Solarpunk Urbanism

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A community to discuss solarpunk and other new and alternative urbanisms that seek to break away from our currently ecologically destructive urbanisms.

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founded 2 years ago
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Designing Circular Cities (yt.artemislena.eu)
submitted 1 year ago by Five to c/urbanism
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submitted 1 year ago by Five to c/urbanism
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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by stilgar@infosec.pub to c/urbanism
 
 

I'm very new to Solarpunk, but Hundertwasser seems to gel very nicely with what I've seen of the ethos.

He has designed, and actually implemented many buildings which tightly integrate nature into the urban environment.

His political views leave a LOT to be desired but his work is extremely inspiring.

https://hundertwasser.com/en/ecology/arch75_das_huegelwiesenland_1094

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cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/6168675

RRFBs. HAWK signals. Do any of these devices actually do what they're supposed to do, and how do traffic engineers decide when and where to install them?

As a European, much of this was mind-boggling to me. While I believe all of this is real, I still found myself wondering throughout the video: Is this actually the norm in the US, or are these some cherry-picked bad examples? It felt for me like a whole other level of systemic hostility.

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Cleveland (mindly.social)
submitted 1 year ago by duckweed@mindly.social to c/urbanism
 
 

Cleveland

@urbanism

"In those metros, pedestrian-centered places are within easy reach of people of color, people with low income, and people with less educational attainment. Cleveland topped the report's "Social Equity Index" rankings; Baltimore, Cincy, Detroit and Philly also made the top 10, while St. Louis landed at number 11."

"Cleveland's current mayor has announced an initiative to transform the Ohio community into a 15-minute city."

#Cleveland #Urbanism

https://usa.streetsblog.org/2023/02/07/americas-most-equitably-walkable-city-is-cleveland

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I loved the parallel between transit strategies and public health. Might be a useful approach in many areas given the resistance to reducing car infrastructure that we see in many areas.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/2051579

laist.com

The climate crisis is pushing average temperatures higher, and driving longer and hotter heat waves. And all the pavement in our cities only makes it worse.

But “cool pavement” may be one tool to help. It is a coating that can be applied to the surface of asphalt streets that can reflect solar radiation, rather than absorb it. But cooling the surface of a street doesn’t automatically mean a cooler community.

Pacoima is one of the hottest neighborhoods in metro L.A. And last year, they decided to test this technology. Ten square blocks of streets, an elementary school yard and a basketball court were covered with “cool paint." This week, we checked on the results.

Keeping it cool

As temperatures climbed to 95 degrees on a recent afternoon in Pacoima, the surfaces with “reflective paint” were 10 degrees cooler than regular old asphalt.

Preliminary research by the company that installed the paint, GAF Roofing, shows the pavement is helping to cool the ambient temperature of the whole 10-block area — and sometimes beyond — by as much as 3 degrees, possibly more.

But these “cool paint” technologies are new, so it’s not yet clear how much they can make a difference when it comes to our actual experience of heat. One thing that is clear: These paints are no silver bullet, and no replacement for improving tree cover, shade and green space.

Measuring the impact of cool pavement

GAF uses a modified electric golf cart to see how the cool coating may affect the human experience of heat in the neighborhood.

Eliot Wall, director of GAF's cool pavement, drives an electric golf cart that takes measurements of the cool pavement, including surface temperature, ambient air temperature and wind.

Challenges with pavement

Cool coatings may reduce the surface temperature of pavement dramatically, but actually make it hotter immediately above the surface, where people are. That’s what a 2020 study out of UCLA found with the type of cool pavement L.A. has used on some 10 million square feet of city streets over the last six years.

The coatings the city has used — put in the most simple terms — are asphalt-based with white paint mixed in, allowing them to reflect instead of absorb solar radiation.

But the coating in the 10 square blocks of Pacoima are acrylic-based. Eliot Wall, director of GAF Roofing's cool pavement program, said the company's proprietary mix of materials reflects solar radiation in long waves, rather than short waves — eliminating that increase in temperature just above the surface. A young woman with light brown skin, wearing a green shirt and jeans poses next to a sign in a park that reads "Hubert H. Humphrey Memorial Recreation Center Licensed Child care center welcomes you; city of las angeles recreation and parks department."

Melanie Paola Torres, community organizer with Pacoima Beautiful, at the park where a basketball court, parking lot and surrounding streets have been painted with a cool coating.

“What's unique about this coating is that there's an additive in it that actually reflects in a different portion of the radiation spectrum,” said Wall. “It’s not reflecting the visible light in the UV that can cause more heat and damage; it's actually in the long wave. So we're not seeing that same impact.”

The project where this coating has been applied is part of a partnership between GAF and community group Pacoima Beautiful, as well as the city of L.A., to better understand the impacts of cool pavement on the experience of heat and deploy cooling technologies in one of the city’s hottest neighborhoods.

Melanie Paola Torres, who grew up in Pacoima and is now a community organizer with Pacoima Beautiful for the cool pavement project, said community members are feeling a positive difference in the areas where the coating has been applied — and they want more.

“We’ve seen things that do work,” Torres said. “So we just keep hoping to add and stack onto that and really create a climate-resilient community.“

She said the next step is to pilot “cool roofs” in the area, so residents can benefit from the cooling effect at home.

Still, Torres and other experts know this is just one tool in the toolbox — research shows expanding tree cover, shade and removing pavement and adding green space are the ideal strategies when it comes to both cooling communities and improving quality of life.

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From flak bunker to green bunker (www.bunker-stpauli.de)
submitted 1 year ago by poVoq to c/urbanism
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About Strong Towns (www.strongtowns.org)
submitted 1 year ago by meyotch to c/urbanism
 
 

I just wanted to introduce this group to Strong Towns, a non profit devoted to making development make sense. I worked with the founder of Strong Towns years ago when the idea was new.

The issues and framework of Strong Towns transcend partisan politics and instead gathers people under the banner of demanding that our towns be built to upon principles most any reasonable person would want to see enacted. Principles like: development responsive to local needs and financial transparency.

Please check them out.

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