{"id":60917,"date":"2018-09-04T17:10:53","date_gmt":"2018-09-04T15:10:53","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.area-arch.it\/en\/?p=60917"},"modified":"2018-09-05T17:42:00","modified_gmt":"2018-09-05T15:42:00","slug":"nextgen-infrastructure","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.area-arch.it\/en\/nextgen-infrastructure\/","title":{"rendered":"NextGen infrastructure"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"p1\"><b>NextGen infrastructure: <\/b><b>places of (resource) aggregation and (public) congregation<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">By the end of this century, the infrastructural landscape may look radically different from that of today. The interlinked effects of global urbanization, climate change, and environmental degradation will compel us to embrace innovative approaches to design of our energy, water, sanitation, waste and transport systems. Specifically, the use of systems thinking \u2013 more holistic analysis for solving complex problems \u2013 will enable us to see patterns that connect seemingly disparate things. As a result, we can develop single solutions that serve multiple needs: old industrial-era, single-purpose assets will be supplanted by more poly-functional, ecologically-performing complexes.<br \/>\nAdvantage can be gained by avoiding conventional narrowly focused solutions and instead co-locating and\/or functionally conjoining different services.<br \/>\nWithin a single site, combined functions and mixed use optimizes real estate utilization, reducing pressure on undeveloped sites. Colocated facilities (\u201caggregation\u201d) may yield capital and operating savings. System wastes \u2013 energy, water or resources \u2013 can also be recovered, exchanged and repurposed for beneficial use elsewhere on the same site. Finally, there\u2019s the incorporation of public uses (\u201ccongregation\u201d) within these infrastructural complexes as well: facilities also incorporating recreational, educational or cultural activities.<br \/>\nIn an increasingly urbanized world, siting new or expanding an infrastructure facility is a contentious process. Water treatment plants, waste handling facilities are perceived as disruptive and intrusive, potentially leading to diminished quality of life. Instances of environmental injustice have occurred in neighborhoods overburdened by such facilities.<br \/>\nWhile equitable siting practices and mitigation of adverse environmental effects are first order imperatives, another priority will be developing a mixed-use asset beneficial to the host community and the city at large, through imaginative programming and design.<br \/>\nDevelopment of critical infrastructure has long been the exclusive purview of engineering specialists. However, architectural or landscape professionals are proving to be more sensitive to pattern and spatial relationships, appreciative of context, and creative in fostering mixed use of space. Designers are especially adept at combining amenity with utility by envisioning opportunities for inclusionary activities in unusual places.<br \/>\nIn some cases, they are also emboldened by opportunities for including ironic humor, through incongruous juxtapositions as we will see in some examples below.<br \/>\nStill, many of these strategies may not be self-evident to all participants and may remain elusive to others. Therefore, gaining the benefits of synthesis will demand enhanced skills on the part of the whole team. It will require new habits of relational thinking, intensive interdisciplinary collaboration, and in some cases forging novel partnerships.<br \/>\nEach of the following four examples \u2013 two waste management facilities and two water treatment plants \u2013 required out-of-the-box thinking and persuasive design concepts from a committed team of players.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\"><b>Recreation Opportunities Complement Water Treatment Facilities<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">The proposed siting in a public park of an enormous water filtration treatment plant serving New York City triggered major community pushback. As a concession, and ultimately an enhancement, to the neighborhood, a world-class design team returned precious parkland to the community by depressing the entire 9-acre, 9-storey structure underground! Topped with a green roof, the new above-grade portion of the facility today incorporates a new clubhouse, learning center and community civic space. The green roof serves a double purpose, first acting as a large new driving range for the park\u2019s golf course, and second, performing critical hydrologic functions.