SlideShare a Scribd company logo
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
Better Livable Town
Blossom
Town
Name : Lee Kailyn
Student ID : 0320273
Course : FNBE AUG 2014
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
Content:
1. Introduction 3
2. Investigation on Better Town 4 - 5
3. Investigation & Data Collection: Ancient towns 6 - 8
4. Investigation & Data Collection: The present towns 9 -15
5. Investigation & Data Collection: The future and better town 15 - 23
6. The New “X” Town / Or the new name 24 - 26
7. The Conclusion 27
8. References list 28
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
1. Introduction
This is our second project aka final project for this subject Elements of Natural
Built Environment. The first part of this project, I have to pretend that I am the
mayor of “X” town. The people in “X” town require a new town because of
reasons that it is too crowded. We will need to propose a new layout for the new
“X” Town very quickly.The size of the proposed new town should be about 30km2
or
smaller about 15 – 30km2
.
The idea of this project is to understand the component and elements of a town
and what makes a better liveable future town for individual proposal. To make a
good town, I should learn from the history to achieve a better future city. I decided
to do research and collect data about the past, present and future town to plan and
propose a new “X” town.
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
2. The Town
2.1 Definition of Town
An built-up area with a name, defined boundaries and local government, that is larger than a
village and generally smaller than a city. The size definition for what constitutes a "town" varies
considerably in different parts of the world.
2.2 What is the brief history
The word town shares an origin with the German word Zaun, the Dutch word tuin, and
the Old Norse tun. The German word Zaun comes closest to the original meaning of the word: a
fence of any material. An early borrowing from Celtic *dunom (cf. Old Irish dun, Welsh din
"fortress, fortified place, camp," dinas "city;"
In English and Dutch, the meaning of the word took on the sense of the space which these fences
enclosed. In England, a town was a small city that could not afford or was not allowed to build
walls or other larger fortifications, and built a palisade or stockade instead. In the Netherlands,
this space was a garden, more specifically those of the wealthy, which had a high fence or a wall
around them (like the garden of palace Het Loo in Apeldoorn, which was the example for the
privy garden of William and Mary at Hampton Court). In Old Norse tun means a (grassy) place
between farmhouses, and is still used in a similar meaning in modern Norwegian.
In Old English and Early and Middle Scots, the word ton, toun, etc. could refer to kinds of
settlements as diverse as agricultural estates and holdings, partly picking up the Norse sense (as
in the Scots word fermtoun) at one end of the scale, to fortified municipality at the other. If there
was any distinction between toun (fortified municipality) and burgh (unfortified municipality) as
claimed by some, it did not last in practice as burghs and touns developed. For example "Edina
Burgh" or "Edinburgh" (called a city today) was built around a fort and eventually came to have
a defensive wall.
In some cases, "town" is an alternate name for "city" or "village" (especially a larger village).
Sometimes, the word "town" is short for "township". In general, today towns can be
differentiated from townships, villages, or hamlets on the basis of their economic character, in
that most of a town's population will tend to derive their living from
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
manufacturing industry, commerce, and public services rather than primary industry such
as agriculture or related activities.
The distinction between a town and a city similarly depends on the approach adopted: a city may
strictly be an administrative entity which has been granted that designation by law, but in
informal usage, the term is also used to denote an urban locality of a particular size or
importance: whereas a medieval city may have possessed as few as 10,000 inhabitants, today
some consider an urban place of fewer than 100,000 as a town, even though there are many
officially designated cities that are much smaller than that.
2.3 What makes a town
A town is made up with an amount of population, government area, commercial area, religious
and cultures area, port and shipping area, education area, and sufficient of facilities.
2.4 What makes a good town.
● Provides sufficient educational and health services
● Safe and security
● Sufficient land for building development
● Stable governance
● Sufficient shelter to live
● Enough jobs opportunities
● Green environment
● Clean environment
● Good location
● Good leaders
● Public transportation efficient
2.5 What is the future towns
For me, a future towns is everything has mentioned at what makes a good town. Since no one
knows what the future holds. I have to use my imagination. A future towns has a clean
environment, full of different type of skyscrapers, colourful flying cars and robot around us.
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
3. Investigation & Data Collection:
Ancient Town
Lijiang, China
3.1 History
Lijiang, possibly the best preserved old town in China, is one of the last places
where a visitor can witness and experience a historic, traditional urban culture. Lijiang
lies 570 km north-west of Kunming in Yunnan Province. It consists of three old towns,
namely Dayan, Baisha and shuhe. Remarkably, the old houses with stone foundations,
plastered whitewashed brick walls, red wooden doors, shutters and balconies, and
sloping tiled roofs, survived a recent earthquake without much damage, while the new
concrete buildings were flattened. Due to the unique culture and comfortable climate, it
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
has been classified as a World-class Cultural Legacy by UNESCO, 'National-level
Scenic Zone 'and a 'National Town of History and Culture'.
The history of Lijiang dates back to the South Song period (1127-1279AD). In 1253,
Kublai, in his expedition to conquer the state of Dali, came to what is now Lijiang after
his troops crossed the Jinsha River by using inflated bags of animal hide. That explains
why many names of places in the Naxi languages are transliterations of 'army camps,'
'drilling grounds,' etc. for the Mongolian language. In the early years of the Yuan
Dynasty (1271-1368AD), there were about 1,000 families in Lijiang, which constantly
grew in size during the Ming and Qing Dynasties. Since the Qing Dynasty, Lijiang has
been the distribution center for goods produced in northwest of Yunnan province.
Tibetans send their woolen textiles and medicinal herbs here for shipment to other parts
of China, and tea and articles for daily use from Xishuang Banna, Fengqing and
Xiaguan of Yunnan province are sold to Tibetan areas via the town.
3.2 What town are you concentrating on.
Lijiang, China
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
3.3 What makes is a significiant town and what are the
details
The town is a leading tourist city and has ancient towns and natural areas as
the major attractions. Lijiang attractions provide the most popular Lijiang
sightseeing. These must-see attractions in Lijiang range from peaceful Lijiang Old
Town, breathtaking Jade Dragon Mountain, majestic Tiger Leaping Gorge, enchanting
Lugu Lake, to mysterious Black Dragon Pool, featured Baisha Village and ancient
Shuhe Old Town. A Lijiang travel is incomplete without visiting these Lijiang tourist
attractions.
3.4 Conclusion about the town
Lijiang China old town is great place for those who love to visit historical places and
ancient traditions. Lijiang Old Town is located on the lap of mountains and on the banks
of river and perhaps the only old city without a city wall. Due to the multiracial
inhabitants settled here long years back, the ancient city reflects the aspects of
different cultures. You can see different architectural styles like Bai, Han, Tibet etc
blended into Naxi architectural style rendering it a unique look. This place is good for
hiking and offers beautiful scenery viewed from the top.
3.5 What information or element that you can use to your
new future town
Since the major attraction of this town is natural area, I might consider to create a
natural area for my future town, because natural area is critical to human and
environmental well being.
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
4. Investigation and Data Collection
Present Town
London
4.1 History
The Romans founded London about 50 AD. Its name is derived from the Celtic word Londinios,
which means the place of the bold one. After they invaded Britain in 43 AD the Romans built a
bridge across the Thames. They later decided it was an excellent place to build a port. The
water was deep enough for ocean going ships but it was far enough inland to be safe from
Germanic raiders. Around 50 AD Roman merchants built a town by the bridge. So London was
born.
The early settlement at London did not have stone walls but there may have been a ditch and
an earth rampart with a wooden palisade on top.
Then in 61 AD Queen Boudicca led a rebellion against the Romans. Her army marched on
London. No attempt was made to defend London. Boudicca burned London but after her
rebellion was crushed it was rebuilt. Rich people built houses of stone or brick with tiled roofs
but most people lived in wooden houses.
By the end of the 2nd century a stone wall was erected around London. The wall was 20 feet
high. Outside the wall was a ditch. In the middle of the 3rd century 20 bastions were added to
the walls (a bastion was a semi-circular tower projecting from the wall).
The population of Roman London rose to perhaps 45,000, which seems small to us but it was
the largest town in Britain.
In the center of Roman London was the forum. This was a square with shops and public
buildings arranged around it. The most important building in the forum was the basilica or 'town
hall’, which was 500 feet long and 70 feet high. In Roman London there were brick works,
potteries and glass works. There were also donkey powered mills for grinding grain to flour and
bakeries.
Roman London was also an important port with wooden wharves and jetties. Grain and metal
were exported and luxury goods were imported. (Things like wine, olive oil, glass, fine pottery,
silk and ivory).
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
Rich citizens had baths in their homes but there were several public baths near the city gates.
(Romans went to the baths to socialize not just to keep clean). Most people in the town got their
water from wells and used cess pools but there were underground drains to remove rainwater.
Roman London also had an amphitheater, which could hold 8,000 people. Here gladiators
fought to the death. Cockfighting was also a popular sport.
Roman Britain
SAXON LONDON
The last Roman soldier left Britain in 407 AD. Afterwards, during the so-called Dark Ages
London was probably abandoned. There may have been a few people living inside the walls by
fishing or farming but London ceased to be a town. But soon it rose again. A new town
appeared outside the walls on the site of Covent Garden. It was much smaller than Roman
London with perhaps 10,000 inhabitants.
In 597 monks from Rome began the task of converting the Saxons to Christianity. In 604 a
bishop was appointed for London.
By the 640's there was a mint in London making silver coins. In the 670's a Royal document
called London 'the place where the ships land'. Early in the 8th century a writer called London 'a
trading center for many nations who visit by land and sea'.
Saxon London consisted of many wooden huts with thatched roofs. Slag from metal forges have
been found proving there were many blacksmiths at work in the town. Archaeologists have also
found large numbers of loom weights (used in weaving wool) Saxon craftsmen also worked with
animal bones making things like combs. The main export from Saxon London was wool, either
raw of woven. Imports included wine and luxury foods like grapes and figs. Pottery and
millstones were also imported. Slaves were also bought and sold in London.
Disaster struck London in 842 when the Danes looted London. They returned in 851 and this
time they burned a large part of the town (an easy task when all buildings were of wood). Then
the Danes gave up just raiding and turned to conquest. They conquered northern and Eastern
England including London.
King Alfred the Great totally defeated the Danes in 878 and they split the country between them.
The Danes took eastern England including London while Alfred took the South and West.
Despite the peace treaty Alfred's men took London in 886. Alfred repaired the walls of the old
Roman town. Until then Londoners lived outside the Roman walls but during Alfred's reign they
moved inside the walls for protection. Soon foreign merchants came to live in London. By the
10th century there were wine merchants from France at Vintners Place and German merchants
at Dowgate.
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
The Danes returned in 994 but this time the Londoners fought them off. A writer said ' they
proceeded to attack the city stoutly and wished to set it on fire but here they suffered more harm
and injury than they ever thought any citizen could do them'.
'London Bridge is falling down'...so says the nursery rhyme. This is believed to be derived from
an event that took place in the early 11th century. King Olaf of Norway attacked England but he
was unable to sails up the Thames past London Bridge. So he ordered his men to erect wood
and wicker canopies over their boats. They then approached London Bridge. Londoners on the
bridge threw down missiles but they were unable to stop the Vikings. At that time London Bridge
was made of wood. Olaf and his men tied ropes to the wooden struts supporting it. They then
rowed away and London Bridge collapsed. Some historians question whether this event really
happened or whether it was just a legend that grew up around King (later Saint) Olaf.
Edward the Confessor (1042-1066) built a wooden palace at Westminster. Later Parliament met
here. Because of this Westminster became the seat of government not the city of London itself.
Edward also built Westminster Abbey, which was consecrated a few weeks before his death.
LONDON IN THE MIDDLE AGES
