Building Context Flashcards
Describe the first early settlements
Living quarters surrounding granary and multi-purpose temple. Palaces and temples later introduced. Greeks added temples for specific uses, agora for marketplace, theaters, stadiums and enclosed the city in walls.
Medieval city characteristics and evolution
Started with crossroads of two main streets and grew outward in irregular pattern. Still organized around church and market and city was walled. After gunpowder was invented, star shaped city developed with bastions at each point and organized, radial streets.
Renaissance city characteristics and examples
More attention to aesthetics of city planning with symmetrical and radial order that focused on points of interest and creating vistas. Hierarchy of radial boulevard superimposed on secondary grid or existing roads. Ex: London after fire (Christopher Wren) and Paris (Haussmann). Later: Washington DC (L’Enfant).
Impact of Industrial Revolution on cities
Became focused on factory towns that were overcrowded, filthy and devoid of open space. Reformers housing conditions and open space design. Garden City (Howard) designed as a result. City Industrielle (Garnier) was first attempt at zoning to separate uses. USA implemented gridiron street system like in Philadelphia and Savannah. Fredrick Law Olmsted brought focus to landscape design. FLW and Le Corbusier envisioned cities with vast open spaces.
Development philosophies/concepts reacting to rise of the suburbs
Urban sprawl: uncontrolled expansion with little concern for urban planning.
New Town: Intended as autonomous towns near big cities but end up being reliant on them for jobs, economy.
New Urbanism: Neighborhoods used for mixed use, reducing dependence on cars, building for pedestrians, connections to open space.
5 Development Patterns
- Expanding grid: Extends outward until reaches natural feature. Other patterns superimposed on it in larger cities. Ex: Philadelphia.
- Star: Dense urban core with radiating spokes of transit. Ex: Chicago
- Satellite: Dense urban core surrounding by other major urban areas. Often connected by a beltway. Ex: Houston
- Field Pattern: No central focus or otherwise organizing scheme. Ex: LA
- Megalopolis: When 2 or more major urban centers near each other grow together as the space between is developed. Ex: New England, Southern California
The Image of the City
1960 book by Kevin Lynch exploring idea of imageability (quality of a physical environment that evokes a strong image). 5 basic elements of the urban image:
- Paths
- Edges
- Districts
- Nodes
- Landmarks
Superblock
Large block without roads. Idealized community with houses around perimeter and shared open space in the middle. Our reliance on cars results in better usage of perimeter than interior.
Planned Unit Development (PUD)
Large parcel with mixed uses and different zoning regulations (no individual setbacks). Efficient groupings of buildings allows the extra land to be used for open/common spaces.
Transit Oriented Development
Housing, commercial and support services located near transit nodes to discourage use of cars and rely on public transit for all urban living needs.
Density
Ratio of people: area. Does not give total number of people or how they are distributed. Not to be confused with crowding.
Sociopetal / Sociofugal
Incourage / discourage social interaction
Cluster designs
- Same # of units in a tract but grouped together for greater density, therefore preserving more open space. -Reduces visual impact of new development.
- Allows more buffer space between incompatible uses.
- preserves natural features/functions
- contributes to rural character
- benchmark for future projects
Characteristics of a quality community (from Save our Lands, Save our Homes, Thomas Hylton)
- A sense of place
- Human scale
- Self-contained neighborhoods
- Diversity
- Transit-friendly design
- Trees
- Alleys and parking lots to the rear
- Humane architecture
- Outdoor rooms
- Maintenance and safety
Lot layouts
- Grid
- Deep/narrow
- Wide/shallow
- Alley houses