<br \/>\nThe roof\u2019s rainwater catchment is combined with site stormwater and groundwater displaced by the sunken facility. Rather than being piped away as wastewater, these combined flows are pumped up to the roof\u2019s highpoint. From here, the water cascades downward, encircling the building in the form of a \u201cmoat,\u201d which eliminated the need for security fencing. The moat\u2019s descending series of bioengineered channels and waterfalls cleans and polishes the water. Used to irrigate the golf course, the recovered water offsets the need for 280,000 gallons of potable water annually. In all, this handsomely fashioned facility, with its stone walls and generous planting, reprises the historic design legacy of New York\u2019s upstate water-supply infrastructure. The design not only eliminates an eyesore, but also considerately provides assorted new recreational activities for the community in which the facility was imposed. The gardens and playgrounds in the north end support quiet recreation, while the multipurpose pond in the southern section features a water play \u201csplash pad\u201d for summer cooling that transforms into a winter skating rink. Throughout the park, pedestrian bridges crisscross the water channel, while other places allow for direct human contact before the water is discharged into Lake Ontario. Aggregation of play and treatment functions work together to serve congregating crowds in this unusual combination.<\/p>\n<p class=\"p3\"><b>Waste Handling Facilities as Environmental Learning Centers<\/b><\/p>\n<p class=\"p1\">In each of these projects, one in Japan, the other found in America\u2019s southwestern desert, design professionals successfully coupled amenity with utility.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>While acknowledging that the handling and treating of municipal solid waste is a potentially offensive process, each designer adroitly mitigated negative impacts, while transforming the facility into an arena for public education. Yoshio Taniguchi approached the infrastructural redesign of Hiroshima\u2019s Waste-to-Energy plant as he would any of the world-class museums for which he is known. Here, special attention is given today to the nearly 200,000 visitors annually attracted to the facility.<br \/>\nA 400-foot long glass enclosed corridor that bisects the building invites the public to first look down upon the colossal inner workings of the plant \u2013 as if into a glass vitrine in a museum. This so-called \u201cEcorium\u201d or \u201cMuseum of Garbage\u201d showcases the waste sorting and combustion process that produces a major portion of the city\u2019s electricity energy and surplus heat to nearby homes and a neighborhood swimming pool. The visitors are rewarded as the procession terminates outdoors on a platform cantilevered over a newly incorporated public park with a splendid harbor view. In an unlikely twist, two environmental artists (Michael Singer and Linnea Glatt) were given license by the City of Phoenix, Arizona to totally transform its proposed Solid Waste Transfer Station.<br \/>\nWhat would have been an offensive, off-the-shelf engineered solution was reconceived collaboratively with the community as an attractive and inviting facility. It was reconfigured and reoriented it to avoid downwind odors to workers and to give visitors inviting views. Copious plantings along with a pond provide site water-cleaning services. To educate visitors on wasteful consumption patterns, the designers framed openings in a gallery above the workings with interpretive exhibits. They designed a public amphitheater, called by one critic, \u201can operating theater for environmental therapy\u201d where spectators watch trash-sorting equipment handle their collective wastes.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>Dramatizing the quotidian processes for metabolizing waste, the designers worked to provoke changes in social behavior. Other activities have since collocated themselves at the campus. Today there\u2019s a comprehensive recycling program to process residential brought by citizens each weekend.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>Every year, more than 5,000 schoolchildren tour the facility. This artful waystation for urban refuse has since inspired subsequent projects that apply ecological solutions to infrastructure facilities while conjoining public educational activities.<br \/>\nIn summary, the practice of integrative, cross-disciplinary design transcends the siloed, single-purpose habits of the modernist paradigm.<br \/>\nThis new approach favors collaborative, systems-based solutions that can leverage truly diverse use. Artful urban design, interpretive exhibits and imaginative park and play spaces, coupled with environmental messaging are notable advances beyond conventionally engineered infrastructure complexes.<span class=\"Apple-converted-space\">\u00a0 <\/span>Such enhancements not only neutralize community anxiety, but actually confer additional benefits to the neighborhood and the wider city-public. Through context-sensitive design, respect for local ecology, and especially with the inclusion of tangible public amenities, next-generation infrastructure will be positively integrated into the fabric of the community and the city.