the untested city


The Big Show: You are cordially invited
February 8, 2010, 10:57 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized



New City ON HOLD
January 9, 2010, 7:59 pm
Filed under: China | Tags: , , ,

Construction of a city center on hold, Sunnyvale, CA

Recent global phenomena and by-product of the economic recession:: The unfinished project.

Around the world, the construction of new buildings has halted, and these edifices, or “monuments to failed investment” remain erect in various forms of completion/annihilation.  Many are just the foundations, or cleared and surveyed landscapes, that have become the voids of well-established urban fabrics.  Others are the secured and inaccessible construction sites, severed and obstructing desolate parts of a city.  New York (and Boston?) are keeping running tabs on these arrested developments.  See Curbed NY for the city’s latest count.

In the US, the unfinished project is often a building or two.  And while Las Vegas probably has the largest conglomeration of these domestic paused developments right now, what happens in Asia…where the building of cities occurs at speeds comparable to single building construction here?

Existing Ordos south of the river, New orthogonal superblocks of Ordos City North of the river

Main arterial view, Ordos City

AlJazeera documented Ordos City, China in this November video segment.  It is an entire new city that stands built, yet empty.  A ghost town pre-inhabitation.  This is a pattern, though, that isn’t too unlike the empty spaces of Dubai and Shanghai.  Dubai’s Burj Khalifa opened this past week with loads of available office and hotel space and people wondering if it will ever be fully occupied.  I visited other places entertaining similar ‘on hold’ scenarios: New Songdo City, South Korea and Astana, Kazakhstan.  A view down an arterial road in Ordos makes me think of identical views across central Asia and reveals that city building today hasn’t changed much over the last 50 years.

Astana, Kazakhstan

Does this mean that cities around the world are rethinking their once audacious building agendas as large-scale projects have been consequentially delayed, halted, or cancelled?  This pause in city building presents an opportunity for a deliberate and thorough investigation of the built realities of the past decade’s experimental construction era.  It also begs for a realistic and sensitive vision on how to proceed once the gears of progress begin to turn again.



acquiescence
January 5, 2010, 7:16 am
Filed under: California | Tags: , ,

The end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time. -T.S. Eliot

The travel concludes….(momentarily?)  I return to the Bay for the last edition: Thesis 2010.  It is a time to recoup, regroup, and build new computers for rendering.  Stay tuned for the grand exhibition and lecture, to be posted.

In the meantime, Burj Dubai, now known as Burj Khalifa, opened its doors today.  Props to the tallest tower team back in Chicago …roughly six years ago.  See more.



360 degrees of Putrajaya
December 13, 2009, 1:52 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized



“Go to Malaysia, It’s truly Asia”
December 13, 2009, 5:53 am
Filed under: Malaysia | Tags: ,

Pre-new city hiking in Putrajaya, Cyberjaya, and the Multimedia Super Corridor, I stumble upon more new cities and competitions being held in and around Kuala Lumpur.

There is a ‘Name a Township’ contest for a new development, an intelligent city, being planned in Selangor Science Park 2, Bukit Baja, Sepang.
————
Contest parameters:

The name of the township must portray the following attributes:

- Intelligent Technology

- Urban Contemporary Modern Living

- Integrated

- Strategic Location

P/S: Do exclude ‘cyber’ in your suggestions, we know you are more creative than that.

————-
I tried to submit ‘untested city,’ entrants must be Malaysian citizens.



Evolution of the Pearl River Delta
December 13, 2009, 4:56 am
Filed under: China, Guangzhou, Hong Kong, Shenzhen | Tags: ,

Chance encounters w/the elevated landscapes of Guangzhou, near Zhu Jiang New Town

Spent the past week exploring events/meeting urban enthusiasts in and around the Pearl River Delta (PRD).  Roughly ten years ago, Koolhaas (and the GSD) recognized this region of China to be the generator of the “city of exacerbated difference” (Project on the City).  He referred to city building as an opportunity to engage in urban design at many different levels and through a variety of different cultures.  A decade later, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Hong Kong have continued city building at a rate and scale that deserves further investigation.  In a sense, they have been completely transformed, re-imagined, and re-appropriated by a new population.  Within the last ten years, Hong Kong’s northern territories are infilled with new towns, Guangzhou is constructing a new city axis and public attractor weighted heavily with what LA architecture critic, Frances Anderton, raises as “architectural excess” and Shenzhen has a burgeoning new art’s district (the Overseas Chinese Territory, or OCT) inhabited by (basically) returning expats.  The delta region, due to its unique location geographically, economically, and politically, is the leading model for new cities in China.  I set out to the Shenzhen/Hong Kong biennale, themed “City Mobilization,” to find out if the fruits of this labor are applicable to a wider venue abroad.