After the battle of Hastings an advance guard of Normans approached London Bridge from the
South but were beaten off. The Norman army then marched in a loop to the west of London to
cut it off from the rest of England. William the Conqueror occupied the royal palace at
Westminster and the won over the Londoners by making various promises. William was
crowned king of England at Westminster on 25 December 1066. William gave London a charter,
a document confirming certain rights. Nevertheless he built a wooden tower to stand guard over
London. It was replaced by a stone tower in 1078-1100. That was the beginning of the Tower of
London
The population of London at this time was perhaps 18,000, which seems very small to us but
was very large by the standards of the time. London grew in size through the 12th century and
some people began to build housed outside the walls. In 1176 the wooden bridge across the
Thames was replaced with a stone one.
A writer described London about the year 1180: 'London is happy in its clean air, in the Christian
religion, in the strength of its fortifications, in its natural situation, in the honor of its citizens. The
Cathedral is St Pauls but there is also in London and its suburbs 13 large monasteries, beside
126 parish churches. On the east side lies the tower, very large and strong with 4 gates and
turrets at intervals and runs around the northern side of the city. To the north lie fields and
meadows with small rivers flowing through them, by these water mills are driven with a pleasant
murmur. To this city come merchants from every nation under heaven rejoicing to bring
merchandise in their ships'.
Someone else wrote about London: 'Among the noble and celebrated cities of the world, that of
London, the Capital of the Kingdom of England is one of the most renowned, possessing above
others, abundant wealth, extensive commerce, great grandeur and significance'.
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
Medieval London was a lively place. There was a horse market at Smithfield (originally smooth
field) where horse racing took place. Smithfield was also the site of public executions, which
always attracted large crowds. Londoners also loved dancing on the open spaces that
surrounded the town. They liked archery and wrestling and men fought mock battles with
wooden swords and shields. In Winter people went ice skating on frozen marshes at Moorfield
using skates made of animal bones.
In the 12th or 13th century London was often spelled Lunden or Lundon. By the time of Chaucer
in the late 14th century it was spelled London.
In the 13th century the friars came to London. Friars were like monks but instead of living lives
separate from the world they went out to preach. There were different orders of friars each with
a different color of their costume. Dominican friars were called black friars because of their black
costumes and the place where they lived in London is still called Blackfriars. There were also
grey friars (Franciscans), white friars (Carmelites) and crutched friars. The word crutched is a
corruption of crouche, the old English word for cross. Their proper name was Friars of the Holy
Cross.
The Jews suffered from persecution during the Middle Ages. The first Jews came to England
after the Norman Conquest. Jews in London lived in a ghetto in old Jewry. They were some of
the first people since Roman times to live in stone houses. They had to as wooden houses were
not safe enough! In 1189 a wave of persecution resulted in the deaths of about 30 Jews. In
1264 rioters killed about 500 Jews in London. Then in 1290 all Jews were expelled from
England.
In Medieval London streets were sometimes named after the trades carried on there. Bakers
lived in Bread Street and Poultry was sold in that street. Cows were kept in Milk Street for
milking.
In 1381 the Peasants Revolt broke out. On 13 July the rebels marched on London and
sympathizers opened the gates to them. The king and his ministers took refuge in the Tower of
London while the rebels opened the prisons and looted the house of John of Gaunt, an
unpopular noble. On 14 July the king met the rebels at Moorfield and made them various
promises, none of which he kept.
The next day the king went to mass at Westminster while he was away the rebels broke into the
Tower of London and killed the Archbishop of Canterbury and several royal officials who had
taken refuge there. They confronted the king on his way back from mass. The mayor of London
stabbed the leader of the rebels, fearing he was going to attack the king. Afterwards the king
managed to calm the rebels and persuaded them to go home.
The population of London may have reached 50,000 by the middle of the 14th century making it
far larger than any other town in England. However at least a third of the population died when
the Black Death struck in 1348-49 but London soon recovered. Its population may have reached
70,000 by the end of the Middle Ages.
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
4.2 What town are you concentrating on.
London, England
4.3 What makes a significant town and what are the details
In the City of London, 20 natural areas are currently designated as "Environmentally
Significant Areas" or ESA's. These areas exist within both agricultural and urban
settings and include wetlands, forests and meadows as well as river corridors and
valleylands and significant wildlife habitat. The City, in partnership with the Upper Thames
River Conservation Authority (UTRCA), manages seven of these ESA's; Kilally Meadows,
Meadowlily Woods, Medway Valley Heritage Forest, Sift on bog, Warbler Woods and
Westminster Ponds.
The ESA's are an integral part of London's Natural Heritage System connecting valley
lands, parks and other open spaces. In addition to the designated habitats, London has
many other natural areas within the city limits including some significant woodlands that
have been incorporated into parks.
4.4 Conclusion about the town
London is a good place for shopping, dinner and drinks. From the modern London Eye to the
historic Tower of London are London's most visited tourist attractions. any of London's top 10
attractions are free, making them affordable places to soak up some culture
4.5 What information and element that you can use to your
new future town.
Public transportation in London provides a fast, precise and efficient way. I wanted to provide
such a fast and convenient public transportation in my future town.
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
Subway
● The network incorporates the world's first underground railway, the Metropolitan
Railway, which opened in 1863 and is now part of the Circle, Hammersmith &
City and Metropolitan lines
Bicycle
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
● Bicycling may be faster and more efficient than taking a car. Bicycles also produce no
meaningful pollution when in operation.
Helicopter
● People can take helicopter as transport and fly to my future town.
5. Investigation & Data Collection:
The future of towns and Better Towns
TAO-ZHU GARDEN
AGODA GARDEN, SUSTAINABLE RESIDENTIAL TOWER
TAIPEI 2010-2016
TAIWAN
Residential Tower located at Taipei. The Project is currently under construction and will
be completed in 2016. You will find below the Conceptual Design Proposal presented
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
during the competition presented during the competition phase by Vincent Callebaut,
Design Architect:
1. THE ECOLOGIC PHILOSOPHY OF THE PROJECT :
2. THE MORPHOLOGIC PHILOSOPHY OF THE PROJECT:
This twist of 90 degrees answers to four major objectives:
housing superimposed vertically and put in successive rotation of 4.5 degrees level by
level, a multi-facial morphology appears all in convex and concave curves.
Actually, according to the point of view of the pedestrian from the surrounding streets,
the AGORA GARDEN tower changes of faces and proposes new profiles. Besides this
moving geometry wearing a planted dress with sensual style, the project represents really
a built ecosystem that repatriates the fauna and the flora in the heart of the city and
generates alone a new box of subtropical biodiversity. It is a new nest in the city!
3. THE MAIN COMPONENTS OF THE PROJECT:
3.1. The luxuriant forest and the glade:
In order to ensure the confidentiality of the residents, the whole perimeter of the site is
bordered by a mineral moat that animates the outside public space with organic urban
furnitures. Inside the parcel, the walls of this moat transform themselves into planted
surrounding walls. The main access of the site is located at the Song Yong Road which is
less busy that the main avenue, Song Gao Road. The tower is coiled up in the centre of a
heavy and luxuriant safe forest of mature trees that protects the intimacy of the
inhabitants from the surrounding urban pollution. In the heart of the vegetable lung, the
pedestrian square of exotic wood opens itself on a mineral and aquatic glade.
Such as the shock wave created by a water drop, the landscape design is made in circles
arches and radiates from the epicentre of the tower. A circular light well, curved this
time, makes the light, the abundant plants in cascades to the deepest basement. The car
parks, the swimming pool and the fitness are thus naturally lightened and ventilated.
3.2. The lobbies in indoor - outdoor connectivity: The ground floor in double height
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
sets through its great transparent facades a high connectivity between the interior
community spaces and the exterior garden.
3.3. The central core, a vertical twisted garden surrounded by sky entry foyers: The
central core has been designed to separate totally the vertical circulations into two
housing units on the same level. This core is fixed (it does not pivot). But in order to
ensure the rotation of the storeys floor by floor, it is surrounded by a (naturally lightened)
horizontal circulation loop welcoming the entry foyer dedicated to each unit. This buffer
loop enables thus to set the main entrance always in the axis of each apartment and this
despite of the 4.5 degrees rotation storey by storey. An alternative has been studied to
build sky entry foyers directly around the cylindrical central core offering thus planted
entry foyers with spectacular front view on the city of Taipei.
By level, the central core gathers 2 staircases, 4 high speed elevators of 24 people (1800
kg), 1 car elevators (also useful to carry enormous art pieces, luxury antique vehicles, or
even huge pianos, etc.), 2 sky garages in glass and also all the vertical shafts for the main
flows. All these vertical flows are covered by a huge bearing exoskeleton in reinforced
steel.
3.4. The apartments, a maximal spatial and technical flexibility: The apartments of
540 M2 on average superimpose themselves under the shape of two planted twists unified
around a central core. Each unit presents a storey structurally made with Vierendeel
beams system behind glass facades only on even floors. All levels are linked at both ends
by two spiralling mega columns covered by green walls. Each apartment is completely
free columns !
This structural concept inspired of the DNA chain enables a maximal flexibility in terms
of interior layout. It ensures also an optimal visual permeability (indoor outdoor
connectivity) towards the suspended gardens of the balconies in foreground and the urban
panorama on the background.
• The spatial flexibility is divided in 4 main typologies of storeys of 2 or 4 units:
Typology A : 2 units with curved living rooms around a central core.
Typology B : 2 units with living rooms stretched in the length behind the Southern
façades.
Typology C : 2 units with living rooms set in bow by the panoramic storey.
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
Typology D : 4 units in duplex with living rooms benefiting from a double height.
In addition to these basic typologies, two huge clubhouses are set up on the roof floors so
as to respect the setback required by the building volume. Therefore, from the same
standardized double helix (1.250 M2 floor area), the rotation of the storey and its
customizable interior laying-out makes every level be a unique floor for each resident!
• The technical flexibility is obtained by the integration of the double deck and
double wall concepts:
The energetic efficiency is obtained by isolating façades with high performance
named inter-layer or double-layer:
3.5. The landscape balconies, green cascades of flowers, fruits, vegetables and
aromates:
The balconies called ascending or positive:
The balconies called descending or negative:
3.6. The photovoltaic roof and its gardens for phyto-purification:
3.7. The landscape basement naturally lightened and ventilated:
4. THE CHALLENGE OF A POSITIVELY ECOLOGIC REVOLUTION!
In November 2010, VINCENT CALLEBAUT ARCHITECTURES SARL was awarded as the
successful tenderer for the construction of a new Sustainable
In the heart of the urban networks of Xinyin District in full development, the AGORA GARDEN
project presents a pioneer concept of sustainable residential eco-construction that aims at limiting
the ecologic footprint of its inhabitants by researching the right symbiosis between the human
being and the Nature.
On this site that is the last and only biggest parcel of land for residential use, the concept is to
build a true fragment of vertical landscape with low energetic consumption. The building is thus
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
eco-designed. It integrates not only the recycling of organic waste and used water but also all the
renewable energies and other new state-of-the-art nanotechnologies (BIPV solar photovoltaic,
rain water recycling, compost, etc.).
The project targets thus the energetic performance so as to be officially approved by the Green
Building Label, the norm for high environmental quality, delivered by the Home Affairs
Ministry of Taipei.
Part of the concept of inhabited and cultivated vertical farm through its own inhabitants, this
project of residential tower enables first to design by its avant-gardist architecture a new life
style in accordance with the nature and the climate. Actually, the AGORA GARDEN tower
superimposes vertically wide planted balconies of true suspended orchards, organic vegetable
gardens, aromatic gardens and other medicinal gardens.
Such as a living organism, the tower becomes metabolic! It overpasses its energy-consuming
passive role (absorbing all the natural resources and rejecting only waste) to produce its own
