towards regenerative development - planning · • restorative design • regenerative development....
TRANSCRIPT
Towards Regenerative
Development
Responding to environmental and
economic pressures on the built
environment
www.ap.urscorp.com
Economic Change
Peak Oil
Climate Change
Natural SphereHuman Sphere
www.ap.urscorp.com
www.ap.urscorp.com
“[Hu]man made surroundings that provide
the setting for human activity, ranging from
large-scale civic surroundings to the
personal places”
Moffatt, et al, 2008
www.ap.urscorp.com
Energy and material
Greenhouse gas
emissions
Total waste
40%
40%40%
UNEP 2007
www.ap.urscorp.com
Four approaches to a sustainable built
environment
• Eco-efficiency
• Eco-effectiveness – cradle-to-cradle
• Restorative Design
• Regenerative Development
www.ap.urscorp.com
Conservation House, Wellington, New Zealand
www.ap.urscorp.com
Four approaches to a sustainable built
environment
• Eco-efficiency
• Eco-effectiveness – cradle-to-cradle
• Restorative Design
• Regenerative Development
www.ap.urscorp.com
Adam Joseph Lewis Centre for Environmental
Studies, Oberlin College, Cleveland, USA
www.ap.urscorp.com
Four approaches to a sustainable built
environment
• Eco-efficiency
• Eco-effectiveness – cradle-to-cradle
• Restorative Design
• Regenerative Development
www.ap.urscorp.com
Living Water Gardens, Chengdu, China
www.ap.urscorp.com
Four approaches to a sustainable built
environment
• Eco-efficiency
• Eco-effectiveness – cradle-to-cradle
• Restorative Design
• Regenerative Development
www.ap.urscorp.com
The Willow School, Gladstone, New Jersey, USA
www.ap.urscorp.com
Trajectory of Responsible Design
www.ap.urscorp.com
Conventional
NEGATIVE
ENVIRONMENTAL
OUTCOME
Eco-efficiency,
green,
sustainable
ZERO STATE
Cradle-to-cradle,
Restorative and
Regenerative Development
POSITIVE OUTCOME
Paradigm shift
Business as
usual in NZ
5yrs 40yrs 80yrs 100+yrs
www.ap.urscorp.com
1. Increased human physical health and psychological wellbeing
2. Reduced economic costs (over life cycle) and increased economic value.
The building/development becomes a potential source of income.
3. Increased innovation in projects.
4. Positive environmental impact.
5. Changing relationship to nature. ‘Deeper and more enduring’.
6. Manageable and meaningful approach to global issues through a place-
based approach.
7. More integrated and therefore accurate knowledge of place. Mutually
beneficial relationships are created between people and place.
8. Increased robustness, flexibility and adaptability in the face of climatic
change.
9. Creates stronger, more equitable communities.
Benefits
www.ap.urscorp.com
“The path towards a prosperous and healthy
future lies, of necessity, in our ability to re-
integrate our thinking, our systems, and
ourselves into the natural systems and limits
in which they have existed, albeit in stark
denial of that reality, all along”
David Eisenberg and William Reed
www.ap.urscorp.com
Conservation House, Wellington, New Zealand
www.ap.urscorp.com
Adam Joseph Lewis Centre for Environmental
Studies, Oberlin College, Cleveland, USA
www.ap.urscorp.com
Living Water Gardens, Chengdu, China
www.ap.urscorp.com
The Willow School, Gladstone, New Jersey, USA