Landscape urbanism mediates sporting venue and housing in the OCT, Shenzhen

At the opening day activities, Shenzhen/Hong Kong Architecture and Urbanism Biennale, Shenzhen’s Civic Square, main venue


Biennale theme: City Mobilization

Tessellated  urbanism, subdivide surface realized.  Saw works in-progress in the PRD, including Zaha Hadid’s Guangzhou Opera House (pictured), SOM/Smith+Gill’s Pearl River Tower, and OMA’s Stock Exchange in Shenzhen.  See flickr for more.

On the Pearl River



a gradient between east and west

For the context and a brief history of Almaty and Astana, see the July 2008 blog post part 1 and part 2 by molapse. This perspective sets the scene for my trip to Kazakhstan and directs my search for authenticity in two new cities re-designed/transformed, built, and inhabited in just over 10 years.
Pre-arrival I wondered if the former capital and long-standing Almaty would look like a new city based on all the recent and ongoing development projects rising from the older city fabric. In truth, I wondered what Kazakhstan would look like in general as it was my first trip to central Asia. Soviet-era planning left a city of epic proportions. Especially the right-of-ways. All infrastructure is massively proportioned by western/European standards. The yards, the sidewalks, the medians, the streets, the drainage trenches and channels are super-sized. Compared to China, the dimensions of city blocks are not as striking, yet the lack of density – the missing clusters of high-rise towers or and unending midrise commercial buildings adjacent to these city arteries- makes Almaty remarkably different, an ‘otherness’ that few places can claim. Molapse observed, “Almaty itself doesn’t have much of a skyline, or concentrated mass of big buildings. Those that exist they are rather distributed in and around the large, uniform center.” When you walk the streets, you feel this. I agree. I’ve never been in the heart of a city and felt so far away from the buildings before. There are so many buffers between you and them – the space between becomes larger than the city when you are on foot, on the ground. The sidewalks are often dark and (unsafe?) at dusk because the light from the street lamps are so far away and separated by a buffer of beautiful, old (which type of) trees. However, this is all changing because taller and more visible buildings are rising out of the fog and so-called pollution that covers the city. Photo artists Vladimir Pronin and Natasha Kartuzova have captured stunning views of this ‘new city’ via panoramic portraits.

However, these dimensions and lack of consistent street frontage, and cold weather (due to my late Nov. visit) did not produce the isolation or lack of public life that I expected…even in the southern, very new districts of the city. There was a vibrancy and amount of activity that is missing in Northern European Cities. There are enough informalities, like the street markets, and small carts of goods, and unofficial taxi drivers, that – similar to cities in India- you are engaging with the people and in the city whether you have chosen to interact or not.

But as I mentioned in the last post, there seems to be a culture of organized informality here that is surprising and welcomed….and maybe it stems from a residue of soviet rule . Drivers operate vehicles with steering wheels on either side, yet the country drives on the right lane and stops for pedestrians at crosswalks like it were the Bay Area. There is a kind of unspoken public neglect of the institutionalized pay consoles on the city buses. Although mandated to pay via this system and report abuse of the system, everyone still pays the privately-owned system’s “meter maids,” or attendants on board. Despite the foot traffic, there is an overwhelming amount of cars in this city. Its dimensions alone branded it as a city of speed, a place to be experienced by the automobile. And, the city’s troubles with implementing an underground metro system have only added to the congestion on the streets (Almaty has been ‘building’ a metro system for over 10 years but high water levels, seismic conditions, and other ground ’states’ have impeded the process). Cars get first dibs on public space. They are found anywhere level enough to park…..including right up to the main steps of the complexes that make up the city’s most prized civic and public space – republic square.

Much of the new building boom is said to be modeled after Dubai. Yet, will it too be as deserted and in debt as that city is today? There are so many other aspects of Almaty that give it another identity – the mountains, the sloped/terraced terrain, the incredibly visible drainage canals between sidewalk and street, and the pockets of older, single-story Kazakh housing (made of modest brick, siding, and corrugated metal).