organic food.
The architectural concept is thus to eco-design an energy self-sufficient building, whose energy
is electric, thermal and also alimentary.
Therefore, the project answers directly to 4 main ecologic objectives of the After Copenhagen:
1. The reduction of the climatic global warming.
2. The protection of the nature and the biodiversity.
3. The protection of the environment and the quality of life.
4. The management of the natural resources and waste.
Finally, according to the Cradle to Cradle concept where nothing is lost, everything transforms
itself; all the construction and furnishing materials will be selected through recycled and / or
recyclable labels. By imitating the processes of natural ecosystems, it deals thus with reinventing
in Taiwan the industrial and architectural processes in order to produce clean solutions and to
create industrial cycle where everything is reused, either back to the ground as non toxic organic
nutrients, or back to the industry as technical nutrients able to be indefinitely recycled.
Biotechnological prototype, the AGORA GARDEN project reveals thus the symbiosis of human
actions and their positive impact on the nature.
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
Neither single tower, or twin towers, the project arises towards the sky with two helicoidal
towers gathering themselves around a central core. This architectural party offers a hyper-
compacted core and a maximal flexibility of the housing storeys (with the possibility to unify
two apartments units in one without any footbridge). It brings a reduction of view angles towards
the urban landscape and a hyper-abundance of suspended gardens.
The AGORA GARDEN tower is, as its name indicates it, directly inspired of the structure in
double helix of the DNA (Deoxyribonucleic acid), source of life, dynamism and twinning. Every
double helix is represented in the project by two housing units forming a full level.
Thus, from its base to the top, the 20 inhabited levels in double helix stretch themselves and twist
themselves at 90 degrees. By metaphor, the obtained sinuosity corresponds to the universal
musical symbol of harmonic revealing the notion of ultimate balance praised by the project.
1. The first objective is to be perfectly integrated in the North / South pyramidal profile of the
Building Volume. Actually, the morphology of the project changes according to its orientation.
Its East / West elevations draw a rhomboidal pyramid whereas the North-South ones represent a
reverse pyramid.
2. The second objective is to generate a maximum of cascades of suspended open-air gardens,
not part of the F.A.R. (floor area ratio). Thus, the planted balcony surface area can easily exceed
the limit of the required 10 percents. The global framework of 40 percents of building coverage
ratio, i.e. 3 264 M2 is thus totally respected.
3. The third objective is to offer to the inhabitants exceptional panoramic views on the skyline of
Taipei by multiplying the transversal views, especially towards the very close Taipei 101 tower
and the Central Business District in full emergence.
4. The fourth objective is to generate from a flexible standardized level a progressive geometry
with corbels which assures the intimacy and the confidentiality of each apartment by avoiding
the indiscreet vision axes.
Inspired from the Nature, the AGORA GARDEN project is shaped with an organic fluid and
dynamic geometry. From the simple and standardized element of the double helix of
Spatially hyper-flexible, the constructive system proposed also a total flexibility to the level of
technical distribution of the flows. Additional vertical flows are organized with “oblique shafts”
along the glass façade. The system of double deck is integrated at each level under the shape of a
double floor and a suspended ceiling. The network of the flows (rain water, used water, hot
water, electricity, under floor-heating, cool air, hot air, optic fibre, etc.) crossing the central core
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
can thus irrigate without any difficulty on the horizontal way all the surface area of each storey.
Moreover, the use of castellated beams will enable to take advantage of a maximal free height
under ceiling. The interior partitioning of each apartment will be àla carte according to the
wishes of each inhabitant. The double walls will compartmentalize the different rooms following
the curved axes of the building by integrating also many useful storage spaces.
The AGORA GARDEN tower is covered by linear crystalline façades repeating themselves at
each level. The identical facades in every apartment will be pre-manufactured in factory to
accelerate their setting-up during the works. A multilayer glass (airspace + Polyvinyl Butyral) or
double layer façades with integrated blinds will be directly associated there in order to protect
the interior spaces from the solar radiation in summer and to limit the calorific loss in winter.
The landscape concept is to build a cascade of suspended gardens which cover the entire
building. The tower becomes then a true vertical inhabited park, in a box of nature in the heart of
the city ! The selected essences will be preferably eatable in order to make each inhabitant
gardener in its own vegetable consumption. Suspended orchards, organic vegetable gardens,
aromatic and medicinal gardens will flourish the wide and deep jardinière along the global
periphery of each apartment. Garden furniture, compost spaces from waste to organic fertilizers,
fuel cells, rain water tanks for the irrigation of plants, and ecologic nests for birds will be directly
integrated in the design of these jardinières. In order to protect the organic substrate tanks from
the heating coming from the solar radiation, the planting beds will be covered by a layer of
Bethel white granite on honeycomb. The white colour of the AGORA GARDEN tower will
provide a new emblematic, pure and fresh identity.
The tower generates through its morphology in rotation two types of very specific landscape
balconies :
open-air, they benefit from a maximal sunshine and enable to cultivate their trees and shrubs of
subtropical essences. We will preferably set up the living rooms on this side. It will be also
possible to inlay photovoltaic sunshades at the extremity of the slab according to the wishes of
each resident. Thermal captors could be also set up in order to produce sanitary hot water.
Covered by the superior level, they offer half shadowed relaxing spaces to cultivate flowers,
vegetables, aromatic plants and falling and climbing species. We will preferably set up the
bedrooms on this side.
In bow of the housing storeys, are laid-out some outdoor garden bath sanctuary that coils
themselves up in an alcove dig in the façade of each apartment. Different from the modern city
built of concrete, glass and steel, the AGORA GARDEN tower appears in an urban centre as a -
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
deciduous leaves) will make its colours and its abundance to evolve. Declining a camaieu of
green in the summer, the tower will blaze with golden and bloody colours in autumn. In spring, it
will be bloomed with thousands colours and will liberate floral fragrances from its fruit trees.
The tower will then develop perfumed micro-climate for the very best welfare of its inhabitants!
Located at 100 meters high, a huge photovoltaic pergola of 1000 m²transforms the sun rays into
electric energy which is directly reintroduced into the network of the building. Under this layer
with blue-steel reflection, clubhouses are located on the roof surrounded by panoramic sky
gardens. They filter and purify the rain water with the action of the plants in order to reinject the
water by gravity in the distribution network of sanitary water. From this terrace, there is an
extraordinary panoramic view on the 101 tower.
Contrary to the traditional car park of 2.10 M high under beams and plunged under an artificial
shadowy light, the car park of the AGORA GARDEN project benefits from the natural light.
Actually, A light well integrating seismic joints makes the light and the fresh air fall to the levels
of the basement. Thus, the car park and the connected facilities (swimming pools and fitness) are
naturally ventilated. The main access of the basement is done by the Song Yong Road under a
sculptural entry gate inspired by a spiralling leaf.
From the level B1, we can access to both car elevators inside the central core and go very
quickly to the sky garages located at the entrance of each apartment. The car park is designed in
the existing perimeter of the current car park of the pre-existing Agora Garden hotel in order to
limit the works cost of excavation and foundations. Only the South-West wall has been corrected
so as to set up a laying-out with double helix. Actually, in the continuation of the rotating tower,
the car park is drawn according to a circular plan with an ascending interior helix around the core
in the direction of the exit and a second descending helix in the direction of the entrance. The
whole set forms a continuous banister that welcomes more than 230 cars and 500 scooters. From
slab to slab, the minimal height is 3,10 meters which improves comfortably the atmosphere of
the building of an immaculate white. It is important to notice that the structure of the tower
weights through this car park in order to facilitate the descent of the loading of the whole
building.In the architecture of the AGORA GARDEN project, the association of the living
(Bios), the biotechnologies (renewable energies and nanotechnologies), and the NICT (New
Technologies of Information and Communication), can meet the Chinese antique thought which
always refused to separate the nature and the humanity that nourishes itself from it; the body
from the spirit that did not exist without it. Avant-gardist on the theme of contemporary ecologic
crisis, the Chinese thought prefers the relationships rather than the separated elements. The
human being and its life framework depend from the fusion of the variables:
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
As humbly wrote the influent sinologist, specialist in old China Marcel Granet in the Chinese
Thought in 1934: None opposes the human being from the nature; do not think of opposing them
such as the free element from the determined element. The Chinese people only see in the Time
and the Space a gathering of occasions and sites. These are interdependences, solidarities that
constitute the order of the Universe. We do not think that the Man could form a reign in the
Nature or that the spirit distinguishes itself from the material.
In the heart of Taipei, after having built the city on the landscape, after having then built the city
on the city, it is now time for the landscape to rebuild itself on the city. In this perspective of
ecologic resilience, the AGORA GARDEN project must be considered as an abstraction of
geography and a distortion of ecosystem.
The AGORA GARDEN project is a Nature built from the living that fights for the re-
naturalisation of Ecopolis of tomorrow.
This tower reveals strongly and surely the challenge of reinventing a new lifestyle for residential
tower, that is self-sufficient, sculpturally unprecedented. It is a project absolutely unique in the
world and charismatic drawing with poetry in the Oriental sky, a delicate superposition of sky
villas with wide suspended private gardens.
Last but not least, it is a unique ecologic landmark, new symbol of sustainability at the bottom of
the prestigious 101 tower.
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
6. The New “X” Town
“Blossom” Town
Report of proposing a new town because of people increased greatly recently.
Many people have no house, no job since it’s too crowded in the previous town. A
shelter is very important to every living things especially human being. As a
Malaysia, I am glad that I will be able to safe the others Malaysian life from worst
back to normal.
As a mayor of new town, I decided to build a town that provides enough
educational and health services, enough shelter to live, good jobs opportunities and
green environment for the people in “ X” town. Some of the people will pollute our
environment and destroyed green space because of building new resident area ,
industrial area and business area.
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
6.2 What is the important characteristic and
elements.
Bicycle as a transportation
Riding bicycle in a town is definitely a great choice. Riding a bicycle is a
quicker way of getting around the town. Bicycle is an environmentally
friendly mode of transport because it does not need any petrol or gas.
Riding a bicycle is good for your health. You develop a strong heart and
muscular limbs.
Green Spaces and forest
Trees combat the green house effect. Global warming is the result of
excess greenhouse gases, created by burning fossil fuels and destroying
tropical rainforests. Tree also clean the air , it absorb odors and pollutant
gases (nitrogen oxides, ammonia, sulfur dioxide and ozone) and filter
particulates out of the air by trapping them on their leaves and bark. Green
spaces can be used as community park for citizens to mingle around.
Airport
There’s a airport in Blossom Town. Since there’s a tall building, so I
decided to build an airport on top of the building for the people who come
from other city or country. People can travel to here by taking helicopter.
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
6.4 Master Plan
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
7. Conclusion about Blossom Town
Through research to design stage, it takes lots of time to
finish this proposal. It’s not as easy as what I expect.
Throughout this assignment, I’ve learned a lot from my
lecturer and doing research. I’ve learn that priority of
citizens is placed before everything. I also learned how to
plan things well. Although this Blossom Town that I
designed might not be perfect. I hope I can do better in
future.
ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation
Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University
8. Reference Links
1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Town
2. http://www.china-tour.cn/Lijiang/Lijiang-Travel-Guide.htm
3. http://www.localhistories.org/london.html
4. https://www.london.ca/residents/Environment/Natural-
Environments/Pages/ESAs.aspx
5. http://vincent.callebaut.org/page1-img-asiancairns.html

