Sunday, 27 March 2011

//week five - assignment breakdown and research

Group members:
Conor Todd
Guro Aanestad
Prue Dabelstein

City - Chur, Switzerland

Chur, Switzerland

From doing a quick search of maps we found out that Chur in Switzerland is the oldest city in switzerland, it is surrounded by mountains that you can ski on, it has a large railway that goes through the city up to the mountains (alpine city), there are many churches and the streets are very narrow.

things to include in our research panel:
- maps (nolie, history and mobility)
- written component
- model of city

Facts about Rhine River:
- means to flow
- route for goods and trades inland to switzerland 
- boarders Switzerland and Germany
- suffered from pollution in germany in the past

 Section of Chur my group is focusing on where old meets new

reflection... in the tutorial i really enjoyed searching for maps and doing research for our chosen city of Chur. From images we could find the city is very beautiful and one of the oldest in Switzerland. The city has a very interesting aerial view which gave us some information on how the city may have formed. By looking at the main roads and shapes from an aerial view our group gathered that Chur was an organically formed city with not many straight roads. As you can see from the map at the top of this post which shows the whole of Chur you can see a main train lines that go right through the center of the city, possibly suggesting that it is a city in which you pass through to get to the alps or something of the like. One of the most interesting part of the city which my group is going to focus on is the southeast corner of the city below the main train lines. Just above is an image of this section. Our group found this section of the city particularly interesting due to the very obvious separation of areas, where an old city meets a newer part of the city (the southeast corner being the old city).

MAIN ROUNDABOUT FROM OLD TO NEW CHUR
http://www.travelpod.ca
PROTECTED BY MOUNTAINS
http://mystoryabroad.com/johnhuston/
OLD CITY
http://members.virtualtourist.com/m/29312/a9035/


Cuthbert explains that 'urban design is either 'architecture writ large' or 'urban planing writ small' (2003). I found this analogy of urban design interesting as it places the profession smack bang in the middle of urban planing and architecture. Yet Cuthbert writes that it is not recognized for either. I believe that urban planners, as they already deal with similar scales to urban designers, should merge professions so that planners who are not recognized for design will become proficient in both. Urban design and urban planning have many overlapping sections which is why in my opinion makes it hard to distinguish and individualize the two professions. If i was to define urban design i would say that it is almost the same as urban planning although urban design deals more with the city in a three dimensional aspect as well as designing spaces appropriate for the people. Even after trying to define urban design as its own entity i still think that merging urban planning and design would be the simple solution, although i could be a little naive of the situation.  

Cuthbert, A. R. (2003). Designing cities : critical readings in urban design. Malden, MA,
Oxford : Blackwell Pub.





Thursday, 24 March 2011

//week four - Urban Analysis

exercise one A - Brisbane timeline

 exercise one B - Brisbane timeline
Mapping Brisbane's timeline was very interesting. In particular I would have thought that the main part of the city would be the oldest part of Brisbane and then expansion out from there would have occurred. Although this is not the case, in fact from completing the history mapping exercise it is obvious that the first hub of development occurred in the Fortitude Valley are of Brisbane and it wasn't until 1874 when the city center was developed.

 exercise two - mobility analysis
In the mobility analysis map above shows the transport routes of the city cat, cross river ferry, trains and main bus ways.
 exercise three - functional analysis

 exercise four - urban morphology

reflection... when completing these maps I began to think about the planning of Brisbane city in more depth and how a map of a city can show so many thing about the city depending on how you manipulate the map.

Urban morphology is analysis of a city which helps reveal human settlement patterns (Steiner, F. R. 2008). As we experienced in the tutorial whilst completing the urban morphology map, it is evident that the human settlement patterns can be seen in plan by colour coding the heights of the built environment. By completing this exercise you begin to form a map which shows a bit of the city's history. Whitehand mentions the notion of an urban fringe which constitutes to a major part of the urban area (Whitehand, J. W. R. 1987). I found this quite interesting that there is a space just outside of the town or city that is almost like a buffer zone between the urban and rural environments. I had a little look at some city maps where this is clearly evident.
 
As you can see in the map above of Chur, Switzerland, that the urban fringe (buffer zone) is coloured in white with the rural area in green and the urban city in gray.

      -Whitehand, J. W. R. (1987). The Changing Face of the City. Oxford: Institute of British Geographers.
      -Steiner, F. R. (2008). The Living Landscape: an ecological approach to landscape planning. America: Island Press

Thursday, 17 March 2011

//week three - Describing the city

This week we had our second workshop on describing the city. this was predominately carried out by experimenting with different types of mapping techniques and gathering information to create urban sections.

ex1: CONCEPTRAL REPRESENTATION

ex2: CITY PATTERN

ex3: FIGURE GROUND MAP

ex4: NOLIE MAP

ex5: URBAN SECTION

ex6: STREET SECTION

reflection... Throughout the mapping process the most interesting maps for me were the nolli and the figure ground maps which clearly show you the public spaces in white. I found these maps very interesting because i never realised before how much public space there is throughout the city and fortitude valley. although the city pattern map took the longest to finish because of how detailed it was, I definitely think it is the map that clearly exhibits the structure of the city (and surrounding suburbs) as you can see where the city starts to morph into a more residential spaces.  It is also evident in  all of these maps the large impact the river has a on the layout of the city.

