1st Edition
New Industrial Urbanism Designing Places for Production
Since the Industrial Revolution, cities and industry have grown together; towns and metropolitan regions have evolved around factories and expanding industries. New Industrial Urbanism explores the evolving and future relationships between cities and places of production, focusing on the spatial implications and physical design of integrating contemporary manufacturing into the city. The book examines recent developments that have led to dramatic shifts in the manufacturing sector – from large-scale mass production methods to small-scale distributed systems; from polluting and consumptive production methods to a cleaner and more sustainable process; from broad demand for unskilled labor to a growing need for a more educated and specialized workforce – to show how cities see new investment and increased employment opportunities. Looking ahead to the quest to make cities more competitive and resilient, New Industrial Urbanism provides lessons from cases around the world and suggests adopting New Industrial Urbanism as an action framework that reconnects what has been separated: people, places, and production. Moving the conversation beyond the reflexively-negative characterizations of industry, more than two centuries after the start of the Industrial Revolution, this book calls to re-consider the ways in which industry creates places, sustains jobs, and supports environmental sustainability in our cities.
This book is available as Open Acess through https://www.taylorfrancis.com/.
CONTENTS
Preface
Organization of the Book
Acknowledgments
PART I FOR PRODUCTION’S SAKE
1. People, Factories, and Making
Factories, Architects, and the Design of Work Spaces
Work Spaces: Building Types and Programs
2. Between Production and City Development
Industrial Landscapes and Urban Life Dynamics
Designing City-Industry Dynamic for the 21st Century
3. The Way Forward: New Industrial Urbanism
From Overarching Concepts to Policy Initiatives
The Future of Industry: From Parallel Initiatives to an Integrated Framework
PART II PLACES OF MAKING
4. Clustering New Industries
Features of Clustering Industries
Wageningen Food Valley, the Netherlands
Kista Science City, Sweden
Hsinchu Science Park, Taiwan
Kendall Square, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
The Industry–Place Nexus in Developing Clusters
5. Reinventing Industrial Areas
Features of Reinventing Industrial Areas
Jurong, Singapore
HafenCity, Hamburg, Germany
Brooklyn Navy Yard, New York City, USA
The Fashion District, Los Angeles, USA
Industry–Place Nexus in Reinventing Areas
6. Forming Hybrid Districts
Features in generating hybrid districts
22@ District, Barcelona, Spain
Innovation District, Medellín, Colombia
Central Eastside, Portland, Oregon, USA
Huaqiangbei, Shenzhen, China
Industry–Place Nexus in Forming Hybrid Districts
7. Industry and Place
PART III OPEN MANUFACTURING
8. Advancing Regions
Regional Industrial Coordination
Research Triangle Regional Partnership (RTRP), Durham, North Carolina, USA
The Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG), San Francisco, California, USA
The Regionalverband Ruhr, Ruhrgebiet, Germany
Plattelandscentrum Meetjesland, Regional Network, Meetjesland, Belgium
Towards Developing a Regional Ecosystem: The Case of Kiryat Shmona
Summary: Regional Socio-Economic Visioning
9. Integrating Urban-Industrial Systems
Regulating Variability: From Separation to Consolidation
22@District, Barcelona, Spain
Innovation District, Medellín, Colombia
Central Eastside, Portland, Oregon, USA
Shenzhen, Guangdong, China
Towards an Integrated System: Eastern Market Neighborhood, Detroit
Summary: Recoding the Industrial–Residential Nexus
10. Working, Living, and Innovating
The Variety of Synchronic Architectural Typologies
Strathcona Village, Vancouver, Canada
Iceland Wharf, and Fish Island, London, UK
415 Wick Lane, Fish Island, Hackney Wick, London, UK
Westferry Studios, London, UK
Summary: Locating Synchronic Architectural Typologies in the City
11. New Industrial Urbanism
New Industrial Urbanism: Key Planning Concepts
Scalar Strategies
Integrative Approaches
Coding Complexity
Synchronic Architectural Typologies
Experimenting and Developing a New Industrial Urbanism
Biography
Tali Hatuka, an architect and urban planner, is a Professor of Urban Planning and the head of the Laboratory of Contemporary Urban Design, at Tel Aviv University (lcud.tau.ac.il). Her work is focused primarily on two fields: urban society, and city design and development. Hatuka is the author and co-author of the books: The Design of Protest, Violent Acts and Urban Space in Contemporary Tel Aviv, The Factory, State-Neighborhood, The Planners, City-Industry and Land-Gardens. She also works as a city planner and urban designer advising municipalities and the public sector. Hatuka has received many awards, including a Fulbright Scholarship and a Marie Curie Scholarship at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). She holds degrees from the Technion in Israel and Heriot-Watt University in the UK.
Eran Ben-Joseph is the Class of 1922 Professor of Landscape Architecture and Urban Planning and the former head of the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). His research and teaching areas include urban and physical design, standards and regulations, sustainable site planning technologies and urban retrofitting. He authored and co-authored the books: Streets and the Shaping of Towns and Cities, Regulating Place: Standards and the Shaping of Urban America, The Code of the City, RENEW Town and ReThinking a Lot. Ben-Joseph worked as a city planner, urban designer, and landscape architect in Europe, Asia, the Middle East, and the United States. He holds academic degrees from the University of California at Berkeley and Chiba National University of Japan.
Although advocates and academics alike have embraced the notion of advanced manufacturing locating in cities, the literature has lacked a compelling and detailed vision of what a new industrial urbanism would actually encompass. This comprehensive volume fills that gap, with a powerful visual analysis thoroughly grounded in economic theory and historical context.
- Karen Chapple, Professor and Director, School of Cities, University of Toronto, Canada
Typically the purview of logistics consultants and engineers, Tali Hatuka and Eran Ben-Joseph make a compelling case that industrial districts should be an important area of focus for urban designers. The reemergence of direct-to-customer and small batch manufacturing and the proliferation of last mile e-commerce distribution facilities means that many types of industrial facilities need to be integrated into the urban core and not segregated to the expanding metropolitan periphery. New Industrial Urbanism provides a comprehensive roadmap for how this can be considered and accommodated.
- Tim Love FAIA, Professor Northeastern University and Founding Principal Utile, Boston, Massachusetts
In a time of dramatic changes in industrial strategies and manufacturing, New Industrial Urbanism provides a much-needed spatial approach to exploring the relationships between city and industry. Hatuka and Ben-Joseph offer valuable lessons to those who are committed to communities and places, and actively engaged in shaping our cities’ built environment.
- Elisabeth B. Reynolds, Former Executive Director of MIT’s Industrial Performance Center and Task Force on the Work of the Future; Special Assistant to the President of the United States for Manufacturing, National Economic Council