Campus of the Future workshop in Washington DC

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On December 3rd and 4th the Americas Social Infrastructure Market and Education Business hosted a Campus of the Future workshop in Washington DC at the Georgetown University Hotel and Conference Centre. The workshop, hosted by Leo Argiris and Mahadev Raman, was part of a larger series of workshops on the theme of campuses (corporate, medical, academic). Attendees included architects, planners, facility managers and academics from Carnegie Mellon, John Hopkins, U Penn, Cornell, American University as well as globally recognized architect talent Toshiko Mori, and Tom Kennedy and Raj Patel from Arup. Participants were encouraged to think about how the emerging trends of resource constraint and demographic changes might impact the future design of universities.

The workshop speakers included Cisco's Director of Education, Michelle Selinger, who spoke about the impact of technology and design on learning and collaboration as well as Senior Sustainability Consultant Karin Giefer who drew on her experiences at the Pentagon and at Arup to describe two very different stories of sustainability.


Organized by Arup Foresight's Francesca Birks and hosted by Global Director for Foresight & Innovation, Chris Luebkeman, these series of workshops are mechanism to facilitate open dialog between Arup and our clients - learning about their concerns as they relate to STEEP (social, technological, economic, environmental and political categories and looking towards the future.

Visual pollution and visual literacy

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While doing research on sustainable parks and community involvement in the maintenance of them, I came across the Dunn Foundation and their 25 minute movie entitled "Community of Choices". The film focuses on the environmental, social and economic benefits of preserving the local character of a place and bemoans the prolifertion of commercial development as a blight and eyesore on the visual environment.

The Dunn Foundation goes as far as saying that "a major factor in the decline in the appearance of America's communities is widespread illiteracy on the visual environment." They believe that a better understanding of the visual environment and the forces that shape it will strengthen the connections that people have to places and reinforce civic values which are vital to healthy, sustainable communities.

Future Communities

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Arup Foresight and Arup Healthcare have been working closely with Help The Aged to support their launch of a research report on Future Communities for an ageing society. The half-day conference will take place at Arup London on the afternoon of March 10th and will address topics ranging from climate change and ageing, disaster preparedness, housing for tomorrow, assistive technology, intelligent transport systems and health in a changing world. The importance of inclusive design will definitely be an undercurrent of the conference and hopefully a discussion around what more Arup and Help The Aged can be do to encourage, design, and create a future which is more ageing-friendly.

Headlines from a Travel Newswire

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The latest headlines from Travel Impact Newswire which tries to provide "unmatched, thought-provoking coverage of big-picture issues and trends that impact global travel and tourism":

1. 20 MILLION COULD LOSE JOBS IN FINANCIAL CRISIS
2. TAX CREDITS OFFER CASH BOOST FOR U.K. SMEs IN HARD TIMES
3. INCOME INEQUALITY AND POVERTY RISING IN MOST OECD COUNTRIES
4. ASIA’S COASTAL CITIES MOST VULNERABLE TO CLIMATE CHANGE
5. CHINESE CITIES TOP 2008 U.N.-HABITAT AWARDS
6. SCIENTISTS CONFIRM OCEANS ACIDIFYING AT UNPRECEDENTED SPEED
7. SHIPYARDS, OWNERS AND OPERATORS AGAIN FACING TOUGH TIMES
8. DOWNTURN “WILL PUT PRESSURE ON U.K. PUBLIC SERVICES FOR YEARS”
9. REVENUE GROWTH SEEN AS GREATEST CHALLENGE BY ASIA PACIFIC AIRLINES

Worldchanging celebrates their 5th

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The sustainable solutions oriented blog Worldchanging celebrated its' 5th anniversary yesterday. Responding to the changes currently affecting the American landscape the blog has decided to turn its' attention to envisioning an environmentally and socially positive plausible future:

" If we are going to convince large numbers of people to embrace the kinds of creative, large-scale change sustainability demands, we need to offer them something more than scattered, loosely connected possibilities. We need to show them a new, brighter future, a plausible, inspiring, achievable -- and sustainable -- future towards which people can aim their aspirations. We need to invite people to abandon that sinking ship and swim for a future that works."

This aligns with what the Transition Towns community also promotes in attempting to encourage more positive pro-activism among its constituencies. In an attempt to continue to inspire but also mobilize people Worldchanging is publishing Bright Green. The book intends to show that 'transformation can be accomplished not in centuries or a number of decades, but in years, quickly enough that the model we create can spread around the world.'

