www射-国产免费一级-欧美福利-亚洲成人福利-成人一区在线观看-亚州成人

US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
World / Reporter's Journal

New city design can help reclaim a lost way of life

By Chris Davis (China Daily USA) Updated: 2015-03-18 05:19

When landscape architect Sean O'Malley finds himself on a site for the first time, he looks for what stands out, what defines the place. Working on the scale that he does as managing principal of Laguna Beach, California-based firm SWAGroup, this could often mean a mountain, a river, a system of wetlands. Whatever it is that defines the landscape's character.

"I look for the environmental system," he said, "the armature from which residential, retail, office or civic uses can grow and evolve over time."New city design can help reclaim a lost way of life

Case in point: the Shunde New City Plan, located at the Pearl River Delta, and hour-and-a-half ferry ride from Hong Kong and the second-largest bird migration delta and estuary in Southeast Asia.

In the race toward development in one of the fastest growing regions on the planet, the area had, by 2008, become a low-lying, levee city like New Orleans and China wanted it turned into a city for 2 million people with a one-square-kilometer reservoir.

SWA won the Shunde New City project by beating teams from Germany, France, Singapore and Beijing in an international competition.

SWA's 95-square-kilometer plan, approved in 2010, made room for people and birds by weaving a delta wetland into a pedestrian-oriented city. Its website calls it an example of a project at "the pinnacle of today's development challenges".

The solution is what landscape architects call a "sponge city", an area "that can absorb excess water, keep it on site and return it to the ground water table right there beneath your feet and treat the water in the natural way and reduce runoff", O'Malley said.

O'Malley studied the site and saw that it originally had been a delta with a network of small waterways, all of which had been channelized into two main rivers that flanked and edged the site behind big levees.

"The same thing we did in the Mississippi River Valley, China has done in southern China. So we share the same unfortunate landscape history," he said.

"In southern China, life used to revolve around the edge of the water, people would gather beneath the fichus tree along these narrow waterways and chat and wash their clothes and drink the water all from the little canals," he said.

Here all those little canals had been pushed out and made into two giant rivers and, as O'Malley puts it, "Who wants to be on the edge of a giant river?"

The Pearl River Delta was one of the fastest growing regions in the world, "but because they went so fast, they got a lot of environmental problems," said Xiao Zheng, another principal at SWA who has been working on the project.

Channelizing rivers creates a host of problems: it directs the water and deepens it in a way that makes it flow faster, it creates erosion and worst of all leaves no flexibility when nature decides to release a torrent of rainfall upstream and the floods come.

O'Malley's team came up with an idea. Why not take the reservoir they want and stretch it out, rebuild the delta and create a series of walkable water towns and islands each of which can grow in a natural way.

"Restore the lost waterways, the lost water towns," he said. "Most importantly, restore the lost water culture."

They linked all the islands and waterways as both transportation and recreation, with parks and bike trails so kids could ride their bikes to school, and put wetlands along the way to help clean and filter the water.

"As the river now passes through the city, the city feels like a lung of the river, breathing new life, new dissolved oxygen into the river," O'Malley explained.

The two central business districts are now anchored by a high-speed rail, one of the first things to be built, and a highway, and then the waterfront, the linear park system as a catalyst for development. A civic center and government offices have opened and a small college is slated for expansion into a university.

O'Malley said a lot of SWA's ideas come from the US' culture, where the landscape is front and center. "It defines who we are," he said. "We've made mistakes before and we're coming at it from that angle, bringing that knowledge to China."

"We learn from the mistakes and the lessons learned from the Western countries," Xiao said.

O'Malley said selling their ideas has not been too difficult because he feels the Chinese like the idea of landscape and are "very accepting of Nature and that story".

"Traditionally it's been a part of their past and they've lost it and they know that, as they've developed so quickly," he said.

"Also," Xiao added, "a lot of our clients are very open minded. They like bold ideas."

Contact the writer at chrisdavis@chinadailyusa.com.

Trudeau visits Sina Weibo
May gets little gasp as EU extends deadline for sufficient progress in Brexit talks
Ethiopian FM urges strengthened Ethiopia-China ties
Yemen's ex-president Saleh, relatives killed by Houthis
Most Popular
Hot Topics

...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 午夜一级毛片免费视频 | 久久亚洲精品中文字幕第一区 | 性高湖久久久久久久久 | 亚洲欧美日韩精品久久久 | 中文字幕中文字幕在线 | 模特精品一区二区三区 | 久久视频在线 | 成人久久网| 欧美视频第一页 | 中美日韩在线网免费毛片视频 | 国产高清第一页 | 亚洲欧美视频在线播放 | 久久91亚洲精品久久91综合 | 欧美aaa毛片免费看 欧美aaa视频 | 国产美女动态免费视频 | 97免费公开视频 | 九九视频在线观看视频 | 一个人的视频日本免费 | 欧美视频一区二区 | 国内精品福利在线视频 | 欧美做a一级视频免费观看 欧美做爱毛片 | 伊人蜜桃 | 在线观看一级 | 国产三级香港在线观看 | 亚洲精品第一国产综合野 | 日韩成人黄色片 | 日韩欧美在线看 | 国产手机在线视频放线视频 | 欧美精品v日韩精品v国产精品 | 国产在线精品一区二区三区 | 久久久久国产精品美女毛片 | 国产午夜免费福利红片 | 成人韩免费网站 | 亚洲成a人片在线网站 | 国产精品路边足疗店按摩 | 99久久99久久久99精品齐 | 亚洲国产日韩欧美综合久久 | 日本亚洲欧美高清专区vr专区 | 亚洲成av人片在线观看无码 | 欧美在线观看a | 成人综合网址 |