Dan Doctoroff at NLA

Dan Doctoroff

This post is by Bruce McVean, Integrated Design Manager at Beyond Green

This morning NLA hosted an interesting talk by Dan Doctoroff, CEO and President of Bloomburg and former deputy Mayor of New York. While working for Mayor Bloomburg’s administration Doctoroff oversaw the development and implementation of PlaNYC, which provides an ambitious and comprehensive framework for developing a sustainable (in every sense) future for New York.

His main theme was that friendly competition between London and New York drives innovation in both cities and ought to allow them to maintain their position as great world cities long into the future. Both cities are very similar in terms of size, diversity of their populations and forecasts for economic and population growth. By a long way they lead the world as centres for financial industries, with Doctoroff claiming New York has a slight edge over London (using the number of Bloomburg subscribers as the measure).

Doctoroff sees quality of life as essential to ensuring London and New York’s long term success. It is at the heart of his ‘virtuous cycle for a successful city’ – quality of life attracts people (residents and visitors), which drives the economy, which provides the money to invest in projects to improve quality of life. Those projects must be part of comprehensive strategy for urban transformation. The High Line for example has not only created a fantastic new public space in the centre of the city, but was also the catalyst for wider change in over 40 neighbouring blocks.

Creating a great city for walking is central to the PlaNYC transport strategy and has driven much of the rapid transformation of New York’s public realm over recent years. Improvements that are also helping to create a cycle network that in terms of its eventual coverage and quality of provision is miles ahead of London’s Cycle Super Highways.

The first London Plan, drawn up under Ken Livingstone, was the template for PlanNYC, but New York’s plan is much more ambitious. Doctoroff politely suggested that New York was still learning from London, using the example of the cycle hire scheme (which London can hardly claim to have pioneered), but it is London that must now learn from New York.


Intern needed for ambitious outreach campaign

NYC highline seating

We’re looking for an intern to join us in our London office to contribute to an exciting new communications project-  ideally working three days a week for approximately two months, starting the week of January 9th, 2012.

Background:

-We’re developing an ambitious outreach campaign aimed to reshape the conversation on sustainable development and city planning, both in the UK and abroad.

-This campaign will engage with local and international networks of development practitioners, media, higher education programmes and various other stakeholders.

The role:

Contribute to creating core infrastructure for the campaign, which will include aspects of:

  • Website and brand development
  • Communication and outreach planning
  • Production of an event series

Help research and organize stakeholder database

  • Consolidate and categorise existing stakeholders within Beyond Green network
  • Investigate and reach out to new contacts for potential project collaboration

We’ll pay £20 per day to cover travel and subsistence.

If you’re interested, please send an email marked ‘internship application’ to Joshua Foss (joshua@beyondgreen.co.uk) explaining why this internship opportunity interests you. Please attach your CV and send it before 9th January. If you have any questions on this position, feel free to write to Joshua.


BG’s Joshua Foss an ambassador for Living Building Challenge

lbc

LEED and BREEAM are often viewed as the benchmarks for sustainable building.  This may have rung true several years ago, but these standards can no longer lay these claims.  A new player is in town, the Living Building Challenge, which confidently declares itself the most advanced measure of sustainability in the built environment today.  It truly is ambitious, mandating net-zero energy, closed-loop water, urban agriculture, local and toxin-free material procurement, and embodied energy offsets (amongst many other imperatives) through performance-based metrics.  Originally developed in the United States in 2006 as a philosophy, advocacy tool, and certification program, the Living Building Challenge is effectively provoking the deep conversations required within the building industry and beyond to solve pressing problems rather than shift them.

Very much in a nascent stage, the Challenge has successfully certified 4 buildings at varying scales throughout North America, with many more in occupancy and development stages in various parts of the world.  Several iconic projects are now in the works, including a $60 million 5 story office building in downtown Portland, Oregon. With each project that strives for and obtains certification, a bar is raised that proves our built environment is capable of becoming more. This creates a ripple effect that is felt far and wide, energizing those who are on the front lines of sustainable development.

Beyond Green’s own Joshua Foss is from the US and has been an ambassador for the Challenge the past two years. He has been trained by the Living Building Institute to lead volunteer presentations on their behalf.  These genereally entail an hour long seminar presented for interested groups/organizations/events and are qualified to earn attendees’ 1 LEED continuing education hour.  In addition to presenting on the Living Building Challenge, Foss has also contributed to several projects that have aimed for certification, including a multi-family mixed use development in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Beyond Green certainly understands and is inspired by the Living Building Challenge, but recognises that it is currently not an all-encompassing vision for sustainable development.  Real sustainability must be developed at scale with a focus on quality placemaking without investing too much emphasis on single structures (although the LBC certainly recognises this and looks to be evolving to better incorporate district and neighbourhood scales).  The value the Challenge does however serve is being an icon for sustainability, for raising awareness and excitement within the field, and for acting as an agent to tranform development processes to be more upstream thinking, collaborative, and transparent (all things that we strive to do here at Beyond Green).

