重新想象城市运动:在自然保护区、地下铁路和生态桥的交汇处

Q3 Social Sciences
Jamie Wang
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引用次数: 3

摘要

2013年,新加坡政府宣布了建设跨岛线(CRL)的计划,这是该国的第8条捷运列车线路。自发布以来,该提案引发了持续的激烈辩论,因为它涉及到新加坡最大的剩余保护区:中央集水区自然保护区。在与环保组织进行了长时间的讨论后,运输管理局后来表示,他们现在将考虑两条路线的选择:一条在中央保护区下面的直接路线,以及一条绕过保护区边界的替代路线。当局警告说,绕道可能会大大增加建设成本,并使通勤者多花几分钟的旅行时间。有趣的是,与威胁进一步破坏中央保护区的地下铁路项目相反,另一个更明显的修复工作正在同一保护区的边缘进行,旨在通过生态桥重新连接破碎的栖息地。通过这两个看似截然不同但又密切相关的案例研究,本文探讨了城市运动的复杂性和矛盾性,以及它与发展、技术和城市性质的纠缠。城市流动性的话语是如何被对“速度”的渴望、不可见的政治和对确定性的执着所引导的?在日益城市化的环境中,对多物种运动重新配置当代实践和伦理可能意味着什么?在新加坡和世界各地的基础设施和公共交通不断扩张的背景下,通常以可持续性和宜居性的名义,本文颠覆了一些被认为理所当然的、充满速度和以人为中心的城市运动方法,并探讨了为更具包容性和繁荣的城市运动创造新的可能性的迫切需要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Re-imagining urban movement: at the intersection of a nature reserve, underground railway and eco-bridge
In 2013, the Singapore government announced a plan to build the Cross Island Line (CRL), the country’s eighth Mass Rapid Transit train line. Since its release, the proposal has caused ongoing heated debate as it involves going underneath Singapore’s largest remaining reserve: the Central Catchment Nature Reserve. Following extended discussions with environmental groups, the transport authority later stated that they would now consider two route options: a direct alignment running underneath the Central Reserve, and an alternative route that skirts the reserve boundary. The authority warned that the skirting option could increase the construction cost significantly and cost commuters an extra few minutes of travel time. Intriguingly, in contrast to the underground rail project that threatens to further fragment the Central Reserve, another, more visible, repair work is taking place at the edge of the same reserve, aiming to reconnect fragmented habitat through an eco-bridge. Through these two seemingly contrasting yet intimately related case studies in a highly developed city-state, this article explores the complexity and ambivalence of urban movement and its entanglement with development, techonology and urban natures. How are the discourses of urban mobility directed by the desire for ‘velocity’, the politics of invisibility, and a fixation on certainty? What might it mean to reconfigure contemporary practices and ethics towards multispecies movements in an increasingly urbanised environment? Amid the growing expansions of infrastructure and public transportation in Singapore and around the world, often in the name of sustainability and liveability, this article unsettles some taken-for-granted, velocity-charged and human-centred approaches to urban movement and explores the serious need to craft new possibilities for a more inclusive and flourishing urban movement.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Cultural Studies Review is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to the publication and circulation of quality thinking in cultural studies—in particular work that draws out new kinds of politics, as they emerge in diverse sites. We are interested in writing that shapes new relationships between social groups, cultural practices and forms of knowledge and which provides some account of the questions motivating its production. We welcome work from any discipline that meets these aims. Aware that new thinking in cultural studies may produce a new poetics we have a dedicated new writing section to encourage the publication of works of critical innovation, political intervention and creative textuality.
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