'The only legitimacy of the street is as public space. With out it, there is no city.' (Kostof, 1992). This quote by Kostof is an interesting thought and quite evident in the maps that distinguish between public and private spaces. Above the maps of Brisbane show more that 50 percent of the spaces in the city is devoted to public spaces. 

        -Kostof,S. (1992). The City Assembled. London: Thames and Hudson

After mapping in plan it is interesting to see the relationship between the built environment and the natural landscape in the urban section above. It shows a whole new perspective on the idea of public and private spaces in relation to heights above ground of which private spaces occupy. The private spaces when considering elevation possibly out way the public spaces within Brisbane city.

Overall I found the mapping experience quite informative as I was able to further understand planning  techniques in Brisbane city and how the Brisbane river and typography of the city has had a large impact on the urban planning.

Wednesday, 9 March 2011

//week two - Urban Reading

This week we had to allocate ourselves to a walkshop tutorial to take us to the Story Bridge. All of the walkshop tutorials were different from each other in terms of there modes of transport, i chose the walking group. Below are sketches i produce while i was on the walkshop.
Government House - landmark

Mangroves Boardwalk - path

 Goodwill Bridge - node

 Kangaroo Point Cliffs - edge/path

Story Bridge from Riverside - landmark/node

Story Bridge from below

Story Bridge elevation

walking up to Story Bridge

under Story Bridge

Story Bridge entrance

By using a combination of Kevin Lynch's approach ('The Image of the City') and Gordon Cullen's approach ('The Concise Townscape'), i have traced my way through the city with a series of sketches. Throughout the walk i gathered from my surroundings elements such as paths, nodes, landmarks and edges and documented each of them. Cullen sketched exactly what he saw although as if he were "to walk from one end of the plan to the other" (Cullen, 1996, p.17), this is what i have attempted to do in my sketches.
     -Cullen, G. (1996) The Concise Townscape. Burlington, MA: Architectural Press.

reflection...this week in the walkshop, apart from getting fairly burnt, i very much enjoyed walking to the story bridge via the back river side of QUT. by choosing the walking walkshop i believe we were at an advantage because we were actually able to walk the whole way which allowed you to stop and really experience all elements of the city. i believe Cullen's picturesque way of documenting urban design allows for a concise interpretation of the city and the important elements within the city. although the plans are as important as picturesque images in urban design, the images do tend to appeal more to and are understood by the wider general public.

i think it is important to be able to understand city's and the components with in them before you design architecture for them.

Sunday, 6 March 2011

//week one

'order and transgression' - over stepping boundaries and growth

week one activity//write the first couple of words that come to mind next to the images below...

plan view of all images

image one
water front town.

image two
city versus mountains.

image three
floating city.

reflection...this week uni commenced and we had the first lecture for architecture and the city. I think I am really going to enjoy this subject because I will be learning about city's all over the world and in particular city's in Germany (which is where I am going on exchange this year).

When looking at the images above, at first I didn't realise that all the images where just different photos of the same city. The first image looks like a city that has been built right on the ocean front The second image shows a bit more context and explains the settings a little further letting you know that the water is probably a large lake or river in the middle of the city rather than ocean. and the third image looks like the city is floating at the foot of these large cliffs.

In the first chapter of 'Cities and Cultures' a reading by Miles, he poses the question "but what makes a city?". I think this is an interesting thought that could possible require a complex answer or could be as simple as saying that a "city is a place where things happen to influence history"(Miles, 2007, pg.9). Although saying this about a city portrays the city as shallow and lifeless with no purpose which is completely inaccurate. Cities today are densely populated and full of action and life, they are places of interest to outsiders and homes of others. I agree with Miles when he states that Utopianism is a key factor in the development of modern cities today, as it suggests that developers and urban planners strive to make idealistic cities. Take Dubai for example, it is a fairly new Utopian city with little history. The strive for this city to be a utopias has cause many social and environmental issues, greatly lacking in comfortable public spaces. It is fair enough to plan idealistic cities although thought has to go into the people who use the city not just the buildings that are put in it.

It is also interesting to think of how and why cities get established where they are, for the images above it would seem obvious that this city/village was established on the water front for convenience of exports and importing goods, also the fact that the terrain is to step to develop further back.

Miles, M. (2007). Cities and cultures. Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon, New York: Routledge.