More Related Content

Viewers also liked

Math
MathMath
Computer mediated version
Computer mediated versionComputer mediated version
Computer mediated version
Yessicaaa1990
 
Ici final group
Ici final groupIci final group
Ici final group
Kailyn Lee
 
Antal Passport - Issue 2.compressed
Antal Passport - Issue 2.compressedAntal Passport - Issue 2.compressed
Antal Passport - Issue 2.compressed
Constanze KASTNER
 
Franchising brochure-2015.compressed
Franchising brochure-2015.compressedFranchising brochure-2015.compressed
Franchising brochure-2015.compressed
Constanze KASTNER
 
Psycho slides-1 (1)
Psycho slides-1 (1)Psycho slides-1 (1)
Psycho slides-1 (1)
Kailyn Lee
 
1 bici updated
1 bici   updated1 bici   updated
1 bici updated
Kailyn Lee
 
Maths survey
Maths surveyMaths survey
Maths survey
Kailyn Lee
 
Ecn30205 economics assignment class trip
Ecn30205 economics assignment   class tripEcn30205 economics assignment   class trip
Ecn30205 economics assignment class trip
Kailyn Lee
 
Assignmet final
Assignmet finalAssignmet final
Assignmet final
Kailyn Lee
 
Enbe project 1
Enbe project 1Enbe project 1
Enbe project 1Kailyn Lee
 
Ss field-data
Ss field-dataSs field-data
Ss field-data
Kailyn Lee
 
Bs1 final report_templaterecovered
Bs1 final report_templaterecoveredBs1 final report_templaterecovered
Bs1 final report_templaterecovered
Kailyn Lee
 
Ss report-2-field-data-latest
Ss report-2-field-data-latestSs report-2-field-data-latest
Ss report-2-field-data-latest
Kailyn Lee
 
Field service management pwc_20160128
Field service management pwc_20160128Field service management pwc_20160128
Field service management pwc_20160128
Iñigo Atin
 

Viewers also liked (16)

Math
MathMath
Math
 
Computer mediated version
Computer mediated versionComputer mediated version
Computer mediated version
 
Ici final group
Ici final groupIci final group
Ici final group
 
Antal Passport - Issue 2.compressed
Antal Passport - Issue 2.compressedAntal Passport - Issue 2.compressed
Antal Passport - Issue 2.compressed
 
Franchising brochure-2015.compressed
Franchising brochure-2015.compressedFranchising brochure-2015.compressed
Franchising brochure-2015.compressed
 
Psycho slides-1 (1)
Psycho slides-1 (1)Psycho slides-1 (1)
Psycho slides-1 (1)
 
1 bici updated
1 bici   updated1 bici   updated
1 bici updated
 
Maths survey
Maths surveyMaths survey
Maths survey
 
Ecn30205 economics assignment class trip
Ecn30205 economics assignment   class tripEcn30205 economics assignment   class trip
Ecn30205 economics assignment class trip
 
Assignmet final
Assignmet finalAssignmet final
Assignmet final
 
Tj 1
Tj 1Tj 1
Tj 1
 
Enbe project 1
Enbe project 1Enbe project 1
Enbe project 1
 
Ss field-data
Ss field-dataSs field-data
Ss field-data
 
Bs1 final report_templaterecovered
Bs1 final report_templaterecoveredBs1 final report_templaterecovered
Bs1 final report_templaterecovered
 
Ss report-2-field-data-latest
Ss report-2-field-data-latestSs report-2-field-data-latest
Ss report-2-field-data-latest
 
Field service management pwc_20160128
Field service management pwc_20160128Field service management pwc_20160128
Field service management pwc_20160128
 

Similar to Enbe final project

Final enbe report
Final enbe reportFinal enbe report
Final enbe report
khaikeat16
 
FNBE ENBE Future Town Report
FNBE ENBE Future Town ReportFNBE ENBE Future Town Report
FNBE ENBE Future Town Report
Monnie Bao Jia
 
Future town- Pearl Town
Future town- Pearl TownFuture town- Pearl Town
Future town- Pearl Town
Shze Hwa Lee
 
ENBE X TOWN REPORT
ENBE X TOWN REPORTENBE X TOWN REPORT
ENBE X TOWN REPORT
hongbinng
 
The ''X'' town - Case study.doc
The ''X'' town - Case study.docThe ''X'' town - Case study.doc
The ''X'' town - Case study.doc
Zhen Li
 
enbe project 2 part A- town proposal report
enbe project 2  part A- town proposal report enbe project 2  part A- town proposal report
enbe project 2 part A- town proposal report
harrygirn
 
Proposal
ProposalProposal
Proposal
NingBL
 
The Caracatita Proposal
The Caracatita ProposalThe Caracatita Proposal
The Caracatita Proposal
cynfang Fong
 
X town with templates
X town with templatesX town with templates
X town with templates
kychong1105
 
X town with templates
X town with templatesX town with templates
X town with templates
Kit' Here
 
x town report
x town reportx town report
x town report
Jıa Yıı
 
Done enbe report
Done enbe reportDone enbe report
Done enbe report
Eelyn Cheong
 
Better livable town
Better livable townBetter livable town
Better livable town
Puisan Lim
 
ENBE FINAL REPORT
ENBE FINAL REPORTENBE FINAL REPORT
ENBE FINAL REPORT
deadmk
 
X city report
X city reportX city report
X city report
Lee Yih
 
Avenir report
Avenir reportAvenir report
Avenir report
Lynnstyles
 
Enbe report template
Enbe report templateEnbe report template
Enbe report template
Michelle Lee Ern Hui
 
ENBE FINAL PROJECT REPORT PROPOSAL TOWN
ENBE FINAL PROJECT REPORT PROPOSAL TOWNENBE FINAL PROJECT REPORT PROPOSAL TOWN
ENBE FINAL PROJECT REPORT PROPOSAL TOWN
Darshiini Vig
 