If you are interested in learning more about the Living Building Challenge, please contact Joshua.  He is very keen on engaging dialogues here in the UK about the standard and discussing how it fits into the greater sustainable development conversation (he is at the moment the only trained presenter in the country).  Foss can be reached at joshua@beyondgreen.co.uk


Beyond Green go to Copenhagen

pedestrian friendly Copenhagen waterfront

For the last few months the Beyond Green design team has been busy developing a masterplan for our project in Broadland, an authentically sustainable new community to the north of Norwich.

Last week a small team of us travelled to Copenhagen to see Gehl Architects – leading design practice with a people-first approach to planning and the built environment – who are heading up the work on our public realm strategy at Broadland. We had two days of workshops with their head of design, Oliver Schulze, and architect, Jacob Blak, getting into the detail of the public spaces, parks and streets in advance of a series of design workshops for stakeholders and members of the public in Broadland.

Copenhagen has long been an inspiration to Beyond Green and is well known for its success at challenging the dominance of the car. Over a period of 40 years its taken a series of complementary actions – major investment in cycle lanes, a reduction in city centre car parking, shared surface streets with pedestrian and cycle priority, and investment in public transport – to transform the city to one of the world’s best for cycling with 55% of commuter journeys in central Copenhagen made by bike.

Sadly there wasn’t much time to see the sights of Copenhagen in the short time we were there, but Oliver and Jacob made sure we sampled some traditional Danish food. Make sure you visit Frida’s next time you’re there and try the Pariseboef. Word of warning though – it’s not for the feint hearted (or those on a first date).

Now we’re safely back in the office we’ll be working up the public realm plan and strategies with the Gehl team in time for the Broadland design workshops in October. You can find more information on our work in Broadland including the public realm strategy HERE.


Jonathan Smales to take part in sustainable place making debate

smales speaking

Beyond Green executive chairman Jonathan Smales has been invited to sit on the panel of an upcoming discussion focused on sustainable place making.  Put on by Hermes Real Estate group and held at Kings Cross Central on the 2nd of November, the event looks to provide a platform for an engaging dialogue on current and future trends in urban development.  With experience working on ambitious sustainable developments of significant scale, Smales has established himself as one of the UK’s premier voices in producing places that feature high qualities of life with minimal ecological footprints.  His insights and recommendations will be featured during this panel discussion.

If interested in attending this event, please RSVP to Maggie Agememnonos at m.agamemnonos@hermes.co.uk.  Doors are at 4:30PM with a 5:00 start time.

The discussion will take place The German Gymnasium, Kings Cross Central, 26 Pancras Road, London N1C 4TB.  An RPI awards ceremony and drinks reception will follow.


Wilderness Wood to host eco-celebrity Alistair McGowan on October 7th

wdytya4_alistair

Beyond Green sister company Wilderness Wood is a 62-acre productive woodland in East Sussex, a quaint village located one hour south of London via train.  The Wood hosts a variety of eco-initiative for nature appreciators large and small, from guided hikes that search out edible fungus, bugs and woodland monsters to handmade furniture and locally sourced, organic food available for purchase.  Accompanying the many activities provided during the day, Wilderness Wood has also presented a series of monthly candlelit dinners to celebrate unique and ambitous efforts taken by individuals of varying disciplines.  The upcoming dinner is particularly special, hosting the accomplished actor, impressionist and eco-advocate Alistar McGowan on October 7th at 7:30PM.

Alistair is probably best known for his impersonations on BBC1’s BAFTA-winning The Big Impression, but his career has ranged from irreverent comedy to serious drama, together with writing and directing. Alongside his career as a performer, Alistair is a passionate spokesman on environmental issues. He’s helped promote campaigns for Sustrans, the Woodland Trust, Trees for Cities and Recycle Now and is an ambassador for WWF-UK. He developed a green charter for the film industry and in partnership with Zac Goldsmith, Emma Thompson and Greenpeace, bought a strip of land to block development of the proposed third runway at Heathrow. He’s never owned a car.

To learn more about Alistair’s unique journey firsthand whilst enjoying a handcrafted organic meal in fantastic company, refer to Wilderness Wood’s website HERE for more information.


