Saturday, August 08, 2009

The greatest destination may be closer than you think.

A hat tip to Rory Turner at Goucher College's Cultural Sustainability blog for pointing out Juan Gonzalez's Global Culture: Sustainable, Memorable, Livable travel experiences for global citizens.

Juan's recent piece on the greatest destination responds to various city ranking methodologies with an intriguing list of attributes to be considered in conjunction with destinations, neighborhoods, and the tools of place analysis.

Without trying to discredit the effort (I really think they are onto something), the article falls to easily into common clichés such as wind turbines, urban farming, community greenhouses, rooftop entertainment and falls short of getting into a serious exploration of the most powerful element to transform our cities: a lively, dense, diverse neighbourhood with progressive minds ready to adapt as new technologies and ideas becoming affordable. In my opinion, more than building we need to explore our cities to find those neighbourhoods that are almost at the brink of a creative explosion, just waiting for the right people to converge and turn them into the ideal urban quarters.

What are the attributes that would make a neighbourhood such a candidate? I expect this will turn into a debate, but here a summary of arguments I’ve put forward over the last three years (in no particular order):

* Hyper-connected: both in the virtual and living realms, it must provide the infrastructure to keep its dwellers engaged with other people across the city and around the globe.

* Sustainable: as with any self-organizing entity, it must optimize resources for its survival, learning to reduce dependency on external sources. This could very well apply to energy efficiency, local food supplies or even its ability to foster the innovation necessary to sustain a thriving culture.

* Evolving: opposing any attempts to characterize the area with a limited number of attributes or features, a great neighbourhood is a living entity with an ongoing narrative that can only be understood by its actors and can only be fully appreciated by being part of such narrative.

* Diverse: not only in the variety of its people, but in its ability to bring these people together into a single meeting point. You should feel like every day is an opportunity to meet a different person from whom you will learn something new.

* Acoustic: as in acoustic medium, where the space becomes a medium that excels at enabling cultural transfer by virtue of the evolved traditions of its participants, advanced mechanisms enabled by technology to propagate information and a rich mix of sources that can be used and reused for many different purposes.

* Unique: even though we may one day discover the perfect recipe for a great neighbourhood, I bet we will continue to be amazed by their variety. A signature lifestyle should be a good hint that you’ve got a good thing going in this place.

* Livable: a great destination should make you feel like you’ve arrived somewhere and not like you’re in transit as an spectator. Its ability for calling on people to settle should be of utmost importance.

2 comments:

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  2. Mercer's Top 5 cities - Americas
    Vancouver, Canada (tied 4th)
    Toronto, Canada (15th)
    Ottawa, Canada (16th)
    Montreal, Canada (22nd)
    Calgary, Canada (26th)

    None in the US; that seems odd, I would have thought Boulder,CO, Portland,OR or San Francisco,CA would have been in that group, wouldn't you?

    Good article nonetheless, I'm a frequent visitor of;
    http://global-culture.org/

    Thanks...

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