Post-Sprawl Metropolis: Planning for the Transition to Sustainability Jennifer Wolch Department of...

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Post-Sprawl Metropolis: Planning for the Transition to Sustainability Jennifer Wolch Department of Geography USC Sustainable Cities Program

Transcript of Post-Sprawl Metropolis: Planning for the Transition to Sustainability Jennifer Wolch Department of...

Page 1: Post-Sprawl Metropolis: Planning for the Transition to Sustainability Jennifer Wolch Department of Geography USC Sustainable Cities Program.

Post-Sprawl Metropolis: Planning for the Transition to Sustainability

Jennifer Wolch

Department of Geography

USC Sustainable Cities Program

Page 2: Post-Sprawl Metropolis: Planning for the Transition to Sustainability Jennifer Wolch Department of Geography USC Sustainable Cities Program.

Building the sustainable metropolis: Key challenge of post-sprawl era

Page 3: Post-Sprawl Metropolis: Planning for the Transition to Sustainability Jennifer Wolch Department of Geography USC Sustainable Cities Program.

What is sustainability? The four E’s Environment: insure long-term viability of

ecosystem and continued provision of “nature’s services”

Economy: secure high quality of life for current and future generations

Equity: promote social justice for people as well as nature

Engagement: involve full spectrum of stakeholder groups and residents in planning and policy

Page 4: Post-Sprawl Metropolis: Planning for the Transition to Sustainability Jennifer Wolch Department of Geography USC Sustainable Cities Program.

Why ‘sprawl’ may be less sustainable than other forms of urbanization Environment

Resource intensive Land/habitat consumptive

Economy May not reflect consumer preferences Can limit regional development

Equity Reinforces social polarization Exacerbates fiscal inequities

Engagement Fragments regional identity and dialogue

Page 5: Post-Sprawl Metropolis: Planning for the Transition to Sustainability Jennifer Wolch Department of Geography USC Sustainable Cities Program.

The way from here to there Using life-cycle & cross-cutting indicators Rethinking ‘non-urban’ policy arenas Collaborating across race, class, nation &

species Building cross-stakeholder coalitions Constructing bold demonstration projects

Page 6: Post-Sprawl Metropolis: Planning for the Transition to Sustainability Jennifer Wolch Department of Geography USC Sustainable Cities Program.

Academic-developer collaboration Building green & clean Mixed use, mixed densities, mixed

incomes Education for coexistence Understanding cats & dogs (and ‘gators

too)

Ideas from Harmony, Florida