A world first

farm shop

A FARM: shop like no other

Farm shops are popping up in the most unlikely of places these days, with produce transported in (hopefully) from nearby farms and containing an enticing display of well sourced seasonal and ethically produced meat, fruit and vegetables. Nothing we’ve seen so far however has been quite as unique as the shop we visited last week in London’s east; it literally was a farm in a shop!

FARM: shop is the genius invention of ‘Something & Son’, a trio of entrepreneurs, two of which are alumni of Beyond Green. Keen to find out more about the enterprise, some of us went to visit the farm last week with Sam Henderson explaining the scientific workings of the place to us…

The shop/farm started as a dream for the trio until they won Hackney Council’s Art in Empty Spaces initiative, which awarded them the chance to transform an empty property in Dalston into something ‘useful and meaningful’. With a budget of just a few thousand, some handy contacts and a lot of elbow grease, a year later and they’re not only well on their way to creating a fully fledged farm with all sorts of inspiring food production initiatives on the go, but they’ve also  doubled the rental value of the property for the council through their work!

Our tour begun in the garden, where we found a polytunnel hosting tadpoles, salad and veg supplies with plans for a food and drink bar amongst the herbs and even space for pigs alongside!  We  then worked our way up to the top of the building, stopping along the way to admire the Tilapia powered aquaponics system (and office space), the hydroponics growing a plentiful supply of premium basil. The kefur bacteria display in the hallway (recently used in their homemade gingerbeer experiment) led up to the tomato (and will be pineapple) factory on the second floor and a meeting room with a view of 4 happy chickens pecking away in a run on the roof.

This is way more than an exhibition space however, since all the food they produce is designed to be eaten on site. The team have recently renovated the kitchen so they can prepare and sell food in the lovely little cafe; from mushroom omelettes to a planned fish fry using the Talapia from the room next door! Demand for produce in the shop is high, and any food they can’t grow onsite is supplemented from the sister (and more traditional) Church Farm in Ardeley.

At a time when you can’t eat a tomato without enquiring about the carbon intensity of its production, the project is also unique since it’s “not out to prove anything.” In response to our questions about the relative benefits and potential footprint of growing pineapples in the sunny room upstairs, Sam replies that for them, its all about inspiring people, and that the team “simply sought to create something fascinating…and have never tried to take sides”.

FARM: shop is definitely fascinating; a world first come to life through the commitment, skill, intelligence and imagination of the team. We’d advise you to visit the café for a brunch with a difference, or take a tour yourselves (you can liaise with Sam to book tours starting at £5 per person)!


How to do eco in style

eden project

In this blog prepared to mark the 10 year anniversary of the inspirational Eden project, green living expert Joanna Yarrow shares her top ten tips for a stylish and ethical lifestyle.

View the article on the telegraph’s website here, and click here to see some more of the guest birthday blogs and other shenanigans from Eden!


Jan Gehl is sweet on people

Jan Gehl's Cities for People

On the heels of a sold out gig in New York’s West Village, Jan Gehl spoke to an overflow crowd of 500 people at London’s NLA last Tuesday about his latest book “Cities for People.”

After a brief introduction by none other than Lord Richard Rogers (who wrote the books’ preface), Gehl gave a highly engaging talk summing up the vast body of knowledge he’s gained throughout his 50-some year career as an architect, academic, urban planner and most recently – global cult phenomenon.

Gehl’s basic principle is pretty simple –common sense really: design places so people can thrive. It’s just that for some reason around 1960 we lost our collective head and have been designing places that are totally out of whack with what makes us happy and keeps us healthy. As Gehl astutely pointed out, we actually know more about the ideal habitat for the silver mountain gorilla than we do about what kind of place keeps a homo sapien happy. Or at least if we know how to keep ourselves happy then we’re on some sort of self-destructive mission to make ourselves miserable and fat – and to sort of totally mess up our environment to boot. Good times!

Gehl conjured up images of master planners and architects as Godzilla-like figures hovering over models of a new city and making it beautiful from their perspective, but not giving a stuff about the micro-sized people running around below. He calls it Brasilia syndrome, which is basically shorthand for design from 5000 feet – or what it would look like as you fly over a place in an airplane or a helicopter. Another favorite Gehl-ism is “birdshit planning” whereby a giant bird flies over a city and randomly drops huge towers creating a beautiful skyline of unique and artistic masterpieces – not unlike the perfume bottles his wife keeps on the bathroom counter. The problem, Gehl says, with these amazing beautiful towers like those found in Dubai, is they’re just a collection of objects – not a city full of happy, thriving people. There’s no soul – there’s no THERE there.

