים מציע למשתתפי הסדנא
עשרה כללים בסיסיים לתכנון עירוני אשר ימקמו את העיר שלהם
כמקום אשר טוב לחיות, לשהות ולבלות בו.
.1 רחובות לאנשים אנשים נמשכים אל העיר בשל יכולתה לשמש מאגר גדול לקשרים עם אנשים אחרים.
קשרים אלה מהווים הזדמנויות – חברתיות, עסקיות ותרבותיות. קשרים נוצרים בעיקר במרחב הציבורי
והרחוב הוא המרכיב היסודי של מרחב זה. זאת משום שבעיר טובה הרחוב משמש למעבר מקרי של בני
אדם. הנמצא ברחוב יראה אנשים סביבו ולא יידע עליהם דבר.
.2 שימושים מעורבים מבטיחים נוכחות של אנשים שונים, בזמנים שונים, למטרות שונות ברחובות העיר.
נוכחותם של אנשים רבים ושונים ברחוב ברוב שעות היממה מגבירה את הבטחון האישי. שימושים
מעורבים מאפשרים הקטנת כמות הנסיעות וצמצום התלות ברכב. לכן, יש להימנע מלחלק את העיר
לאזורים בעלי מאפיינים אחידים כגון: אזור תעשיה או קריית חינוך.
.3 עירוב אוכלוסיות הגיוון האנושי הוא חלק מעוצמתה של העיר. כל מתחם בעיר יתוכנן כך שיתאים
לכולם - דיור מגוון מאוד באופני בינוי, באדריכלות ובגודל הדירות הינו הכרחי למשיכת אוכלוסיה מגוונת.
דיור בר-השגה צריך להיות חלק אינטגרלי מכל אזור בעיר. מתחמים לאוכלוסיות הומוגניות לא מאפשרים
את מגוון ההזדמנויות ההכרחי לקיומה של עיר טובה. מתחמים הומוגניים המוקמים ביחד מזדקנים
ומתנוונים בבת אחת.
.4 נגישות מירבית רשת רציפה וצפופה של רחובות כאשר המרחק הממוצע בין צמתים הוא בין 60-150
מ' מאפשרת נגישות נוחה ומגוון של אפשרויות תנועה מנקודה לנקודה ויוצרת חשיפה גדולה יותר של
רחובות, עסקים והזדמנויות לאנשים. רשת כזאת מקטינה את הגודש ברחובות הראשיים, תורמת
לבטיחות בדרכים. בשום מקרה אל תתכנן רשת רחובות הירארכית ומרחקים גדולים בין צמתים.
.5 צפיפות ושימוש יעיל בקרקע צפיפות עירונית )מספר התושבים של העיר לחלק לשטחה( היא מרכיב
הכרחי של עירוניות טובה. מתחת לצפיפות מינימאלית לא יכולה להתקיים עיר. יש להימנע מהפיתוי של
הרחבת העיר כדי לתת מענה לביקושים למגורים ותעסוקה ולמצוא דרכים לנצל קרקע קיימת שאיננה
בשימוש יעיל בתוך העיר. צפיפות ציבורית )מספר התושבים לחלק לסה"כ השטח הציבורי( משפיעה אף
יותר על איכות המרחב הציבורי. יש לתכנן את מימדיו של כל מרחב ציבורי )רחוב או פארק( בהתאם
למספר האנשים העשויים לעבור בו במקרה.
.6 מגוון אפשרויות של תחבורה נגישות לשירותים ותעסוקה היא מר
5. פרק IIרשת
כצנלנסון
דניאל
קק "ל מחלף דב הוז
עירונית ונגישות
'
עוזיאל / אנילביץ'
רשת עירונית
מה הם
המכשולים
לקשר?
תחבורה ציבורית
המכשולים לקשר רשת המתחם
איכות המרחב
מיעוט הרחובות המתחברים לשאר חלקי העיר. הציבורי
מרחק גדול בין הצמתים – מגיע ל- 054 מ'.
שדרות העצמאות נקטעות בגידור אשר מונע את המשך
ההליכה הרציפה ומחייב ביצוע מעברי כביש מיותרים.
מרחקים גדולים בין מעברי החצייה בין השדרה לדפנות
הרחוב מונעים שימוש אינטנסיבי יותר בשדרה.
זולת שד' העצמאות הרחובות הסמוכים למתחם מתאפיינים
במדרכות צרות, כמות עצים קטנה וריהוט רחוב דליל ביותר. בת ים
בת לב – שיכון ותיקים צפון
ים העיר
8. מרכז
1 1 6 מסחרי
11
11
25 2
11 מחלף פרק IIרשת
דב הוז עירונית ונגישות
33 תדירות גבוהה
51-5 דק'
3
12 תדירות בינונית
51-01 דק'
רשת עירונית
תדירות נמוכה
02-51 דק'
תחבורה ציבורית
1 21 13 1 מספר קווי אגד
בנתיב איזו תח"צ
1 מספר קווי דן
בנתיב קיימת, כמה
קווים ומה
13 2 מרכז התדירות?
תרבות
רשת המתחם
קניון
אזור התעשייה בת-ים איכות המרחב
1 קו בת ים – ת"א יוצא בתדירות של 7 דק'. הציבורי
3 קווים בת ים – ת"א יוצאים בתדירות של 02-01 דק'.
2 קווים בת ים – ת"א – ר"ג – ת"א יוצאים בתדירות של 51 דק'.
1 קו חולון – בת ים – ת"א – ר"ג – ת"א יוצא בתדירות של 51 דק'.
1 קו חולון – בת ים – אזור יוצא בתדירות של 51 דק'.
1 קו חולון – בת ים – ת"א יוצא בתדירות של 51 דק'.
1 קו בת ים – ת"א – ר"ג יוצא 3 פעמים ביום.
1 קו בת ים - חולון – אזור – ר"ג יוצא בשעות הבוקר ואחה"צ בלבד.
בת ים
1 קו בת ים – חולון – ר"ג – פ"ת יוצא פעמיים ביום.
בת לב – שיכון ותיקים צפון
ים העיר