Commentators have long studied connections
between cities and how these influence their development. The city is the natural focus of trade-based
theories of growth. Exporting a surplus,
based on local resources and specialisation was – and is – considered the way to city wealth.
In this world, transport is the key to the trade portal. The cities that dominated world trade in the 19th and 20th centuries were those best connected, initially through their ports and sea links complemented later through strong ties over the airways. Mega-ports and airport hubs were marks of city success.
This blog raises the possibility that this model is changing, and we need to change our thinking about the future of our cities with it.
Connectedness and
concentration
Connectedness is a mantra for the new urbanists: through international connection cities exploit the economies assumed
to arise from ever-increasing concentration of people and business. Hence, the city seeking to make its mark globally must invest in ever increasing transport infrastructure. Acknowledging the information age, it may add
high-speed broadband to the mix and perhaps, in a symbolic move, an
international convention centre.
But is this the right model for 21st century urbanisation?
Aviation – moving on
Think for a moment about what has happened in aviation. The last decade saw a quantum shift from a
model whereby a few powerful hubs concentrated movement between a few major centres from
which passengers and goods could, in turn, be distributed along local spokes –
by regional aircraft, train, coach or car.
Airlines based themselves overwhelmingly at these hubs. The large, twin isle jet reigned
supreme. The Airbus A380 is the latest conveyor
of that model, but most likely the last.
Because late in the 20th century there was a divergence between an ageing hub and spoke model and a growing model based on dense networks connecting more and more cities directly. The single aisle, medium-haul jet took off. And now the long-haul, highly efficient, medium-sized jet is further expanding this capacity to directly connect former spokes – smaller cities -- without the need to hub through major cities.
And all of this has been supported by the productivity leap brought about by the low cost airline model. More people, more cities, more directly connected than ever before with the capacity to transform economic, political and social relations among them. [1]
From transport to
logistics
The transport sector was about moving goods from A to B as
cost effectively as regulation allowed; and all too often regulation kept costs up to protect old technology and incumbent operators, whether by surface, air, or
sea. That, though, is changing as international transport is liberalised.
And today transport is itself transforming into the business of logistics. And logistics is about distribution – through a production chain, between producers and consumers, and among places. Goods move seamlessly through integrated operations that can deliver almost anything almost anywhere in a matter of days.
And today transport is itself transforming into the business of logistics. And logistics is about distribution – through a production chain, between producers and consumers, and among places. Goods move seamlessly through integrated operations that can deliver almost anything almost anywhere in a matter of days.
An informational
world
As the capacity to transport goods went up and the cost went
down, academics trying to explain the differential growth of cities appealed to a new notion that dominating the exchange of information was the new
key to prosperity. Knowledge and
expertise were concentrated in key informational hubs where they became the
centres of capitalist power, the hearths of globalisation. [2]
Well that’s changing, too. Information and expertise is becoming dispersed, knowledge ubiquitous. This is not just about the internet – although it obviously plays a huge part. It’s also about the explosion of personal mobility as informational cities give way to an informational world. (It may also be about the potential for implosion as a result of over-concentration, a threat still lingering in the financial centres of the world).
Linked cities are giving way to networked communities.
From consolidation
...
The lesson? Those of
us involved in planning the city cannot assume the same structures will prevail
in the future as those we inherited from the past. We tend to plan, though, by looking for
repeat patterns, seeking generalisation, extracting principles, predicting the
unpredictable. And because infrastructure
– roads, rail, ports – are large scale, expensive, and enduring they become the
bones around which we construct our futures.
Infrastructure, particularly transport infrastructure, shapes our presumptions about how the city will function
and the form it will take. Hence, urban
planning is preoccupied with how to consolidate existing
structures, increasing their capacity by building up rather than out and moving to
mass transit, among other things.
... to dispersal
Yet the shifts in 21st century logistics and
information technology support dispersal. And it
might just be that dispersal is the key to 21st century urbanisation.
Light rail systems, dedicated bus lanes, smaller, more fuel
efficient vehicles, lower housing costs, more intimate localised but
inter-connected sub-urban communities, common information and mobile expertise cutting across
diverse tastes,experiences, and places – these may
be the way of the future.
In the developing world where urbanisation is most rapid they may be the
only way. Here dispersal is already the
dominant reality. While urbanisation may
be exemplified in a few megacities in Asia, these account for only a small
part of the total. And even they are
marked by rapid peripheral expansion, with distinctive, sprawling, dense and diverse communities on the edge. Democraticised, localised self help institutions
and NGOs may be the way to improved sanitation and health care in this environment, and micro-commerce
the way to sustainable prosperity.
And in the slower-growing cities of the west, the maturing
of sub-urban life, a return to lifestyle-focused localism, ageing in place, and
the growing importance of community-based care point to a future in which
dispersal rather than concentration could be the dominant mode of social and
spatial organisation. Central structures
may still have a role, but a diminishing one.
More generally we may have to think of cities themselves as comprising networks of connections, within and across boundaries. The stronger these networks, perhaps, the more resilient the city. But this does not translate to physical density. Proximity is not the issue. Well connected, dense networks will support, if not encourage, dispersal.
This is contrary to the currently favoured model in places like my city of origin – Auckland – but it is not at all contrary to the centre within that city that I call home.
This is contrary to the currently favoured model in places like my city of origin – Auckland – but it is not at all contrary to the centre within that city that I call home.
Getting it wrong
More than ever as we try to plan for the very long-term, we
need to open our minds to alternatives.
You only need to look at the list of bankrupt airlines (or in and out of
Chapter 11 in
the US) to appreciate the consequences of overinvesting in the current model
on the assumption that it will prevail indefinitely.
[1] See, for example, Centre for
Asia Pacific Aviation (2003) Low
Cost Airlines in Asia Pacific: A Force for Change
and (2009) Global Low Cost Carrier Report
and (2009) Global Low Cost Carrier Report
1 comment:
Well said, and an important message for those planner who think they have the ability to determine the future - or "pick winners".
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As for game-changing technologies, the SkyTran is a curious development. I believe it could, potentially, radically aggravate decentralisation too.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=echZPz4Pmig&feature=player_embedded
It's characteristics of being demand-responsive, scale-able to demand, fast, extremely efficient (energy and operation), and possessing extremely low guideway costs (that's fundamental) make it unique. It could have a remarkable impact on all kinds of small-town like developments. It stands on its own because no other development can achieve this on its level - that's why it's particularly interesting.
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