WAY TOWARDS AN EFFICIENT CITY INDEX • Introduction-Concept • Excessive growth • Urban Ecosystems • Efficient city • Superblocks, Barcelona. (BMW initiative award 2011) • Conclusion 1 Carmen Morales Cifuentes INTRODUCTION-CONCEPT Ecology is the branch of biological sciences dealing with the interactions between living creatures and their environment (chemical and physical factors). Ecology is a multidisciplinary science which is closely related to Biology, Climatology, Chemistry, Biophysics, Engineering, Mechanics, Architecture, Geology, Physics and Mathematics. Concretely, our theme to study is urban ecology. Nowadays, it is an important topic, due to cities are an ecosystem and we should understand its operation and it is essential to design future strategies and to watch its development. The ecology provides to the urban phenomenon a metabolic point of view, and it allows to know energy flows and materials in the city. This way to understand the city is been introduced in lots of management strategies of local administrations. The functional approach of the urban ecosystem is completed taking into account the negative consequences of the interaction between the population and the natural or seminatural resources, besides the effects of the nature in people's lives. If these effects are beneficial, they are services. 2 Carmen Morales Cifuentes EXCESSIVE GROWTH Urbanization is one of the most important and fast processes done by men on Earth, and it is one of the most significant causes of the climate change. Due to this fact, it is important to understand this process to try to lead it in a reasonable way and to correct the consequences of the urban expansion. Dubai 1990/2010 In most of the world, cities grow in a dizzying way. This is a population growth and territorial expansion. In the early twentieth century, there were 1500 million of people, and a century later 7000 millions. We must also note the tendency to live in cities. Today, 60% of the humanity lives in cities, and in 2050, we expect that 76% will live in cities. Regarding the world population, cities consume two-thirds of urban energy and emit 70% of CO2. 1 The urban expansion pattern provokes a peculiar problem. Cities do not grow in a concentric way, they do along transport routes, from small cores 3 Carmen Morales Cifuentes dispersed over the territory and they are spreading... This process means a enormous fragmentation of natural or seminatural systems, and a deterioration of its potential. This dynamism of cities and its impact in our planet make urgent to increase our knowledge about the urban system. URBAN ECOSYSTEMS In this paper, we understand ecology like a study of urban ecosystems, without dealing the ecology of individual organisms which have their habitat in an urban environment. Both meanings are used by ecologists and they are equally legitimate but their significances are different. Cities are ecosystems, but this fact was not recognized until the seventies, and P. Duvigneaud and S. Denaeyer-De Semt did the first publications about this topic.2 However, urban ecosystems pose many theoretical and practical challenges. Natural ecosystem are very complicated, but, urban ones are more heterogeneous, due to lots of their aspects are relationated with activities and decisions about politics, economy, society or culture. 4 Carmen Morales Cifuentes EFFICIENT CITY We consume in seconds the energy that nature has taken millions of years to produce, we spend more than we produce and demand is growing, so saving and energy efficiency is the major challenge of the cities of twenty-first century. For thousands of years, cities are created in places where people settle permanently. In a world of limited resources, growth cannot be infinite, so we are forced to rethink the city model of this century. We must think about a city as a whole and the parts which form it: territory, biological capacities of the city, how much energy we spend, how we move, waste, water and communications. A city is composed of public and private spaces, walkways and transition, thoroughfares, parks. Buildings and sustainable land occupation in 2020, would reduce 25% energy consumption, and even 45% of emissions of greenhouse gases. 3 Due to these reasons, municipalities around the world apply creative solutions to reduce energy consumption, water spending, waste and emissions, while facilitating the movement of people. These solutions can be classified into: mobility, energy saving, energy obtaining, waste. Measures to facilitate mobility: -Intelligent Parking: digital parking meters notify mobile phones and navigation applications that there is a free parking space, which lightens the traffic created by the search for parking. (San Francisco) 5 Carmen Morales Cifuentes -Underground parking: underground garages next to the destinations prevent the occupation of the area by cars. (Paris) -The cost of congestion: to apply higher rates to drivers who travel in clustered areas, tends to soften the traffic. (Stockholm, Singapore) -Subterranean transport: commuter trains, tube and major roads run through large underground tunnels. The surface is free to you walking or cycling, non-polluting. (Portland, Oregon) -Support and bike lanes: a large bike lanes and places to save them, encourage people to use them, and it also promotes the physical exercise. (Minneapolis) -Hybrid taxis: the conversion of much of the taxi fleet to hybrid vehicles reduces air pollution and emissions of greenhouse gases. (San Francisco, New York) Measures to obtain energy: -Wave energy: cylinders embedded by hinges in the seabed are thrusted by waves and they activate turbines to generate electricity. (Orkney, Scotland) -Underwater turbines: turbines settled on the seabed revolve by the action of daily tides and they generate electricity. (New York) -Solar Water Heating: hot water for domestic use is not obtained from boilers, but deposits exposed to sunlight on roofs. (Rizhao, China). -Solar panels: the south-facing facades are covered with photovoltaic panels which generate electricity. -Solar energy: electricity is generated by panels, not by power plants. They also shade the roof, and lower cooling requirements of the building. Measures to