Worldchanging also intends to put out a second edition of our first book, Worldchanging: A User's Guide to the 21st Century and they plan a conference in North America in 2009. It is great to see that despite the financial gloom some groups are still aspiring to make the world a better place.

Enabling Ageing

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A summary of one of the panels I chaired at the 9th International Ageing conference on Reshaping Environments to Enable Older People. The line-up included 6 different talks:

- Reshaping the Environment to Promote Seniors' Independence: Themes and Observations from the case management literature. Beverley Kelley spoke about the ability to meet the needs of the person through their environment and the imporatnce of positively influencing the health career of adults. What if we were to treat our healths as inidivual health careers? Would we be more diligent? Beverley Kelley also pointed out that much of the case management literature neglects to mention family members and their role as care givers.

- Refuge Island? Is it safe to cross? Yue Li with the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute spoke about pedestrian crossings and how something as simple as the design of a refuge island could prevent premature death and promote wellbeing and independence for the ageing. In 2004 37% of all pedestrian fatalities were among elders compared with 13.4% of the population. In the EU tje incidence is higher at 46%. Yue Li expressed the importance for universal design for all seasons and winters in particular in countries like Canada, where winters are often the toughest test. It was also interesting to hear that people's compliance to traffic rules is related to temperature with extreme cold often resulting in violation of pedestrian traffic law. 80% of people will try to make the double crossing when it is very cold, 73% when it is hot, and only 56% when it is fair.

- A study on the Solution for the Hearing Disabled Person's Behavior Limitation at Sandy Beach: Shimpei Kato has observed the physical barriers to those who are hearing impaired. Most environments only address mobility impairment. Shimpei Kato took a look at the ways in which visual cues could be set up to better alert both the hearing impairment and others within the vicinity that could be of help to them.

- Designing a Supportive Living Environment for Older People with Dementia and Thermal Comfort and HVAC Design for People with Dementia: Joost Van Hoof talked about prolonging the stay at home. Those who suffer from dementia are particularly sensitive to their environments. Research on dementia indicates that a person's perception of capability is more important than cognitive functioning. And while Joost did not imply that the home is the entire cure, he did show how design could prove a useful ally in the attempt to care for those suffering from dementia; something as simple as creating very clear sightlines could allow the carer to always keep tabs on their partner. Joost also showed some 3D visualizations of an ideal dementia environment to allow the audience to see the difference that design can make.

He also talked about temperature and thermal comfort and how dementia sufferers are particularly sensitive to temperature variation. He pointed out the need for nurses and engineers to work with each other to create better thermal comfort for demented patients.

- Accommodating Sensory Aspects of Ageing in the Design of Dwellings: An architect by training Camilla Ryhl addressed the importance of not only giving those suffering from sensory impairment access to fantastic spaces and architecture, but also giving them access to the amazing sensory experience. Moving beyond the need to satisfy functional requirements for the sensory impaired, Ryhl inspired her audience with the importance of making the sensory experience euqally accessible to all.

- Age-Friendly New York City: Findings and Lessons: Ruth Finkelstein shared her research findings of what it is like to grow old in New York City. Many of the older generation decide to stay and grow old in New York because they love the city. NYC is in the process of trying to implement the WHO Age-Friendly cities initiative and spoke of the need to plan for multiple identities and particularities of population. She reminded the audience that just because people get older does not mean they lose their identity as the public often assumes with older individuals. New York City plans to release their Age-Friendly NYC report on September 15th.

All in all the most important take-aways from the conference was the ability of environments and design to influence the experience of ageing, the potential for the grey and green agenda to be equally integrated in all future design and planning, and the need to make ageing a mainstream issue and not a sideline conversation. It was encouraging to hear at the senior officials meeting that there are governments making progressive decisions to enable better ageing of their societies, but as in most cases, for their policies to take real effect, the ageing discourse needs to move beyond government circles to the private sector.

9th Global Conference on Ageing

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Next week Montreal will host the 9th Global Conference on Ageing . The focus of this year's conference is on ageing and design. The conference has been organized by the International Federation on Ageing. IFA's President and Co-Chair of the Conference, Irene Hoskins, has said about this year's programme that “it reflects the importance of ensuring enabling and supportive environments, a key priority set out in the Madrid International Plan of Action on Ageing (MIPAA)”.

The three-day conference will also include an exposition on ageing featuring some of the latest products and services being developed in the area of enabling environments. Arup's Director for Global Foresight & Innovation, Chris Luebkeman, will be speaking at the pre-conference event with senior government officials as well as at the Conference's Opening Plenary session entitled "The New Paradigm: Ageing and Design" on the evening of September 4th.