Underwater town
Underwater townUnderwater town
Underwater town
michelle1223
 
Enbe final project proposal
Enbe final project proposalEnbe final project proposal
Enbe final project proposal
Marco Leong
 

Similar to Enbe final project (20)

Final enbe report
Final enbe reportFinal enbe report
Final enbe report
 
FNBE ENBE Future Town Report
FNBE ENBE Future Town ReportFNBE ENBE Future Town Report
FNBE ENBE Future Town Report
 
Future town- Pearl Town
Future town- Pearl TownFuture town- Pearl Town
Future town- Pearl Town
 
ENBE X TOWN REPORT
ENBE X TOWN REPORTENBE X TOWN REPORT
ENBE X TOWN REPORT
 
The ''X'' town - Case study.doc
The ''X'' town - Case study.docThe ''X'' town - Case study.doc
The ''X'' town - Case study.doc
 
enbe project 2 part A- town proposal report
enbe project 2  part A- town proposal report enbe project 2  part A- town proposal report
enbe project 2 part A- town proposal report
 
Proposal
ProposalProposal
Proposal
 
The Caracatita Proposal
The Caracatita ProposalThe Caracatita Proposal
The Caracatita Proposal
 
X town with templates
X town with templatesX town with templates
X town with templates
 
X town with templates
X town with templatesX town with templates
X town with templates
 
x town report
x town reportx town report
x town report
 
Done enbe report
Done enbe reportDone enbe report
Done enbe report
 
Better livable town
Better livable townBetter livable town
Better livable town
 
ENBE FINAL REPORT
ENBE FINAL REPORTENBE FINAL REPORT
ENBE FINAL REPORT
 
X city report
X city reportX city report
X city report
 
Avenir report
Avenir reportAvenir report
Avenir report
 
Enbe report template
Enbe report templateEnbe report template
Enbe report template
 
ENBE FINAL PROJECT REPORT PROPOSAL TOWN
ENBE FINAL PROJECT REPORT PROPOSAL TOWNENBE FINAL PROJECT REPORT PROPOSAL TOWN
ENBE FINAL PROJECT REPORT PROPOSAL TOWN
 
Underwater town
Underwater townUnderwater town
Underwater town
 
Enbe final project proposal
Enbe final project proposalEnbe final project proposal
Enbe final project proposal
 

More from Kailyn Lee

Software
Software Software
Software
Kailyn Lee
 
Software Application report
Software Application reportSoftware Application report
Software Application report
Kailyn Lee
 
Estimating presentation
Estimating presentationEstimating presentation
Estimating presentation
Kailyn Lee
 
Estimating various types of estimating
Estimating various types of estimatingEstimating various types of estimating
Estimating various types of estimating
Kailyn Lee
 
PP1 presentation
PP1 presentationPP1 presentation
PP1 presentation
Kailyn Lee
 
PP1 report
PP1 reportPP1 report
PP1 report
Kailyn Lee
 
Eca presentation
Eca presentationEca presentation
Eca presentation
Kailyn Lee
 
Measurement 4 presentation
Measurement 4 presentation Measurement 4 presentation
Measurement 4 presentation
Kailyn Lee
 
Buildingservices2 bld60503
Buildingservices2 bld60503Buildingservices2 bld60503
Buildingservices2 bld60503
Kailyn Lee
 
People's dynamic individual (autosaved)
People's dynamic individual (autosaved)People's dynamic individual (autosaved)
People's dynamic individual (autosaved)
Kailyn Lee
 
Safety individual final
Safety individual finalSafety individual final
Safety individual final
Kailyn Lee
 
Traffic management safety six key issues
Traffic management safety   six key issuesTraffic management safety   six key issues
Traffic management safety six key issues
Kailyn Lee
 
Bs 2 individual
Bs 2 individualBs 2 individual
Bs 2 individual
Kailyn Lee
 
Managementscienceassignment
ManagementscienceassignmentManagementscienceassignment
Managementscienceassignment
Kailyn Lee
 
Ct bm measurement report
Ct bm measurement reportCt bm measurement report
Ct bm measurement report
Kailyn Lee
 
Psycho video-slides
Psycho video-slidesPsycho video-slides
Psycho video-slides
Kailyn Lee
 
Psychologylor
PsychologylorPsychologylor
Psychologylor
Kailyn Lee
 
Maths project brief jan 2015 project - statistics
Maths project brief jan 2015 project - statisticsMaths project brief jan 2015 project - statistics
Maths project brief jan 2015 project - statistics
Kailyn Lee
 
Account assignment
Account assignmentAccount assignment
Account assignment
Kailyn Lee
 
Furniture shop
Furniture shopFurniture shop
Furniture shop
Kailyn Lee
 

More from Kailyn Lee (20)

Software
Software Software
Software
 
Software Application report
Software Application reportSoftware Application report
Software Application report
 
Estimating presentation
Estimating presentationEstimating presentation
Estimating presentation
 
Estimating various types of estimating
Estimating various types of estimatingEstimating various types of estimating
Estimating various types of estimating
 
PP1 presentation
PP1 presentationPP1 presentation
PP1 presentation
 
PP1 report
PP1 reportPP1 report
PP1 report
 
Eca presentation
Eca presentationEca presentation
Eca presentation
 
Measurement 4 presentation
Measurement 4 presentation Measurement 4 presentation
Measurement 4 presentation
 
Buildingservices2 bld60503
Buildingservices2 bld60503Buildingservices2 bld60503
Buildingservices2 bld60503
 
People's dynamic individual (autosaved)
People's dynamic individual (autosaved)People's dynamic individual (autosaved)
People's dynamic individual (autosaved)
 
Safety individual final
Safety individual finalSafety individual final
Safety individual final
 
Traffic management safety six key issues
Traffic management safety   six key issuesTraffic management safety   six key issues
Traffic management safety six key issues
 
Bs 2 individual
Bs 2 individualBs 2 individual
Bs 2 individual
 
Managementscienceassignment
ManagementscienceassignmentManagementscienceassignment
Managementscienceassignment
 
Ct bm measurement report
Ct bm measurement reportCt bm measurement report
Ct bm measurement report
 
Psycho video-slides
Psycho video-slidesPsycho video-slides
Psycho video-slides
 
Psychologylor
PsychologylorPsychologylor
Psychologylor
 
Maths project brief jan 2015 project - statistics
Maths project brief jan 2015 project - statisticsMaths project brief jan 2015 project - statistics
Maths project brief jan 2015 project - statistics
 
