NEW YORK Conference: Abstract Deadline
New York / Virtual
14-16, June 2023
Abstracts: Nov 20th, 2022 (Round One)
A
cross-departmental conference held at City Tech (CUNY) with the
Departments of Architectural Technology, Construction Management, Civil
Engineering and Environmental Technology
LIVABLE
CITIES - NEW YORK is a conference covering architecture, design,
planning, health, technology, urban economics and social policy. It is
calling for contributions to specific strands of sustainability,
resilience, design, planning and construction.
These
strands seek to explore issues related to net-zero energy buildings,
sea defenses and strategic retreat, life cycle analysis in the
construction industry, Building Environmental Assessment methods,
EcoHomes, BREEAM, alternative energy generation in cities, material
science and much more.
The
conference is organized across departments at City Tech (City
University of New York) with Amps and publication support from Routledge
and UCL Press.
CALL SUMMARY
What
makes a city livable? Transport, housing, health and environment.
Matters of culture, entrepreneurship, crime and safety. Affordability
and education. Depending on whose ‘livability index’ you look at, it may
include design quality, sustainability and the digital infrastructures
of the smart city. Other criteria applied may encompass food access, job
opportunities or walkability. Inclusivity and the politics of
participation also come into play.
The
past two decades have seen an exponential rise of livability measures.
Reflecting increased urbanity globally, they risk making the notion of
the city ever more contested. The two cities that host this event are
cases in point. The Mercer Livability Ranking takes New York as the
datum by which all other cities globally are graded – as better or
worse. London, by contrast, measures itself: the London Assembly scoring
everything from air quality to indices of deprivation. When we consider
the livability of cities then, it is clear we are dealing with a
plethora of issues – both isolated and, inevitably, interconnected.
Within
this broad livability framework, we seek to develop strands and
publications around themes of the design and construction sectors –
particularly as they relate to sustainability and resilience.
https://amps-research.com/conference/livable-cities-new-york/
My source: http://www.cosmobilities.net/ list
n.b. A suggestion: consider the conference themes and the structure and domains of Hodges' model; what relationships, dichotomies, synergies, and opportunities can you glean?