save energy: -High performance windows: special insulation windows quadruple the thermal efficiency of the dual pane and they can be made from existing window glass. (Empire State Building, New York) -Sequestering carbon concrete: greenhouse gases could be reduced by using locally manufactured concrete from carbon dioxide emitted by power plants. (in development) -Vertical farming: growing food would moderate the use of fertilizers and fresh water, it would reduce the transport and recycles gray water thrown out by treatment plants. (in development) 6 Carmen Morales Cifuentes -Green roofs: vegetation on the roof insulates the house against heat and cold, and also absorbs rainwater. (Chicago) -White roofs: roofs painted white reflect heat, reduce the cost of building cooling and prevent overheating of the city. (Washington) The -Sustainable neighborhoods: construction according to organic standards, certification, or Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED), saves energy or materials and reduces emissions. (Rockville, Maryland) -Fee for runoff water: to charge taxes to property owners for the value of the number of runoff discharged during storms promotes reforms to reduce the volume of wastewater treatment plants. (Finland) -Irrigation control with satellite: satellite monitoring of irrigation systems in parks and lawns reduces water consumption and energy needed to pump. (Los Angeles) -Machine with low-flow: to install toilets and showers in homes which economize water, save millions of liters per year. (Austin, Texas) Measures to manage waste: -Selective collection: stores and housings must separate waste: organic waste, recyclables and rest. The tax collection would be reduced to people which generate less waste. (San Francisco) -Incineration of sewage sludge: solid waste removed from wastewater in sewage treatment plants are burned to produce electricity (Nashville, Buffalo) SUPERBLOCKS, BARCELONA. (BMW INITIATIVE AWARD 2011) After discussing the different solutions which can be carried out in cities to become ever more efficient, I would add the BMW Initiative Award 2011. This award consists of a commitment to society, and in favor of values such as creativity, innovation and sustainability. BMW Initiative Award 2011 recognizes results of Implementation Plan of two Superblocks in Gràcia district, in Barcelona, which has improved the functionality and urban quality of this area significantly. This project has been a pioneer in applying the conceptual, instrumental and organizational SmartCity, a 7 Carmen Morales Cifuentes new model of compact and complex city. Salvador Rueda, creator of Superblocks Public space is the main heritage that our cities have and return it to citizens is the basis of a sustainable city. Under this principle the concept of SmartCity (a city that presents a new energy management model based on sustainable and efficient development, thanks to new technologies and with the direct participation of citizens), articulates the project of the Urban Ecology Agency of Barcelona. 8 Carmen Morales Cifuentes After more than two years of work, the implementation of two Superblocks (new urban cells of 400 × 400 m and it includes several blocks inside) in Gràcia district has given rise to a new mobility model, a new management of public space and accessibility to it. With this first sample, the Urban Ecology Agency of Barcelona aims to redefine a new model of city in Barcelona, making it more accessible for pedestrians, which returns to its hegemony in the public space and encouraging the use of more sustainable transport. Superblocks join urban planning and mobility planning to limit the movement of private vehicles on public space. With the implementation of Superblocks fits each space to different uses. A new distribution network includes the passing vehicles and another local network, composed of interior streets where circulating only neighbors, urban services, emergency services and taxis, releases the public area of passing traffic and recovers it for other uses, improving qualitative and environmentally the public space and mobility. With Superblocks, proportions between the space occupied by vehicles and other uses are reversed. In the case of Gràcia district, proportions between driveway and sidewalk were divided by 54% and 46% respectively. With the application of Superblocks, the percentage of roadway is reduced 25% and sidewalk increases 75%. 9 Carmen Morales Cifuentes CONCLUSION Urban Ecology, as a natural science, is a young discipline which was developed in recent decades from a branch of biology to an interdisciplinary field of application in the local and regional planning. It studies the impact of human activities on the environment and finding solutions that help improve or preserve the environment for mutual benefit. Therefore, according to proposals for improving the quality of urban environments and to direct its operation to a better use of resources, it is important to include green elements in urban planning strategies not only for its value in the urban landscape but also for its functionality as a structural element in shaping a city. It is necessary to establish a new urban paradigm, which could reveal itself as an integrated view of the city, its social, environmental and economic contents, where satisfaction of urban needs is conducted in a consistent way with the reduction of energy and environmental impact through the containment of indiscriminate growth, recycling and upgrading of the existing city, the sharp increase in urban eco-efficiency and the multiplication of the logic and renewable systems. 10 Carmen Morales Cifuentes BIBLIOGRAPHY Magazine Investigación y Ciencia, November 2011 Madre Tierra y Naturaleza (PhotoEspaña 2006) http://www.biocab.org http://www.bcnecologia.net http://www.diariodesign.com http://www.plataformaurbana.cl http://www.ecologiaycampo.com 1. Information of http://www.unhabitat.org/categories.asp?catid=9 2. Cuivre et végétation au Katanga , 1963. Publishing company: CEMUBAC. Paul Auguste Duvigneaud and Simone Denaeyer-De Smet. 3. Information of OSE (http://www.sostenibilidad-es.org/) 11 Carmen Morales Cifuentes
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