Account assignment
Account assignmentAccount assignment
Account assignment
 
Furniture shop
Furniture shopFurniture shop
Furniture shop
 

Enbe final project

  • 1. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University Better Livable Town Blossom Town Name : Lee Kailyn Student ID : 0320273 Course : FNBE AUG 2014
  • 2. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University Content: 1. Introduction 3 2. Investigation on Better Town 4 - 5 3. Investigation & Data Collection: Ancient towns 6 - 8 4. Investigation & Data Collection: The present towns 9 -15 5. Investigation & Data Collection: The future and better town 15 - 23 6. The New “X” Town / Or the new name 24 - 26 7. The Conclusion 27 8. References list 28
  • 3. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University 1. Introduction This is our second project aka final project for this subject Elements of Natural Built Environment. The first part of this project, I have to pretend that I am the mayor of “X” town. The people in “X” town require a new town because of reasons that it is too crowded. We will need to propose a new layout for the new “X” Town very quickly.The size of the proposed new town should be about 30km2 or smaller about 15 – 30km2 . The idea of this project is to understand the component and elements of a town and what makes a better liveable future town for individual proposal. To make a good town, I should learn from the history to achieve a better future city. I decided to do research and collect data about the past, present and future town to plan and propose a new “X” town.
  • 4. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University 2. The Town 2.1 Definition of Town An built-up area with a name, defined boundaries and local government, that is larger than a village and generally smaller than a city. The size definition for what constitutes a "town" varies considerably in different parts of the world. 2.2 What is the brief history The word town shares an origin with the German word Zaun, the Dutch word tuin, and the Old Norse tun. The German word Zaun comes closest to the original meaning of the word: a fence of any material. An early borrowing from Celtic *dunom (cf. Old Irish dun, Welsh din "fortress, fortified place, camp," dinas "city;" In English and Dutch, the meaning of the word took on the sense of the space which these fences enclosed. In England, a town was a small city that could not afford or was not allowed to build walls or other larger fortifications, and built a palisade or stockade instead. In the Netherlands, this space was a garden, more specifically those of the wealthy, which had a high fence or a wall around them (like the garden of palace Het Loo in Apeldoorn, which was the example for the privy garden of William and Mary at Hampton Court). In Old Norse tun means a (grassy) place between farmhouses, and is still used in a similar meaning in modern Norwegian. In Old English and Early and Middle Scots, the word ton, toun, etc. could refer to kinds of settlements as diverse as agricultural estates and holdings, partly picking up the Norse sense (as in the Scots word fermtoun) at one end of the scale, to fortified municipality at the other. If there was any distinction between toun (fortified municipality) and burgh (unfortified municipality) as claimed by some, it did not last in practice as burghs and touns developed. For example "Edina Burgh" or "Edinburgh" (called a city today) was built around a fort and eventually came to have a defensive wall. In some cases, "town" is an alternate name for "city" or "village" (especially a larger village). Sometimes, the word "town" is short for "township". In general, today towns can be differentiated from townships, villages, or hamlets on the basis of their economic character, in that most of a town's population will tend to derive their living from
  • 5. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University manufacturing industry, commerce, and public services rather than primary industry such as agriculture or related activities. The distinction between a town and a city similarly depends on the approach adopted: a city may strictly be an administrative entity which has been granted that designation by law, but in informal usage, the term is also used to denote an urban locality of a particular size or importance: whereas a medieval city may have possessed as few as 10,000 inhabitants, today some consider an urban place of fewer than 100,000 as a town, even though there are many officially designated cities that are much smaller than that. 2.3 What makes a town A town is made up with an amount of population, government area, commercial area, religious and cultures area, port and shipping area, education area, and sufficient of facilities. 2.4 What makes a good town. ● Provides sufficient educational and health services ● Safe and security ● Sufficient land for building development ● Stable governance ● Sufficient shelter to live ● Enough jobs opportunities ● Green environment ● Clean environment ● Good location ● Good leaders ● Public transportation efficient 2.5 What is the future towns For me, a future towns is everything has mentioned at what makes a good town. Since no one knows what the future holds. I have to use my imagination. A future towns has a clean environment, full of different type of skyscrapers, colourful flying cars and robot around us.
  • 6. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University 3. Investigation & Data Collection: Ancient Town Lijiang, China 3.1 History Lijiang, possibly the best preserved old town in China, is one of the last places where a visitor can witness and experience a historic, traditional urban culture. Lijiang lies 570 km north-west of Kunming in Yunnan Province. It consists of three old towns, namely Dayan, Baisha and shuhe. Remarkably, the old houses with stone foundations, plastered whitewashed brick walls, red wooden doors, shutters and balconies, and sloping tiled roofs, survived a recent earthquake without much damage, while the new concrete buildings were flattened. Due to the unique culture and comfortable climate, it
  • 7. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University has been classified as a World-class Cultural Legacy by UNESCO, 'National-level Scenic Zone 'and a 'National Town of History and Culture'. The history of Lijiang dates back to the South Song period (1127-1279AD). In 1253, Kublai, in his expedition to conquer the state of Dali, came to what is now Lijiang after his troops crossed the Jinsha River by using inflated bags of animal hide. That explains why many names of places in the Naxi languages are transliterations of 'army camps,' 'drilling grounds,' etc. for the Mongolian language. In the early years of the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368AD), there were about 1,000 families in Lijiang, which constantly grew in size during the Ming and Qing Dynasties. Since the Qing Dynasty, Lijiang has been the distribution center for goods produced in northwest of Yunnan province. Tibetans send their woolen textiles and medicinal herbs here for shipment to other parts of China, and tea and articles for daily use from Xishuang Banna, Fengqing and Xiaguan of Yunnan province are sold to Tibetan areas via the town. 3.2 What town are you concentrating on. Lijiang, China
  • 8. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University 3.3 What makes is a significiant town and what are the details The town is a leading tourist city and has ancient towns and natural areas as the major attractions. Lijiang attractions provide the most popular Lijiang sightseeing. These must-see attractions in Lijiang range from peaceful Lijiang Old Town, breathtaking Jade Dragon Mountain, majestic Tiger Leaping Gorge, enchanting Lugu Lake, to mysterious Black Dragon Pool, featured Baisha Village and ancient Shuhe Old Town. A Lijiang travel is incomplete without visiting these Lijiang tourist attractions. 3.4 Conclusion about the town Lijiang China old town is great place for those who love to visit historical places and ancient traditions. Lijiang Old Town is located on the lap of mountains and on the banks of river and perhaps the only old city without a city wall. Due to the multiracial inhabitants settled here long years back, the ancient city reflects the aspects of different cultures. You can see different architectural styles like Bai, Han, Tibet etc blended into Naxi architectural style rendering it a unique look. This place is good for hiking and offers beautiful scenery viewed from the top. 3.5 What information or element that you can use to your new future town Since the major attraction of this town is natural area, I might consider to create a natural area for my future town, because natural area is critical to human and environmental well being.
  • 9. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University 4. Investigation and Data Collection Present Town London 4.1 History The Romans founded London about 50 AD. Its name is derived from the Celtic word Londinios, which means the place of the bold one. After they invaded Britain in 43 AD the Romans built a bridge across the Thames. They later decided it was an excellent place to build a port. The water was deep enough for ocean going ships but it was far enough inland to be safe from Germanic raiders. Around 50 AD Roman merchants built a town by the bridge. So London was born. The early settlement at London did not have stone walls but there may have been a ditch and an earth rampart with a wooden palisade on top. Then in 61 AD Queen Boudicca led a rebellion against the Romans. Her army marched on London. No attempt was made to defend London. Boudicca burned London but after her rebellion was crushed it was rebuilt. Rich people built houses of stone or brick with tiled roofs but most people lived in wooden houses. By the end of the 2nd century a stone wall was erected around London. The wall was 20 feet high. Outside the wall was a ditch. In the middle of the 3rd century 20 bastions were added to the walls (a bastion was a semi-circular tower projecting from the wall). The population of Roman London rose to perhaps 45,000, which seems small to us but it was the largest town in Britain. In the center of Roman London was the forum. This was a square with shops and public buildings arranged around it. The most important building in the forum was the basilica or 'town hall’, which was 500 feet long and 70 feet high. In Roman London there were brick works, potteries and glass works. There were also donkey powered mills for grinding grain to flour and bakeries. Roman London was also an important port with wooden wharves and jetties. Grain and metal were exported and luxury goods were imported. (Things like wine, olive oil, glass, fine pottery, silk and ivory).
  • 10. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University Rich citizens had baths in their homes but there were several public baths near the city gates. (Romans went to the baths to socialize not just to keep clean). Most people in the town got their water from wells and used cess pools but there were underground drains to remove rainwater. Roman London also had an amphitheater, which could hold 8,000 people. Here gladiators fought to the death. Cockfighting was also a popular sport. Roman Britain SAXON LONDON The last Roman soldier left Britain in 407 AD. Afterwards, during the so-called Dark Ages London was probably abandoned. There may have been a few people living inside the walls by fishing or farming but London ceased to be a town. But soon it rose again. A new town appeared outside the walls on the site of Covent Garden. It was much smaller than Roman London with perhaps 10,000 inhabitants. In 597 monks from Rome began the task of converting the Saxons to Christianity. In 604 a bishop was appointed for London. By the 640's there was a mint in London making silver coins. In the 670's a Royal document called London 'the place where the ships land'. Early in the 8th century a writer called London 'a trading center for many nations who visit by land and sea'. Saxon London consisted of many wooden huts with thatched roofs. Slag from metal forges have been found proving there were many blacksmiths at work in the town. Archaeologists have also found large numbers of loom weights (used in weaving wool) Saxon craftsmen also worked with animal bones making things like combs. The main export from Saxon London was wool, either raw of woven. Imports included wine and luxury foods like grapes and figs. Pottery and millstones were also imported. Slaves were also bought and sold in London. Disaster struck London in 842 when the Danes looted London. They returned in 851 and this time they burned a large part of the town (an easy task when all buildings were of wood). Then the Danes gave up just raiding and turned to conquest. They conquered northern and Eastern England including London. King Alfred the Great totally defeated the Danes in 878 and they split the country between them. The Danes took eastern England including London while Alfred took the South and West. Despite the peace treaty Alfred's men took London in 886. Alfred repaired the walls of the old Roman town. Until then Londoners lived outside the Roman walls but during Alfred's reign they moved inside the walls for protection. Soon foreign merchants came to live in London. By the 10th century there were wine merchants from France at Vintners Place and German merchants at Dowgate.