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\nHillary Brown<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n                <style type=\"text\/css\">\n                    \n                    #td_uid_1_69fdcff6a71e9  .td-doubleSlider-2 .td-item1 {\n                        background: url(https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-Croton-Water-Treatment-Plant-Mosholu-Golf-Course-151103-0831-copia-160x120.jpg) 0 0 no-repeat;\n                    }\n                    #td_uid_1_69fdcff6a71e9  .td-doubleSlider-2 .td-item2 {\n                        background: url(https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-151103-0804-160x120.jpg) 0 0 no-repeat;\n                    }\n                    #td_uid_1_69fdcff6a71e9  .td-doubleSlider-2 .td-item3 {\n                        background: url(https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Phoenix-3_MED-160x120.jpg) 0 0 no-repeat;\n                    }\n                <\/style>\n\n                <div id=\"td_uid_1_69fdcff6a71e9\" class=\"td-gallery td-slide-on-2-columns\">\n                    <div class=\"post_td_gallery\">\n                        <div class=\"td-gallery-slide-top\">\n                           <div class=\"td-gallery-title\"><\/div>\n\n                            <div class=\"td-gallery-controls-wrapper\">\n                                <div class=\"td-gallery-slide-count\"><span class=\"td-gallery-slide-item-focus\">1<\/span> of 3<\/div>\n                                <div class=\"td-gallery-slide-prev-next-but\">\n                                    <i class = \"td-icon-left doubleSliderPrevButton\"><\/i>\n                                    <i class = \"td-icon-right doubleSliderNextButton\"><\/i>\n                                <\/div>\n                            <\/div>\n                        <\/div>\n\n                        <div class = \"td-doubleSlider-1 \">\n                            <div class = \"td-slider\">\n                                \n                    <div class = \"td-slide-item td-item1\">\n                        <figure class=\"td-slide-galery-figure td-slide-popup-gallery\">\n                            <a class=\"slide-gallery-image-link\" href=\"https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-Croton-Water-Treatment-Plant-Mosholu-Golf-Course-151103-0831-copia.jpg\" title=\"Croton Water Treatment Plant\/Mosholu Golf Course\"  data-caption=\"The Mosholu Golf Course, designed by Grimshaw Architects and Ken Smith Landscape Architects, is situated atop the Croton Water Treatment Plant in the Bronx, NY. Croton  is the largest infrastructure project for the City of New York, processing a third of NYC&#039;s drinking water. The building is nine acres wide, and sinks 12 stories into the earth. The golf course, which is the largest continuous living roof in North America, is the only visible part of the plant. Croton is surrounded by a wetland stormwater and groundwater management system designed by Great Ecology as part of the Grimshaw Architects team.\"  data-description=\"\">\n                                <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-Croton-Water-Treatment-Plant-Mosholu-Golf-Course-151103-0831-copia-630x420.jpg\" srcset=\"https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-Croton-Water-Treatment-Plant-Mosholu-Golf-Course-151103-0831-copia-630x420.jpg 630w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-Croton-Water-Treatment-Plant-Mosholu-Golf-Course-151103-0831-copia-150x100.jpg 150w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-Croton-Water-Treatment-Plant-Mosholu-Golf-Course-151103-0831-copia-300x200.jpg 300w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-Croton-Water-Treatment-Plant-Mosholu-Golf-Course-151103-0831-copia-768x512.jpg 768w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-Croton-Water-Treatment-Plant-Mosholu-Golf-Course-151103-0831-copia-1024x683.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-Croton-Water-Treatment-Plant-Mosholu-Golf-Course-151103-0831-copia-696x464.jpg 696w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-Croton-Water-Treatment-Plant-Mosholu-Golf-Course-151103-0831-copia-1068x713.jpg 1068w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-Croton-Water-Treatment-Plant-Mosholu-Golf-Course-151103-0831-copia.jpg 1280w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 630px) 100vw, 630px\" alt=\"\">\n                            <\/a>\n                            <figcaption class = \"td-slide-caption td-gallery-slide-content\"><div class = \"td-gallery-slide-copywrite\">The Mosholu Golf Course, designed by Grimshaw Architects and Ken Smith Landscape Architects, is situated atop the Croton Water Treatment Plant in the Bronx, NY. Croton  is the largest infrastructure project for the City of New York, processing a third of NYC's drinking water. The building is nine acres wide, and sinks 12 stories into the earth. The golf course, which is the largest continuous living roof in North America, is the only visible part of the plant. Croton is surrounded by a wetland stormwater and groundwater management system designed by Great Ecology as part of the Grimshaw Architects team.<\/div><\/figcaption>\n                        <\/figure>\n                    <\/div>\n                    <div class = \"td-slide-item td-item2\">\n                        <figure class=\"td-slide-galery-figure td-slide-popup-gallery\">\n                            <a class=\"slide-gallery-image-link\" href=\"https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-151103-0804.jpg\" title=\"Alex S Maclean --151103-0804\"  data-caption=\"Alex S. MacLean, Croton Water Treatment  Plant, Mosholu Golf Course, Bronx County NY, 2018. \"  data-description=\"\">\n                                <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-151103-0804-630x420.jpg\" srcset=\"https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-151103-0804-630x420.jpg 630w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-151103-0804-150x100.jpg 150w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-151103-0804-300x200.jpg 300w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-151103-0804-768x512.jpg 768w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-151103-0804-1024x683.