The city council has voted to set sweeping, first-of-their-kind limits on ride-hailing vehicles.
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The city council has voted to set sweeping, first-of-their-kind limits on ride-hailing vehicles.
Preliminary design ideas for Toronto’s Quayside
Last week Sidewalk Toronto held a roundtable discussion here in the city and released some preliminary design ideas and strategies for Quayside. (That’s why Dan Doctoroff was talking on BNN Bloomberg.)
I went through the full presentation this morning and below are a bunch of slides that I thought you all might find interesting.
Here is the extent of “Quayside” along the waterfront. The current land use permissions allow for about 3 million square feet of space and towers as tall as 50 storeys.
Here is a paving system being explored for the area. It is modular. It may melt snow. And perhaps most interestingly, it would allow for dynamic changes in road use throughout the day. This sort of thing already happens to a lesser degree on streets like Jarvis. This technology could take that much further.
One of their primary goals is to double Toronto’s usable outdoor hours. To do that, they are proposing simple weather shields (pictured below) and weather-responsive systems.
They are spending a lot of time thinking about the ground floor of buildings, which they are calling Stoa. The idea is to create flexible and porous spaces that respond quickly to changing needs and that integrate more seamlessly with the surrounding public realm.
There’s a lot on the potential hierarchy of the street network and how each will function for transit, conventional cars, AVs, cyclists, pedestrians, and so on. I was happy to see “laneways” as a core part of the pedestrian network. They are designed for walking speeds. Access would be restricted for things that move too quickly.
This image ties in the street grid and Stoa.
Finally, the goal is to build the neighborhood entirely out of timber, and more specifically, Canadian timber. If they follow through on this, I think it would really push adoption of this material forward in the city.
I would encourage you to check out the full package, which you can do here. I can’t wait for these projects to get underway along Toronto’s waterfront.
DAKboard is designed to be an always on, zero maintenance, ever changing display featuring the content that's important and relevant to you. A modern, wifi connected, digital photo frame. At a glance you can see your upcoming events, news and weather overlaid on top of photos pulled from Flickr, Dropbox, Instagram, 500px and other photo/file sharing sites, all in a beautifully designed interface.
Trulia is launching a new editorial initiative that takes you into communities where you’re considering buying. Eventually, it wants to recommend your next neighborhood.
Alphabet's Sidewalk Labs is proposing "unprecedentedly" tall timber buildings, sprawling public spaces, and heated pavements to melt snow, for the first neighbourhood in its major development on Toronto's waterfront.
Vast underground neighbourhoods are built to house an influx of migrants into Seoul, following the reunification of North and South Korea, in this conceptual proposal by Bartlett graduate Natasha Marks.
A “wow”-worthy project from Stuttgart, Germany, uses a robot arm and augmented reality for more precise building—and it just might make waves in the slow-to-evolve construction industry.
Use of robotic arm along with Augmented Reality seems to make a lot more sense to use in the building industry; than just using AR or VR alone - more accuracy
That thought of Neighborhoods in the sky design
From food-delivery startups to mapping and co-living companies, technology focused on urban systems is drawing billions of dollars in venture capital.
Great article on the overview of Urban Tech; what companies are leading & about the upcoming future of the next “start-ups” will be
Dallas-based architecture firm presented a vision of future residential living at the 2018 International Builders’ Show.
Make the Forest Grow Again - Marta Lata, Dobrochna Lata, Agata Czechowska and Mateusz Pietryga, Poland - entry for Reimagine Vernacular Architecture Competition
Enjoy the use of mix media in their presentation
Renderings done by Neoman - collection of ideas from Architects & others - most of the ideas having to deal with limited resources & for human kind to survive
Detroit is taken over by Amazon in architecture student Cody Seipp's conceptual project, which envisions the US city in 2051 following a major redevelopment orchestrated by the retail giant.
Are we really that far off, where corporations will take over whole cities? Facebook is building its own residential developments to house its workers - we are going back to the times of corporation cities.