  • 11. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University The Danes returned in 994 but this time the Londoners fought them off. A writer said ' they proceeded to attack the city stoutly and wished to set it on fire but here they suffered more harm and injury than they ever thought any citizen could do them'. 'London Bridge is falling down'...so says the nursery rhyme. This is believed to be derived from an event that took place in the early 11th century. King Olaf of Norway attacked England but he was unable to sails up the Thames past London Bridge. So he ordered his men to erect wood and wicker canopies over their boats. They then approached London Bridge. Londoners on the bridge threw down missiles but they were unable to stop the Vikings. At that time London Bridge was made of wood. Olaf and his men tied ropes to the wooden struts supporting it. They then rowed away and London Bridge collapsed. Some historians question whether this event really happened or whether it was just a legend that grew up around King (later Saint) Olaf. Edward the Confessor (1042-1066) built a wooden palace at Westminster. Later Parliament met here. Because of this Westminster became the seat of government not the city of London itself. Edward also built Westminster Abbey, which was consecrated a few weeks before his death. LONDON IN THE MIDDLE AGES After the battle of Hastings an advance guard of Normans approached London Bridge from the South but were beaten off. The Norman army then marched in a loop to the west of London to cut it off from the rest of England. William the Conqueror occupied the royal palace at Westminster and the won over the Londoners by making various promises. William was crowned king of England at Westminster on 25 December 1066. William gave London a charter, a document confirming certain rights. Nevertheless he built a wooden tower to stand guard over London. It was replaced by a stone tower in 1078-1100. That was the beginning of the Tower of London The population of London at this time was perhaps 18,000, which seems very small to us but was very large by the standards of the time. London grew in size through the 12th century and some people began to build housed outside the walls. In 1176 the wooden bridge across the Thames was replaced with a stone one. A writer described London about the year 1180: 'London is happy in its clean air, in the Christian religion, in the strength of its fortifications, in its natural situation, in the honor of its citizens. The Cathedral is St Pauls but there is also in London and its suburbs 13 large monasteries, beside 126 parish churches. On the east side lies the tower, very large and strong with 4 gates and turrets at intervals and runs around the northern side of the city. To the north lie fields and meadows with small rivers flowing through them, by these water mills are driven with a pleasant murmur. To this city come merchants from every nation under heaven rejoicing to bring merchandise in their ships'. Someone else wrote about London: 'Among the noble and celebrated cities of the world, that of London, the Capital of the Kingdom of England is one of the most renowned, possessing above others, abundant wealth, extensive commerce, great grandeur and significance'.
  • 12. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University Medieval London was a lively place. There was a horse market at Smithfield (originally smooth field) where horse racing took place. Smithfield was also the site of public executions, which always attracted large crowds. Londoners also loved dancing on the open spaces that surrounded the town. They liked archery and wrestling and men fought mock battles with wooden swords and shields. In Winter people went ice skating on frozen marshes at Moorfield using skates made of animal bones. In the 12th or 13th century London was often spelled Lunden or Lundon. By the time of Chaucer in the late 14th century it was spelled London. In the 13th century the friars came to London. Friars were like monks but instead of living lives separate from the world they went out to preach. There were different orders of friars each with a different color of their costume. Dominican friars were called black friars because of their black costumes and the place where they lived in London is still called Blackfriars. There were also grey friars (Franciscans), white friars (Carmelites) and crutched friars. The word crutched is a corruption of crouche, the old English word for cross. Their proper name was Friars of the Holy Cross. The Jews suffered from persecution during the Middle Ages. The first Jews came to England after the Norman Conquest. Jews in London lived in a ghetto in old Jewry. They were some of the first people since Roman times to live in stone houses. They had to as wooden houses were not safe enough! In 1189 a wave of persecution resulted in the deaths of about 30 Jews. In 1264 rioters killed about 500 Jews in London. Then in 1290 all Jews were expelled from England. In Medieval London streets were sometimes named after the trades carried on there. Bakers lived in Bread Street and Poultry was sold in that street. Cows were kept in Milk Street for milking. In 1381 the Peasants Revolt broke out. On 13 July the rebels marched on London and sympathizers opened the gates to them. The king and his ministers took refuge in the Tower of London while the rebels opened the prisons and looted the house of John of Gaunt, an unpopular noble. On 14 July the king met the rebels at Moorfield and made them various promises, none of which he kept. The next day the king went to mass at Westminster while he was away the rebels broke into the Tower of London and killed the Archbishop of Canterbury and several royal officials who had taken refuge there. They confronted the king on his way back from mass. The mayor of London stabbed the leader of the rebels, fearing he was going to attack the king. Afterwards the king managed to calm the rebels and persuaded them to go home. The population of London may have reached 50,000 by the middle of the 14th century making it far larger than any other town in England. However at least a third of the population died when the Black Death struck in 1348-49 but London soon recovered. Its population may have reached 70,000 by the end of the Middle Ages.
  • 13. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University 4.2 What town are you concentrating on. London, England 4.3 What makes a significant town and what are the details In the City of London, 20 natural areas are currently designated as "Environmentally Significant Areas" or ESA's. These areas exist within both agricultural and urban settings and include wetlands, forests and meadows as well as river corridors and valleylands and significant wildlife habitat. The City, in partnership with the Upper Thames River Conservation Authority (UTRCA), manages seven of these ESA's; Kilally Meadows, Meadowlily Woods, Medway Valley Heritage Forest, Sift on bog, Warbler Woods and Westminster Ponds. The ESA's are an integral part of London's Natural Heritage System connecting valley lands, parks and other open spaces. In addition to the designated habitats, London has many other natural areas within the city limits including some significant woodlands that have been incorporated into parks. 4.4 Conclusion about the town London is a good place for shopping, dinner and drinks. From the modern London Eye to the historic Tower of London are London's most visited tourist attractions. any of London's top 10 attractions are free, making them affordable places to soak up some culture 4.5 What information and element that you can use to your new future town. Public transportation in London provides a fast, precise and efficient way. I wanted to provide such a fast and convenient public transportation in my future town.
  • 14. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University Subway ● The network incorporates the world's first underground railway, the Metropolitan Railway, which opened in 1863 and is now part of the Circle, Hammersmith & City and Metropolitan lines Bicycle
  • 15. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University ● Bicycling may be faster and more efficient than taking a car. Bicycles also produce no meaningful pollution when in operation. Helicopter ● People can take helicopter as transport and fly to my future town. 5. Investigation & Data Collection: The future of towns and Better Towns TAO-ZHU GARDEN AGODA GARDEN, SUSTAINABLE RESIDENTIAL TOWER TAIPEI 2010-2016 TAIWAN Residential Tower located at Taipei. The Project is currently under construction and will be completed in 2016. You will find below the Conceptual Design Proposal presented
  • 16. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University during the competition presented during the competition phase by Vincent Callebaut, Design Architect: 1. THE ECOLOGIC PHILOSOPHY OF THE PROJECT : 2. THE MORPHOLOGIC PHILOSOPHY OF THE PROJECT: This twist of 90 degrees answers to four major objectives: housing superimposed vertically and put in successive rotation of 4.5 degrees level by level, a multi-facial morphology appears all in convex and concave curves. Actually, according to the point of view of the pedestrian from the surrounding streets, the AGORA GARDEN tower changes of faces and proposes new profiles. Besides this moving geometry wearing a planted dress with sensual style, the project represents really a built ecosystem that repatriates the fauna and the flora in the heart of the city and generates alone a new box of subtropical biodiversity. It is a new nest in the city! 3. THE MAIN COMPONENTS OF THE PROJECT: 3.1. The luxuriant forest and the glade: In order to ensure the confidentiality of the residents, the whole perimeter of the site is bordered by a mineral moat that animates the outside public space with organic urban furnitures. Inside the parcel, the walls of this moat transform themselves into planted surrounding walls. The main access of the site is located at the Song Yong Road which is less busy that the main avenue, Song Gao Road. The tower is coiled up in the centre of a heavy and luxuriant safe forest of mature trees that protects the intimacy of the inhabitants from the surrounding urban pollution. In the heart of the vegetable lung, the pedestrian square of exotic wood opens itself on a mineral and aquatic glade. Such as the shock wave created by a water drop, the landscape design is made in circles arches and radiates from the epicentre of the tower. A circular light well, curved this time, makes the light, the abundant plants in cascades to the deepest basement. The car parks, the swimming pool and the fitness are thus naturally lightened and ventilated. 3.2. The lobbies in indoor - outdoor connectivity: The ground floor in double height
  • 17. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University sets through its great transparent facades a high connectivity between the interior community spaces and the exterior garden. 3.3. The central core, a vertical twisted garden surrounded by sky entry foyers: The central core has been designed to separate totally the vertical circulations into two housing units on the same level. This core is fixed (it does not pivot). But in order to ensure the rotation of the storeys floor by floor, it is surrounded by a (naturally lightened) horizontal circulation loop welcoming the entry foyer dedicated to each unit. This buffer loop enables thus to set the main entrance always in the axis of each apartment and this despite of the 4.5 degrees rotation storey by storey. An alternative has been studied to build sky entry foyers directly around the cylindrical central core offering thus planted entry foyers with spectacular front view on the city of Taipei. By level, the central core gathers 2 staircases, 4 high speed elevators of 24 people (1800 kg), 1 car elevators (also useful to carry enormous art pieces, luxury antique vehicles, or even huge pianos, etc.), 2 sky garages in glass and also all the vertical shafts for the main flows. All these vertical flows are covered by a huge bearing exoskeleton in reinforced steel. 3.4. The apartments, a maximal spatial and technical flexibility: The apartments of 540 M2 on average superimpose themselves under the shape of two planted twists unified around a central core. Each unit presents a storey structurally made with Vierendeel beams system behind glass facades only on even floors. All levels are linked at both ends by two spiralling mega columns covered by green walls. Each apartment is completely free columns ! This structural concept inspired of the DNA chain enables a maximal flexibility in terms of interior layout. It ensures also an optimal visual permeability (indoor outdoor connectivity) towards the suspended gardens of the balconies in foreground and the urban panorama on the background. • The spatial flexibility is divided in 4 main typologies of storeys of 2 or 4 units: Typology A : 2 units with curved living rooms around a central core. Typology B : 2 units with living rooms stretched in the length behind the Southern façades. Typology C : 2 units with living rooms set in bow by the panoramic storey.
  • 18. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University Typology D : 4 units in duplex with living rooms benefiting from a double height. In addition to these basic typologies, two huge clubhouses are set up on the roof floors so as to respect the setback required by the building volume. Therefore, from the same standardized double helix (1.250 M2 floor area), the rotation of the storey and its customizable interior laying-out makes every level be a unique floor for each resident! • The technical flexibility is obtained by the integration of the double deck and double wall concepts: The energetic efficiency is obtained by isolating façades with high performance named inter-layer or double-layer: 3.5. The landscape balconies, green cascades of flowers, fruits, vegetables and aromates: The balconies called ascending or positive: The balconies called descending or negative: 3.6. The photovoltaic roof and its gardens for phyto-purification: 3.7. The landscape basement naturally lightened and ventilated: 4. THE CHALLENGE OF A POSITIVELY ECOLOGIC REVOLUTION! In November 2010, VINCENT CALLEBAUT ARCHITECTURES SARL was awarded as the successful tenderer for the construction of a new Sustainable In the heart of the urban networks of Xinyin District in full development, the AGORA GARDEN project presents a pioneer concept of sustainable residential eco-construction that aims at limiting the ecologic footprint of its inhabitants by researching the right symbiosis between the human being and the Nature. On this site that is the last and only biggest parcel of land for residential use, the concept is to build a true fragment of vertical landscape with low energetic consumption. The building is thus
