UBC
School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture (SALA)
Environmental
Design Program (ENDS)
ENDS 221:
DESIGN - Sustainability by Design. Making
our Cities Healthy for Humans and Other Living Things.
Professor Patrick M.
Condon
Fall 2012
Course Intent:
Students will be given a cohesive
synthesis of the various issues pertaining to sustainable cities. The issues
fall broadly into the categories of economy, equity, and ecology. The climate
change crisis will provide a central organizing issue for the class, with
students shown the intimate relationship between urban form and the demands
that this form exerts on the planet. Given
the complexity of this issue, it is paramount that a framework for synthesis be
provided to empower students. This framework is in the form of the Seven Rules for Sustainable Communities,
a framework that both structures the required text (of the same name) and
organizes the 22 lectures to be delivered over the course of the term.
Learning Objectives:
By the end of this course students
will understand:
- how city form is a consequence of how policy interacts
with technology and landscape capacity.
- how the city is comprised of cultural, ecological and
built networks.
- how discerning the relationship between job sites and housing sites allows
students to knowledgeably render judgment on associated issues, such as
social equity or community physical health.
- how professionals and citizens can intervene in
decisions about community growth with a broad understanding of their
social and professional responsibility.
- how to look at the physical form of the city, and from
these observations, propose how the physical form of the city might be
improved.
- how to graphically and verbally present compelling
design arguments.
Subjects to be Covered.
The course is organized in the same
sequence as the Seven Rules for
Sustainable Communities class textbook. Each rule or principle is taken up in turn and provides
the focus for approximately two week of lectures and tutorials. Thus the
sequence of the class will be in accordance with the following structure:
- Restore the Streetcar City. The North American city was
and is essentially a streetcar city. The streetcar city is not only about
the streetcar but a particular relationship between land use, density,
transportation and energy use.
- Provide an interconnected
street system.
Street systems are of two types, interconnected networks or dendritic tree
like hierarchies, with the network system the more sustainable of the two
by many measures.
- Provide a five minute walk to
commercial services and transit. Evidence is clear. The way a city is designed can
either support or frustrate walking and transit use. The five minute walk
to commercial services and transit is the most fundamental requirement for
transit use and facilitating walk trips.
- Provide good jobs close to
home. Work sites are increasingly
segregated. This is unsustainable. The policy and economic reasons leading
to this segregation are unearthed and alternatives examined.
- Provide a variety of house
types on the same street.
Various policy tools have been used to insure a high degree of social
segregation in our urban landscapes. Equally powerful policy tools are
coming on line to reverse this trend.
- Provide an interconnected
system of natural areas and parks. The natural carrying capacity of the land has often
been ignored when building cities, to the peril of those natural systems
and at great unnecessary expanse. Design strategies for working with not
against the natural infrastructure of the site are explored with a wealth
of historical precedents presented.
- Build lighter, greener,
smarter, cheaper infrastructure. North American cities have applied increasingly
exaggerated infrastructure requirements such that the average home today
requires over four times more infrastructure than it did prior to WWII.
The technical and public health justifications for this trend are examined
with realistic alternatives presented.
- Community Agriculture. While not a rule in the book,
it really should be. Significant work has been done in our region on
reconciling the problems of rapid growth and sprawl with the need to
protect highly productive farmlands.
- Summary for our region. Case studies of sustainable
plans for both the City of Vancouver and the Vancouver region will be
highlighted at the end of the course in an attempt to show what the eight
rules, combined with viable community agriculture, might look like in
2050. Note: Isn’t it seven plus agriculture?
Required Text:
Condon, Patrick M. , 2010
Seven Rules for
Sustainable Communities: Design Strategies for the Post Carbon World
Washington, DC: Island Press.
Available at the UBC Bookstore
Supplemental Text:
Condon, Patrick M., Teed,
Jacqueline, 2006
Sustainability
by Design: A Design Vision for a Region of Four Million
Vancouver, BC: Design Centre for
Sustainability at UBC
Copies provided free of charge on
first day of class.
Course Format:
Two 1.5 hour lectures and one 2 hour tutorial section meeting per week. Large lecture format. Power point illustrated
lectures. Two thirds of the lectures will delivered by the course instructor,
Patrick M. Condon, with the remainder delivered by guest lecturers drawn from
the community.
Lectures
Students should be seated before the designated beginning
time for lectures. Students will be asked to consistently sit together with other
students in their tutorial sections, in designated parts of the lecture hall.
Each lecture session, your teaching assistant will use the first ten minutes to
accept your answer to an impromptu question. Your answers will help us get to
know you and establish your range of opinions and knowledge about the issues
presented in the class (as well as provide a convenient way of acknowledging
your attendance). Once this is completed, the regular lecture will begin,
usually 10 minutes after the start time of the class.
Tutorials
Students should arrive at tutorial session ready before the
start time. Students will use tutorial sessions for individual work and comment
with teaching assistants, discussing assignments, presenting your own or group
work to your peers, and for taking exams. Attendance at tutorials is required.
Course Requirements:
Two exams, spaced roughly one every
four weeks, one final exam, and four projects (requiring both individual and
team work), full attendance, active participation in tutorials.
Grading:
Numeric grades based on results of
exams, participation in tutorials, completion of projects 1-4 and attendance.
