
Spotlight on Urban Design
This blog is maintained by the Architecture, Urban, and Regional Design, M.S. program. Contact grad.arch@nyit.edu for more information.
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News Byte: Designing Healthy and Resilient Cities in the Face of COVID-19
Feature | May 27, 2020
In a May 20 article in the French newspaper Le Monde, Graduate Urban Design program director Jeffrey Raven provides insights on how climate-resilient urban design can play a significant role in deterring major health challenges and the spread of disease.
Read More at NEW YORK TECH NEWS
Net-Zero District for New York City - Urban Design Climate Lab Student Pin-Up late-April 2020
URBAN DESIGN CLIMATE LAB : Net-Zero District for New York City
Student Interim Pin-Up – Late-April 2020
In this Graduate Urban Design Studio, students are researching the intersection of urban form, low-carbon cities, and climate to confront a rapidly urbanizing world threatened by climate change. Students are configuring a compact district in Brooklyn, NYC to adapt and thrive in changing climate conditions, meet carbon-reduction goals, and sustain urban population. In keeping with the studio’s Social Resilience theme in response to sudden external shocks to our city (storms, disease, heat wave, power failure), the Design Studio proposes a radical “closed-loop” Net-Zero hypothesis for the Gowanus district in Brooklyn. From Food to Energy, Waste, Water, Transportation and Embodied Energy, Students are incorporating a variety of modes of investigation to map and diagram the condition of the 2050 net-zero district. They are finding new knowledge that leads to the construction of a district, a hypothesis of its characteristics, and scenarios for its future. Ultimately, the Studio envisions the easing of “closed loop” restrictions, but keeping innovative strategies on the table as the district opens to the surrounding city.
Faculty: Jeffrey Raven and Michael Esposito
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Net-Zero District for New York City - Urban Design Climate Lab - Midterm Review - 12 March 2020
URBAN DESIGN CLIMATE LAB : Net-Zero District for New York City
Midterm Review - 12 March 2020
In this Graduate Urban Design Studio, students are researching the intersection of urban form, low-carbon cities, and climate to confront a rapidly urbanizing world threatened by climate change. Students are configuring a compact district in Brooklyn, NYC to adapt and thrive in changing climate conditions, meet carbon-reduction goals, and sustain urban population.
In keeping with the studio’s Social Resilience theme in response to sudden external shocks to our city (storms, disease, heat wave, power failure), the Design Studio proposes a radical “closed-loop” Net-Zero hypothesis for the Gowanus district in Brooklyn. From Food to Energy, Waste, Water, Transportation and Embodied Energy, Students are incorporating a variety of modes of investigation to map and diagram the condition of the 2050 net-zero district. They are finding new knowledge that leads to the construction of a district, a hypothesis of its characteristics, and scenarios for its future. Ultimately, the Studio envisions the easing of “closed loop” restrictions, but keeping innovative strategies on the table as the district opens to the surrounding city.
Faculty: Jeffrey Raven and Michael Esposito
Read More