  • 19. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University eco-designed. It integrates not only the recycling of organic waste and used water but also all the renewable energies and other new state-of-the-art nanotechnologies (BIPV solar photovoltaic, rain water recycling, compost, etc.). The project targets thus the energetic performance so as to be officially approved by the Green Building Label, the norm for high environmental quality, delivered by the Home Affairs Ministry of Taipei. Part of the concept of inhabited and cultivated vertical farm through its own inhabitants, this project of residential tower enables first to design by its avant-gardist architecture a new life style in accordance with the nature and the climate. Actually, the AGORA GARDEN tower superimposes vertically wide planted balconies of true suspended orchards, organic vegetable gardens, aromatic gardens and other medicinal gardens. Such as a living organism, the tower becomes metabolic! It overpasses its energy-consuming passive role (absorbing all the natural resources and rejecting only waste) to produce its own organic food. The architectural concept is thus to eco-design an energy self-sufficient building, whose energy is electric, thermal and also alimentary. Therefore, the project answers directly to 4 main ecologic objectives of the After Copenhagen: 1. The reduction of the climatic global warming. 2. The protection of the nature and the biodiversity. 3. The protection of the environment and the quality of life. 4. The management of the natural resources and waste. Finally, according to the Cradle to Cradle concept where nothing is lost, everything transforms itself; all the construction and furnishing materials will be selected through recycled and / or recyclable labels. By imitating the processes of natural ecosystems, it deals thus with reinventing in Taiwan the industrial and architectural processes in order to produce clean solutions and to create industrial cycle where everything is reused, either back to the ground as non toxic organic nutrients, or back to the industry as technical nutrients able to be indefinitely recycled. Biotechnological prototype, the AGORA GARDEN project reveals thus the symbiosis of human actions and their positive impact on the nature.
  • 20. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University Neither single tower, or twin towers, the project arises towards the sky with two helicoidal towers gathering themselves around a central core. This architectural party offers a hyper- compacted core and a maximal flexibility of the housing storeys (with the possibility to unify two apartments units in one without any footbridge). It brings a reduction of view angles towards the urban landscape and a hyper-abundance of suspended gardens. The AGORA GARDEN tower is, as its name indicates it, directly inspired of the structure in double helix of the DNA (Deoxyribonucleic acid), source of life, dynamism and twinning. Every double helix is represented in the project by two housing units forming a full level. Thus, from its base to the top, the 20 inhabited levels in double helix stretch themselves and twist themselves at 90 degrees. By metaphor, the obtained sinuosity corresponds to the universal musical symbol of harmonic revealing the notion of ultimate balance praised by the project. 1. The first objective is to be perfectly integrated in the North / South pyramidal profile of the Building Volume. Actually, the morphology of the project changes according to its orientation. Its East / West elevations draw a rhomboidal pyramid whereas the North-South ones represent a reverse pyramid. 2. The second objective is to generate a maximum of cascades of suspended open-air gardens, not part of the F.A.R. (floor area ratio). Thus, the planted balcony surface area can easily exceed the limit of the required 10 percents. The global framework of 40 percents of building coverage ratio, i.e. 3 264 M2 is thus totally respected. 3. The third objective is to offer to the inhabitants exceptional panoramic views on the skyline of Taipei by multiplying the transversal views, especially towards the very close Taipei 101 tower and the Central Business District in full emergence. 4. The fourth objective is to generate from a flexible standardized level a progressive geometry with corbels which assures the intimacy and the confidentiality of each apartment by avoiding the indiscreet vision axes. Inspired from the Nature, the AGORA GARDEN project is shaped with an organic fluid and dynamic geometry. From the simple and standardized element of the double helix of Spatially hyper-flexible, the constructive system proposed also a total flexibility to the level of technical distribution of the flows. Additional vertical flows are organized with “oblique shafts” along the glass façade. The system of double deck is integrated at each level under the shape of a double floor and a suspended ceiling. The network of the flows (rain water, used water, hot water, electricity, under floor-heating, cool air, hot air, optic fibre, etc.) crossing the central core
  • 21. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University can thus irrigate without any difficulty on the horizontal way all the surface area of each storey. Moreover, the use of castellated beams will enable to take advantage of a maximal free height under ceiling. The interior partitioning of each apartment will be àla carte according to the wishes of each inhabitant. The double walls will compartmentalize the different rooms following the curved axes of the building by integrating also many useful storage spaces. The AGORA GARDEN tower is covered by linear crystalline façades repeating themselves at each level. The identical facades in every apartment will be pre-manufactured in factory to accelerate their setting-up during the works. A multilayer glass (airspace + Polyvinyl Butyral) or double layer façades with integrated blinds will be directly associated there in order to protect the interior spaces from the solar radiation in summer and to limit the calorific loss in winter. The landscape concept is to build a cascade of suspended gardens which cover the entire building. The tower becomes then a true vertical inhabited park, in a box of nature in the heart of the city ! The selected essences will be preferably eatable in order to make each inhabitant gardener in its own vegetable consumption. Suspended orchards, organic vegetable gardens, aromatic and medicinal gardens will flourish the wide and deep jardinière along the global periphery of each apartment. Garden furniture, compost spaces from waste to organic fertilizers, fuel cells, rain water tanks for the irrigation of plants, and ecologic nests for birds will be directly integrated in the design of these jardinières. In order to protect the organic substrate tanks from the heating coming from the solar radiation, the planting beds will be covered by a layer of Bethel white granite on honeycomb. The white colour of the AGORA GARDEN tower will provide a new emblematic, pure and fresh identity. The tower generates through its morphology in rotation two types of very specific landscape balconies : open-air, they benefit from a maximal sunshine and enable to cultivate their trees and shrubs of subtropical essences. We will preferably set up the living rooms on this side. It will be also possible to inlay photovoltaic sunshades at the extremity of the slab according to the wishes of each resident. Thermal captors could be also set up in order to produce sanitary hot water. Covered by the superior level, they offer half shadowed relaxing spaces to cultivate flowers, vegetables, aromatic plants and falling and climbing species. We will preferably set up the bedrooms on this side. In bow of the housing storeys, are laid-out some outdoor garden bath sanctuary that coils themselves up in an alcove dig in the façade of each apartment. Different from the modern city built of concrete, glass and steel, the AGORA GARDEN tower appears in an urban centre as a -
  • 22. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University deciduous leaves) will make its colours and its abundance to evolve. Declining a camaieu of green in the summer, the tower will blaze with golden and bloody colours in autumn. In spring, it will be bloomed with thousands colours and will liberate floral fragrances from its fruit trees. The tower will then develop perfumed micro-climate for the very best welfare of its inhabitants! Located at 100 meters high, a huge photovoltaic pergola of 1000 m²transforms the sun rays into electric energy which is directly reintroduced into the network of the building. Under this layer with blue-steel reflection, clubhouses are located on the roof surrounded by panoramic sky gardens. They filter and purify the rain water with the action of the plants in order to reinject the water by gravity in the distribution network of sanitary water. From this terrace, there is an extraordinary panoramic view on the 101 tower. Contrary to the traditional car park of 2.10 M high under beams and plunged under an artificial shadowy light, the car park of the AGORA GARDEN project benefits from the natural light. Actually, A light well integrating seismic joints makes the light and the fresh air fall to the levels of the basement. Thus, the car park and the connected facilities (swimming pools and fitness) are naturally ventilated. The main access of the basement is done by the Song Yong Road under a sculptural entry gate inspired by a spiralling leaf. From the level B1, we can access to both car elevators inside the central core and go very quickly to the sky garages located at the entrance of each apartment. The car park is designed in the existing perimeter of the current car park of the pre-existing Agora Garden hotel in order to limit the works cost of excavation and foundations. Only the South-West wall has been corrected so as to set up a laying-out with double helix. Actually, in the continuation of the rotating tower, the car park is drawn according to a circular plan with an ascending interior helix around the core in the direction of the exit and a second descending helix in the direction of the entrance. The whole set forms a continuous banister that welcomes more than 230 cars and 500 scooters. From slab to slab, the minimal height is 3,10 meters which improves comfortably the atmosphere of the building of an immaculate white. It is important to notice that the structure of the tower weights through this car park in order to facilitate the descent of the loading of the whole building.In the architecture of the AGORA GARDEN project, the association of the living (Bios), the biotechnologies (renewable energies and nanotechnologies), and the NICT (New Technologies of Information and Communication), can meet the Chinese antique thought which always refused to separate the nature and the humanity that nourishes itself from it; the body from the spirit that did not exist without it. Avant-gardist on the theme of contemporary ecologic crisis, the Chinese thought prefers the relationships rather than the separated elements. The human being and its life framework depend from the fusion of the variables:
  • 23. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University As humbly wrote the influent sinologist, specialist in old China Marcel Granet in the Chinese Thought in 1934: None opposes the human being from the nature; do not think of opposing them such as the free element from the determined element. The Chinese people only see in the Time and the Space a gathering of occasions and sites. These are interdependences, solidarities that constitute the order of the Universe. We do not think that the Man could form a reign in the Nature or that the spirit distinguishes itself from the material. In the heart of Taipei, after having built the city on the landscape, after having then built the city on the city, it is now time for the landscape to rebuild itself on the city. In this perspective of ecologic resilience, the AGORA GARDEN project must be considered as an abstraction of geography and a distortion of ecosystem. The AGORA GARDEN project is a Nature built from the living that fights for the re- naturalisation of Ecopolis of tomorrow. This tower reveals strongly and surely the challenge of reinventing a new lifestyle for residential tower, that is self-sufficient, sculpturally unprecedented. It is a project absolutely unique in the world and charismatic drawing with poetry in the Oriental sky, a delicate superposition of sky villas with wide suspended private gardens. Last but not least, it is a unique ecologic landmark, new symbol of sustainability at the bottom of the prestigious 101 tower.
  • 24. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University 6. The New “X” Town “Blossom” Town Report of proposing a new town because of people increased greatly recently. Many people have no house, no job since it’s too crowded in the previous town. A shelter is very important to every living things especially human being. As a Malaysia, I am glad that I will be able to safe the others Malaysian life from worst back to normal. As a mayor of new town, I decided to build a town that provides enough educational and health services, enough shelter to live, good jobs opportunities and green environment for the people in “ X” town. Some of the people will pollute our environment and destroyed green space because of building new resident area , industrial area and business area.
  • 25. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University 6.2 What is the important characteristic and elements. Bicycle as a transportation Riding bicycle in a town is definitely a great choice. Riding a bicycle is a quicker way of getting around the town. Bicycle is an environmentally friendly mode of transport because it does not need any petrol or gas. Riding a bicycle is good for your health. You develop a strong heart and muscular limbs. Green Spaces and forest Trees combat the green house effect. Global warming is the result of excess greenhouse gases, created by burning fossil fuels and destroying tropical rainforests. Tree also clean the air , it absorb odors and pollutant gases (nitrogen oxides, ammonia, sulfur dioxide and ozone) and filter particulates out of the air by trapping them on their leaves and bark. Green spaces can be used as community park for citizens to mingle around. Airport There’s a airport in Blossom Town. Since there’s a tall building, so I decided to build an airport on top of the building for the people who come from other city or country. People can travel to here by taking helicopter.
  • 26. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University 6.4 Master Plan
  • 27. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University 7. Conclusion about Blossom Town Through research to design stage, it takes lots of time to finish this proposal. It’s not as easy as what I expect. Throughout this assignment, I’ve learned a lot from my lecturer and doing research. I’ve learn that priority of citizens is placed before everything. I also learned how to plan things well. Although this Blossom Town that I designed might not be perfect. I hope I can do better in future.
  • 28. ENBE | Final Project | Part A – Report | The Better Livable Representation Lee Kailyn | 0320273 | Ms Reene | FNBE AUG 2014 | Taylor’s University 8. Reference Links 1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Town 2. http://www.china-tour.cn/Lijiang/Lijiang-Travel-Guide.htm 3. http://www.localhistories.org/london.html 4. https://www.london.ca/residents/Environment/Natural- Environments/Pages/ESAs.aspx 5. http://vincent.callebaut.org/page1-img-asiancairns.html