Projects
The four design projects are
intended to give students an appreciation for the art and science of creating
sustainable communities. The projects require students to apply ideas presented
in the lectures and the readings. All project assignments will be submitted, discussed
and reviewed in tutorial sections. Towards the end of the semester we will add tutorial
sections and subtract lecture sections, as project time will take a larger
proportion of your effort.
During first week of each new
assignment, TAs will get the projects started. All assignments will be reviewed
by your peers and your tutorial instructor in tutorial sessions. Come prepared
to pin up your work on due dates, and to explain your conclusions in short
verbal presentations. Students must have all the required work up neatly before the start of class; students
arriving late might not be allowed to present their work. You will be graded in
part on how well you verbally describe your project.
The final project, project four,
will be different. The presentation of project four will involve the entire
class and be held in the lecture space.
REQUIRED EQUIPMENT/SUPPLIES
It is
assumed that all students have access to computers and that the computers are
equipped with Microsoft Word or the equivalent. Come to due dates in tutorials
with a roll of double sided tape (available at Staples) for taping up work. The
only other requirement is a simple digital camera, which most of you now have
in your phones. If you don’t have one yet, craigslist will certainly find you
one for under $40.
COURSE EXPENSES
Most
students will spend about $100 for expenses related to this course including: course
text, transportation via transit and reproduction costs. A second-hand camera
may push this to $150.
GRADES
The
teaching assistants do the grading; the professor only assures parity across
sections. The TAs will grade all the projects and exams. Grades will be based
on the resolution of the design project assignments; comprehension of the
reading assignments, lectures, and films as demonstrated in the exam and
exercises; attendance, participation and improvement. Points with brief comments
(no letter grades) will be given for each project during the semester. Questions
about grades can be taken up with TAs during their office hours.
Grade Distribution:
Exam 1: 10%
Exam 2: 10%
Final Exam: 20%
Project 1: 10%
Project 2: 10%
Project 3: 10%
Project 4: 20%
Participation: 10%
ATTENDANCE POLICY
All
issues related to absences should be addressed to your TA. Attendance will be
taken for both lectures and tutorials. Attendance at tutorials is as important
as in lectures and will be treated the same. One unexcused absence or repeated
late arrivals or early departures can be grounds for lowering the final course grade.
Three unexcused absences may be grounds for withdrawing a student from the
course at the discretion of the professor and the teaching assistant. If a
student has an emergency and cannot attend class, they should contact their TA
via e-mail before the start of class if at all possible. Examples of
excused absences include: religious holidays, a serious illness requiring a
doctor's visit. Life happens and we know that. If you are already aware of any
days you will miss class, speak to your TA as soon as possible and provide the
required documentation.
LATE
WORK
If a student knows in advance that they will have an excused absence on a due date for assignments 1 -3, they must turn in the work prior to the due date. Some but not all of the lecture PowerPoints will be on the course blog. Otherwise note taking is the responsibility of the student. In extreme circumstances with ample prior approval for reasons as indicated in the above concessions, and in accordance with university policy, exceptions will be made. In such circumstances, arrangements for alternatives to taking exams on the dates indicated will be worked out with your TA.
If a student knows in advance that they will have an excused absence on a due date for assignments 1 -3, they must turn in the work prior to the due date. Some but not all of the lecture PowerPoints will be on the course blog. Otherwise note taking is the responsibility of the student. In extreme circumstances with ample prior approval for reasons as indicated in the above concessions, and in accordance with university policy, exceptions will be made. In such circumstances, arrangements for alternatives to taking exams on the dates indicated will be worked out with your TA.
INCOMPLETES
Incomplete
grades are very rarely given. They are only given in case of documented health
or family emergencies AND when the semester’s work is already substantially
complete (roughly 80%).
CONDUCT
Students are asked to come to class on
time. Repeated late arrivals will be noted and may affect the final course
grade. There is no use of cell
phones for calls or for texting during class time. Students using these devices will be asked to
leave and will receive an absence. Computers may be used for note taking but not
for other purposes.
MISCONDUCT
Scholastic misconduct is broadly
defined as "any act that violates the right of another student in academic
work or that involves misrepresentation of your own work. Scholastic dishonesty
includes, (but is not necessarily limited to): cheating on assignments or
examinations; plagiarizing, which means misrepresenting as your own work any
part of work done by another; submitting the same paper, or substantially
similar papers, to meet the requirements of more than one course without the
approval and consent of all instructors concerned; depriving another student of
necessary course materials; or interfering with another student's work. Any student caught cheating on an exam will
receive an F in the course.
STUDENTS WITH DISABILITIES
Students with disabilities that affect
their ability to participate fully in class or to meet all course requirements
are encouraged to bring this to the attention of their TA . Accommodations will
be made for any students with disabilities if we are told what the needs are
and have a minimum amount of time to make accommodations.
CONTACT INFORMATION + OFFICE
HOURS
Professor: Office hours: Tuesdays 1 - 3:00,
room 3144 CIRS building. Drop in and
take your chances or e-mail in advance to set up an appointment during office
hours. Please note that most evaluation and direct tutorials will be in the
hands of teaching assistants, but I am glad to meet with you and deal with
issues that are outside those bounds.
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