Just as I was forming these impressions, I hopped on the ‘Spanish Train’ to Astana and was too amazed at the wifi in the 15 hour sleeper car to blog or post a photo.

In Almaty, it was the same story with the public transportation. There were buses (both mini and standard sized) and unofficial cabs, but no planned – or implemented – substantial transit system. This seems unheard of in new city design/planning – but here I was, in the middle of a Kzakhstan glad that I had (-)40 degree insulating Merrell boots, music, and a pace of about 128 beats per minute. I explored the left (new) and right (old) banks of the city, divided by a river. Molapse blogs about the lack of people in Astana, and – a year and a half later, I tend to agree. However, I thought the weather was the issue. It is cold here….but overall, mild during my visit. Molapse asks about the vacant public waterfronts during the winter. A: They are alive with sport. There is ice fishing on the Ishim River and hockey and skating on it’s smaller, frozen tributary. Again, I observe the unique infrastructure of this country operating in a way that supports, or encourages, a public domain. In the flatness of Astana, there is no need for the dredged drainage canals of Almaty. They have another symbolic network of infrastructure – the very visible “temporary” natural gas pipes snaking through and over the public way. In a way never intended, they become urban thresholds, bus shelters, and public space delineation. People are moving over and past them, under them and even into them on occasion. This urban lifeline, a city-scaled version of the Pompidou, is maybe a reminder of how and why Astana exists in the steppes today….and a presence that makes the future of the place a lingering issue in the minds of those who encounter it.

I don’t think I was in town long enough to see the broad new civic spaces (around the Millenium Axis, and the Baiterek Monument “chupa chup”) in use. I am told there are city-wide events and markets that play out on these plazas. The Astana 2030 visionary city model, which definitely rivals world’s largest scaled model in Shanghai, provides a glimpse of the city’s future. International architect, Norman Foster has proposed four gigantic projects – mainly mixed-use and self-sufficient communities – cities with the city. I wonder if this need for smaller, more compact, human-scaled, (maybe more aligned with old Astana) “fully-functional enclaves is the product of a city-wide vision that failed to deliver the very same thing.

Often the product of high rates and scale of development. (Photographed in Astana.)



Manufactured landscapes of remote central asia

I’m staying in Almaty – Kazakhstan’s former capital city – the largest, “most vibrant and cosmopolitan” urban agglomeration in this nation of roughly 15 million people.  One of the most inland locations in the world, this soviet influenced city, is unlike any place I’ve been before.  Super-wide streets, right-of-ways, open space, mountainous terrain, and a sort of organized informality that keeps it all moving.  First, this marks a rapid end to the endless summer/spring of travels.  Temperatures are at just around 3 degrees Celsius/37 Fahrenheit and about to get colder as I head fifteen hours by train into the steppes of central Asia.  In what seems to be a no man’s land, there is no shortage of manufactured landscapes (been watching Ed Burtynsky’s documentary of the same name recently).  Resource rich Kazakhstan is at a lull in a recent construction boom and within the last decade has managed to transform two modest, ubiquitous, low-rise cities of concrete into new and connected central Asian (cultural, economic) hubs of steel and glass structures.  One is the cultural and commercial center – Almaty – and the other is the new capital that the government has moved to the geographic center (and very isolated location) of the country – Astana. (Think Brazilia)

Travel books are making parallels with the surge in construction locally to the building boom of Dubai (apples to oranges?)
I’m located in an interesting newer southern neighborhood of Almaty – there is a bazaar, mosque, and cinema on my street alone.

While I’m discovering these new cities, and their manufactured landscapes of architectural icons, I will be asking if this building boom, 10-12 years after the making, has created a city…or just a collection of buildings.

Some architecture proposals and their international designers:

http://aesthetechtonik.com/2007/04/16/building-almaty-republic-square-competition/



One city, nine towns
November 17, 2009, 3:27 am
Filed under: China, Shanghai | Tags: , , ,

newtowns

image from NPR, 2006



Experiencing difficulties
November 12, 2009, 12:53 pm
Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: , , ,

My workarounds to post over here are not so straightforward or consistent. See my flickr stream (link on left, scroll down) for the latest photos.

In the meantime, today in Shanghai:

IMG_3152

IMG_6728