{"title":"浮动:海平面上升的设计","authors":"C. Cerro","doi":"10.35483/acsa.teach.2019.43","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"According to the United Nations, presently, about 54% of the world’s population lives in urban areas, with the number expected to increase to 66% by 2050. Urban areas which are ill prepared to deal with their present population needs will have to develop and manage; housing, healthcare, education, transportation, infrastructure and food pro-duction for an additional 2.5 billion people. With three-quarters of the world’s megalopolis by the sea and 80% of people living within 60 miles of the coast, sea level rise will force a new way of thinking about urban development. Managing urban areas has become one of the most important development challenges of the 21st century. In the UAE specifically, there are nearly 1,300 kilometers of coast-line. Approximately 85% of the population and over 90% of the infra-structure are located within several meters of sea level in low-lying coastal areas. This poses a very specific urban problem of relocation. But not all relocation will need to be done inland. The potential for floating architecture is a very real possibility to help solve some of the problems brought on by the rise in sea level. This is why at the American University of Sharjah, we have been studying this issue and other sustainability related opportunities in a series of courses that started in 2014 with a summer studio course set in Cambodia. Students lived with a floating community in the Tong le Sap lake for a month, studying vernacular floatation systems to inform the development of proposals for floating dwelling studies. This semester (Spring 2018), a fifth year architecture studio set up to transfer specific urban functions to the water within protected areas in the UAE. The aim of the studio was to start looking at possible implementation of floating systems within everyday functions to start a discussion of the potential of this technologies and the feasibility of its use at both an industrial and commercial level. The idea was to develop a series systemic interdependent sustainable designs based on the idea of third nature, hybridizing complex relationships between distinct functions in environments above and below water. This paper will cover the methodology implemented to start tackling these subjects in the studio environment with the aim to create awareness for designers and the general public.","PeriodicalId":216118,"journal":{"name":"Practice of Teaching | Teaching of Practice: The Teacher’s Hunch","volume":"17 4","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Float: Designing for the Rise in Sea Level\",\"authors\":\"C. Cerro\",\"doi\":\"10.35483/acsa.teach.2019.43\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"According to the United Nations, presently, about 54% of the world’s population lives in urban areas, with the number expected to increase to 66% by 2050. Urban areas which are ill prepared to deal with their present population needs will have to develop and manage; housing, healthcare, education, transportation, infrastructure and food pro-duction for an additional 2.5 billion people. With three-quarters of the world’s megalopolis by the sea and 80% of people living within 60 miles of the coast, sea level rise will force a new way of thinking about urban development. Managing urban areas has become one of the most important development challenges of the 21st century. In the UAE specifically, there are nearly 1,300 kilometers of coast-line. Approximately 85% of the population and over 90% of the infra-structure are located within several meters of sea level in low-lying coastal areas. This poses a very specific urban problem of relocation. But not all relocation will need to be done inland. The potential for floating architecture is a very real possibility to help solve some of the problems brought on by the rise in sea level. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
根据联合国的数据,目前世界上大约54%的人口生活在城市地区,预计到2050年这一数字将增加到66%。准备不足应付其目前人口需要的城市地区将不得不发展和管理;为另外25亿人提供住房、医疗、教育、交通、基础设施和粮食生产。全球四分之三的特大城市都在海边,80%的人口居住在距海岸60英里的范围内,海平面上升将迫使人们对城市发展采取新的思考方式。管理城市已成为21世纪最重要的发展挑战之一。特别是在阿联酋,有近1300公里的海岸线。大约85%的人口和超过90%的基础设施位于海平面几米的低洼沿海地区。这就构成了一个非常具体的城市搬迁问题。但并不是所有的搬迁都需要在内陆进行。漂浮建筑的潜力非常有可能帮助解决海平面上升带来的一些问题。这就是为什么在沙迦美国大学,我们从2014年开始在柬埔寨开设暑期工作室课程,在一系列课程中研究这个问题和其他与可持续发展相关的机会。学生们在Tong le Sap湖的一个漂浮社区生活了一个月,学习当地的漂浮系统,为漂浮住宅研究的发展提供信息。本学期(2018年春季),第五年的建筑工作室将在阿联酋的保护区内将特定的城市功能转移到水中。工作室的目的是开始研究浮动系统在日常功能中的可能实现,开始讨论这种技术的潜力及其在工业和商业层面上使用的可行性。这个想法是基于第三自然的想法,开发一系列系统相互依存的可持续设计,混合水上和水下环境中不同功能之间的复杂关系。本文将介绍在工作室环境中开始处理这些主题的方法,目的是为设计师和公众创造意识。
According to the United Nations, presently, about 54% of the world’s population lives in urban areas, with the number expected to increase to 66% by 2050. Urban areas which are ill prepared to deal with their present population needs will have to develop and manage; housing, healthcare, education, transportation, infrastructure and food pro-duction for an additional 2.5 billion people. With three-quarters of the world’s megalopolis by the sea and 80% of people living within 60 miles of the coast, sea level rise will force a new way of thinking about urban development. Managing urban areas has become one of the most important development challenges of the 21st century. In the UAE specifically, there are nearly 1,300 kilometers of coast-line. Approximately 85% of the population and over 90% of the infra-structure are located within several meters of sea level in low-lying coastal areas. This poses a very specific urban problem of relocation. But not all relocation will need to be done inland. The potential for floating architecture is a very real possibility to help solve some of the problems brought on by the rise in sea level. This is why at the American University of Sharjah, we have been studying this issue and other sustainability related opportunities in a series of courses that started in 2014 with a summer studio course set in Cambodia. Students lived with a floating community in the Tong le Sap lake for a month, studying vernacular floatation systems to inform the development of proposals for floating dwelling studies. This semester (Spring 2018), a fifth year architecture studio set up to transfer specific urban functions to the water within protected areas in the UAE. The aim of the studio was to start looking at possible implementation of floating systems within everyday functions to start a discussion of the potential of this technologies and the feasibility of its use at both an industrial and commercial level. The idea was to develop a series systemic interdependent sustainable designs based on the idea of third nature, hybridizing complex relationships between distinct functions in environments above and below water. This paper will cover the methodology implemented to start tackling these subjects in the studio environment with the aim to create awareness for designers and the general public.