MakeVictoriaBetter

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Mayor Mockus: Bettering Bogota through social learning and experimentation

In doing thesis research, this morning, I came across this excellent article about former Bogota Mayor Antanas Mockus.


Mayor Mockus is an eccentric academic that has had terms in office on either side of Enrique Penalosa, who I previously posted about. Small wonder that the city has made such a huge turn-around in the past 20 years.

The slim, bearded, 51-year-old former mayor explained himself thus: "What really moves me to do things that other people consider original is my passion to teach." He has long been known for theatrical displays to gain people's attention and, then, to make them think.
Mockus, the only son of a Lithuanian artist, burst onto the Colombian political scene in 1993 when, faced with a rowdy auditorium of the school of arts' students, he dropped his pants and mooned them to gain quiet. The gesture, he said at the time, should be understood "as a part of the resources which an artist can use." He resigned as rector, the top job of Colombian National University, and soon decided to run for mayor.

The fact that he was seen as an unusual leader gave the new mayor the opportunity to try extraordinary things, such as hiring 420 mimes to control traffic in Bogotá's chaotic and dangerous streets. He launched a "Night for Women" and asked the city's men to stay home in the evening and care for the children; 700,000 women went out on the first of three nights that Mockus dedicated to them.
 The full article.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Cycling Sucks!

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Interview with an urban folk hero

I recently came across this great interview with former Bogota mayor and planning folk hero Enrique Penalosa. If you don't know much about Penalosa or his amazing work in Bogota, then this is a nice introduction.

image credit
If you could wave a magic wand and create the perfect city, what would that city be like?

We really have to admit that over the past hundred years we have been building cities much more for mobility than for people's well-being. Every year thousands of children are killed by cars. Isn't it time we build cities that are more child-friendly? Over the last 30 years, we've been able to magnify environmental consciousness all over the world. As a result, we know a lot about the ideal environment for a happy whale or a happy mountain gorilla. We're far less clear about what constitutes an ideal environment for a happy human being. One common measure for how clean a mountain stream is to look for trout. If you find the trout, the habitat is healthy. It's the same way with children in a city. Children are a kind of indicator species. If we can build a successful city for children we will have a successful city for all people.

Given the rapid growth of Third World cities, is this possible?

Many Third World cities today are really only half built. Many are still surrounded by undeveloped land that will be overtaken by the city very soon. We still have the opportunity to learn from the successes and mistakes of other cities around the world. We need to think about how to create cities that produce more convivial, creative, and happy human beings. Where is the urban expert who decided that cities had to be structured around cars? Why not begin to think differently? Why not dream of a city where half the streets would be for pedestrians, where the heart of the city would be a giant avenue lined with benches and trees, a meeting place for the community, where people go to jog, ride bicycles, talk, kiss, eat in cafes? A city doesn't have to be a bunch of roads for cars with some buildings around them.

As mayor, you made it your platform to transform the city's transportation system.

When I got to city hall, I was a handed a transportation study that said the most important thing the city could do was to build an elevated highway at a cost of $600 million. Instead, we installed a bus system that carries 700,000 people a day at a cost of $300 million. We created hundreds of pedestrian-only streets, parks, plazas, and bike paths, planted trees, and got rid of cluttering commercial signs. We constructed the longest pedestrian-only street in the world. It may seem crazy, because this street goes through some of the poorest neighborhoods in Bogotá, and many of the surrounding streets aren't even paved. But we chose not to improve the streets for the sake of cars, but instead to have wonderful spaces for pedestrians. All this pedestrian infrastructure shows respect for human dignity. We're telling people, "You are important--not because you're rich or because you have a Ph.D., but because you are human." If people are treated as special, as sacred even, they behave that way. This creates a different kind of society.

How was your idea of putting pedestrians needs ahead of cars received?

I was nearly impeached when I said that cars shouldn't be allowed to park on the sidewalks. My opponents were business owners who said there was enough space on the sidewalks for cars to park and for people to still walk by. In Bogotá only 25 to 30 percent of the households have cars. Yet we use public money to build roads for the cars that so few people can afford, while the major- ity walk or use public transit. Democracy isn't just about casting a vote. It's about public good over private. If we can ban cars, isn't the majority better off?

What steps were you able to take?

We began to experiment by instituting a car-free day on a weekday. In a city of about 7 million people, just about everybody managed to get to work by walking, bicycling, bus, even on horseback--and everybody was better off. There was less air pollution, less time sitting in traffic, more time for people to be productive and enjoy themselves. Every Sunday we close 120 kilometers of roads to motor vehicles for seven hours. A million and a half people of all ages and incomes come out to ride bicycles, jog, and simply gather with others in community. We took a vote, and 83 percent of the public told us they wanted to have car-free days more often. Getting people out of their cars is a means of social integration. You have the upper-income person sitting next to the clean- ing lady on the bus. This may be something you take for granted in your country. But in the Third World, society isn't so integrated. This is extremely powerful and revolutionary.

Monday, January 24, 2011

The negative social impacts of traffic: Revisiting Appleyard's Livable Streets

Well, my first post in nearly 4 months.

Needless to say, school has been keeping me busy. Things appear to only be getting busier -- mostly in a good way. So, I am not sure of any upcoming regulatory in posting.

Nonetheless, I came across a couple of excellent items that I wanted to share, and this one relates -- rather belatedly -- to my last post.

A great short film revisiting Donald Appleyard's Livable Streets:



Revisiting Donald Appleyard's Livable Streets from Streetfilms on Vimeo.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Ironic in the worst way.

Check out this brief wikipedia bio of urban design theorist Donald Appleyard:

Donald Appleyard (1928–1982) was a Professor of Urban Design at the University of California, Berkeley.

In his book Livable Streets, he showed that streets have many social and recreational functions which are severely impaired by fast car traffic. For example, residents of streets with light traffic had, on average, three more friends and twice as many acquaintances as the people on streets with heavy traffic. His work provides a quantitative rationale for traffic calming and living streets.

Appleyard was killed by a speeding automobile.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Traffic jam in China lasts nine days!


I started my planning program at UBC, two weeks ago.

The orientation week included a talk from a new faculty member from China. He explained the desperate need of educated, competent planners in China with its rapid urbanization:

China is expecting a population of 350M people to move to the cities in the next 20 years. That is the population of North America moving to currently not-built city.

On a related topic, Beijing just experienced a 9-day, 100km long traffic jam.

Sounds like some kind of hell: Never knowing when the cars will start moving... for 5 minutes, 5 hours, 5 days....

My hunch is that this all bodes well for the world.

Anyways, this may be my return to blogging... we'll see how the semester goes.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Pedal Power documentary on CBC, tonight!

Thank you to my good friend Tosh for passing this one along to me:

CBC is showing a documentary entitled Pedal Power, tonight (9pm on CBC-TV) and Friday night (10pm on CBC News).
In Canada, bicycles "don't get no respect." From the story of Igor, and the anatomy of the underground world of bike peddlers in Toronto, this film spins out to how other cities are making riding safe. Using innovative "bike-cam" techniques to convey, up-close, the sensation of bike riding, a series of character-driven mini-narratives propel the film through a study of what makes a city "bikeable". Whether it's the public bike program in Paris, bike mega-garages in Amsterdam, bike paths in Vancouver and Montreal, or the surprising leadership of New York City, we follow the story of this remarkable little conveyance as it wheels though the first decade of the 21st century.
Sounds like it could be good.

CBC article/info here.