20
DESIGNING IN THE WALKABLE CITY Alexander Ståhle PHD & CEO Stockholm, Sweden

Designing in The Walkable City

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Designing in The Walkable City

DESIGNING IN THE WALKABLE CITY

Alexander Ståhle

PHD & CEO

Stockholm, Sweden

Page 2: Designing in The Walkable City

Stockholm – A Walk City Story

Gamla stan 1200 Vällingby 1950 Hammarby sjöstad 1990

Page 3: Designing in The Walkable City

Stureplan – Our Time Square in 1990

Central street junction

transformed to a plaza

Now: Financial hub

Now: Night club hub

Page 4: Designing in The Walkable City

Housing value is 90% walkability

Close to city centre

Street connectivity

Walk to park

Courtyard

Walk to transit

Walk to service

Walk to waterfront

Page 5: Designing in The Walkable City

Public transport

Shops & Restaurants

Office clustering

Building modernity

= 90% office value

Office value is 70% public transport accessibility

Page 6: Designing in The Walkable City

The Walkable City – Stockholm City Plan

Page 7: Designing in The Walkable City

Density Park Street

Existing

Plan

+250% +150% + 60%

Testing walkability in new plans

Service access Park access Street connectivity

Page 8: Designing in The Walkable City

Slussen today built 1935

70% car space

Pedestrians in tunnels

Celebrated by Le Corbusier

Page 9: Designing in The Walkable City

New Slussen

50% less car space

30% more open space

2X pedestrians 2030

Page 10: Designing in The Walkable City

Oslo wants to be a bike city

19 of 20 wants better bike city

8%Bike mode share

Page 11: Designing in The Walkable City

Oslo Bicycle Network Analysis

45% low bikability score50% low traffic safety

Page 12: Designing in The Walkable City

Oslo Bicycle Strategy

3X bike network

8% > 16% bike modeshare

530 million USD

Page 13: Designing in The Walkable City

Citymoves 2015

Curating the Future

Page 14: Designing in The Walkable City

STRONG ENERGY /

ECONOMY

WEAK ENERGY /

ECONOMY

HIGH

SOCIAL

CONTROL

LOW

SOCIAL

CONTROL

FREE CITY TECHNO CITY

ECO CITY

Scenarios for

Future Stockholm

Page 15: Designing in The Walkable City

Eco City 2050

Low growth planned

Suburban declline

Bike and Transit

Page 16: Designing in The Walkable City

Techno City 2050

High growth social control

Polycentric suburbs

Shared mobilities

Page 17: Designing in The Walkable City

Free City 2050

High unequal growth

Suburban sprawl

Private car oriented

Page 18: Designing in The Walkable City

Free City Techno City Eco City

Vote!

Page 19: Designing in The Walkable City

Votes from 4850 people

0 20 40 60 80 100 120

1

2

3

4

5

TECHNO CITY ECO CITY FREE CITY

0 100%400 Swedish planners

550 Norwegian architects

300 Finnish planners

255 Radio listeners

3345 Newspaper readers44%

31%

60%

40%

60%

Page 20: Designing in The Walkable City

www.spacescape.se / [email protected]

Worldbank, UN Habitat, WHO, Greenpeace, UN IPCC,

Vatican, World Resources Institute, ITDP, Embarq, WWF,

American Farmland Trust, American Planning Association,

Community Rights Council, ChangeLab Solutions, The

American Public Health Association, The American Society

of Landscape Architects, The Association of Metropolitan

Planning Organizations, The Conservation Fund, Congress

of New Urbanism, National Neighborhood Coalition, The

Partnership for Sustainable Communities, The Institute of

Transportation Engineers, National Trust for Historic

Preservation, National Center for Biking & Walking,

National Association of Transportation Officials (NACTO),

The National Multi-Housing Council, The National

Association of Realtors, The National Oceanic and

Atmospheric Administration, The Surface Transportation

Policy Project, The Center for Immigration Study, The

National Trust for Historic Preservation, The National

Association of Development Organizations, Community

Research Connections, The U.S. Forest Service, National

Wildlife Federation, Natural Resources Defense Council,

The Northeast-Midwest Institute, Project for Public

Spaces, Smart Growth America, Urban Land Institute,

Sierra Club, Smart Growth Network, Walkable and Livable

Communities Institute, US Environmental Protection

Agency, Trust for Public Land

CLOSER TOGETHERThis is the future of cities