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-151103-0804-696x464.jpg 696w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-151103-0804-1068x713.jpg 1068w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Alex-S-Maclean-151103-0804.jpg 1280w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 630px) 100vw, 630px\" alt=\"\">\n                            <\/a>\n                            <figcaption class = \"td-slide-caption td-gallery-slide-content\"><div class = \"td-gallery-slide-copywrite\">Alex S. MacLean, Croton Water Treatment  Plant, Mosholu Golf Course, Bronx County NY, 2018. <\/div><\/figcaption>\n                        <\/figure>\n                    <\/div>\n                    <div class = \"td-slide-item td-item3\">\n                        <figure class=\"td-slide-galery-figure td-slide-popup-gallery\">\n                            <a class=\"slide-gallery-image-link\" href=\"https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Phoenix-3_MED.jpg\" title=\"Phoenix- 3_MED\"  data-caption=\"Michael Singer Studio, The 27th Avenue Solid Waste Transfer and Recycling Center, Phoenix, Arizona, 1989-1993. Photo by David Stansbury\"  data-description=\"\">\n                                <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Phoenix-3_MED-335x420.jpg\" srcset=\"https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Phoenix-3_MED-335x420.jpg 335w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Phoenix-3_MED-239x300.jpg 239w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Phoenix-3_MED-768x964.jpg 768w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Phoenix-3_MED-816x1024.jpg 816w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Phoenix-3_MED-696x873.jpg 696w, https:\/\/static.tecnichenuove.it\/areaarch\/2018\/09\/Phoenix-3_MED.jpg 1020w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 335px) 100vw, 335px\" alt=\"\">\n                            <\/a>\n                            <figcaption class = \"td-slide-caption td-gallery-slide-content\"><div class = \"td-gallery-slide-copywrite\">Michael Singer Studio, The 27th Avenue Solid Waste Transfer and Recycling Center, Phoenix, Arizona, 1989-1993. Photo by David Stansbury<\/div><\/figcaption>\n                        <\/figure>\n                    <\/div>\n                            <\/div>\n                        <\/div>\n\n                        <div class = \"td-doubleSlider-2\">\n                            <div class = \"td-slider\">\n                                \n                    <div class = \"td-button td-item1\">\n                        <div class = \"td-border\"><\/div>\n                    <\/div>\n                    <div class = \"td-button td-item2\">\n                        <div class = \"td-border\"><\/div>\n                    <\/div>\n                    <div class = \"td-button td-item3\">\n                        <div class = \"td-border\"><\/div>\n                    <\/div>\n                            <\/div>\n                        <\/div>\n\n                    <\/div>\n\n                <\/div>\n                \n<p class=\"p1\"><span class=\"s1\"><strong>Hillary Brown\u00a0<\/strong><\/span><span class=\"s1\">is Professor of Architecture at the City College of New York\u2019s Spitzer School of Architecture. She is also the Program Director of City College\u2018s interdisciplinary masters program. Brown\u2019s consulting firm, \u201cNew Civic Works\u201c, founded in 2001, has engaged public and institutional clients in greening facility and infrastructure capital programs. Increasingly her applied research addresses these issues in emerging economies as well. Hillary Brown serves on the Board of Infrastructure and the Constructed Environment under the National Research Council of the National Academies. <\/span><span class=\"s1\">As a former design director and Assistant Commissioner at New York City\u2018s Department of Design and Construction, Hillary Brown, founded its \u201cOffice of Sustainable Design\u201c in 1996. <\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>NextGen infrastructure: places of (resource) aggregation and (public) congregation By the end of this century, the infrastructural landscape may look radically different from that of today. The interlinked effects of global urbanization, climate change, and environmental degradation will compel us to embrace innovative approaches to design of our energy, water, sanitation, waste and transport systems.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":32184,"featured_media":60911,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[66],"tags":[12158,12177,12178,12176,12179,12175,12161,12180],"class_list":["post-60917","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-essays","tag-158-nextgen-infrastructure","tag-158-nextgen-infrastructure-en","tag-area-158-en","tag-area-158","tag-essays-en","tag-essays"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.5 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>NextGen infrastructure | Area<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"NextGen infrastructure: places of (resource) 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