But there are places that have been designed with people in mind. Looking at an arial photo of a housing development in Copenhagen locally known as the “Potato Rows” which were built in the late 1800s, a “form-obsessed architectural neophyte” (to quote an esteemed colleague) might not be overwhelmingly impressed. From an airplane these charming classic row houses look a bit boring and uninspired, and would likely get most architecture students kicked straight out of school. However, when you get to eye level an entirely different perspective emerges. Gehl pointed out the vibrant street life, sense of community and the walkability of the neighborhood. And the punchline? This boring little development boasts the highest real estate values in all of Copenhagen, and a boatload of urban planners, architects and even the mayor are proud to call the enclave home.

So what can we learn from the Potato Rows about how we should we design our villages, towns and major metropolitan areas so people WILL thrive? According to Gehl it’s all about scale – human scale to be exact. In traditional cities – those places we instinctively love because they’re lovely and beautiful and make us want to sit and eat an ice cream or sip a coffee – the Godzilla factor doesn’t win. Great traditional places like the Piazza del Campo in Siena, Italy, or cities like Barcelona, or Gehl’s own beloved Copenhagen which have grown on a foundation of progressive urbanism, and great new places like Curritiba in southern Brazil built on sustainability principles, all are full of small signals and eye-level details that can only be seen as you walk along a human-scale street at 5 km/hr. And Gehl Architecture’s extensive research in the public realm – which could be characterized as an anthropological study of the wild homo sapien in his natural urban environment – backs this up. We don’t just happen to love Venice because it has great food or because it’s romantic and old. We love places like this because they’re built in a way that works for an average human being just walking or biking around being human.

These cities “invite” people to walk or cycle, something that Gehl has been successful at doing in cities around the world, beginning with his ongoing work in Copenhagen where a full 37% of the population now commute to work by bike, thanks to the way the asphalt is allocated. Gehl’s gentle turn of phrase in “inviting” people to change their behavior actually puts a beautifully subtle spin on what is generally viewed as an impossible shift. But he makes a strong point – instead of building more roads to accommodate more cars, let’s stop for a moment and think about the purpose of the street. It’s pretty straightforward stuff really – design the roads for people instead of cars and you’ll have more walking and cycling. Allocate more asphalt to cars and you’ll have more automobile traffic.

His latest efforts in New York as part of PlaNYC have transformed New York’s famous Broadway into “Broadway Boulevard.” In just two short years, Gehl along with NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Traffic Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan have shut down bits of Times Square and Herald Square to automobile traffic and turned them into bustling pedestrian malls where millions of people per year stop and have lunch, enjoy a conversation or simply just watch “the ballet of the street,” a phrase Gehl borrows from Jane Jacobs “Death and Life of Great American Cities”. But it’s not all artistic and nicey-nicey people having a good time and frollicking. Back when Sadik-Khan hired Gehl for the project they might have predicted some impressive safety results like a 63% reduction in motorist and passenger injuries and a 35% reduction in pedestrian injuries, but they also knew that creating a great public space is a valuable commodity. According to an old Icelandic saying that Gehl is fond of repeating “man is man’s greatest joy.” And this joy actually translates into dollars when it comes right down to it. In an interview with Sustainable Cities, an urban design blog, Sadik-Khan says that since the changes, “property values on retail rents from 47th and 42nd street went up 71% in the first six months alone.” Wow.

So. Yup. Jan Gehl basically just wants to be “sweet” to the people, and basically just wants to give them spaces to sit around and look at each other – especially if the people are young and attractive or “goodies” as he likes to call them. And apparently people appreciate that, and if more mayors, developers, architects and planners want to join in apparently not only will be livelier, happier, healthier, safer and more sustainable – maybe we will be sweet to the economy too.

You can view a similar talk given at New York’s Cooper Hewitt Museum here.

Beyond Green is pleased to work with Gehl Architects on the public realm strategy for our Broadland project.


Can the UK ever be sustainable?

It’s a big question, and one which Beyond Green Living were keen to hear the answer to as they joined a packed theatre at the Royal Geographical Society, all intently listening to what Sir Stuart Rose, Rt Hon Hilary Benn and Andy Hobsbawm would say on the matter.

Well chaired by Jo Confino, (Guardian Sustainable Business Network), the evening saw each speaker explain what role their own sector could play, be it business, politics or the creative industry. It’s possible the speakers strayed from the question a little, but the evening nonetheless provided some very interesting food for thought on around for Beyond Green Living. What can, and indeed must, each sector offer if we are to be sustainable and just as important, how can they work together to achieve the joint goal of sustainability?

To hear more about this, and learn why Stuart Rose isn’t afraid of eating food past its ‘use by’ date, click here.