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Earlier this week, we had the honor of participating in the #Electronomous International Mobility Summit for a virtual discussion on #RegenerativePlacemaking with #FOCities advisors @ekentnyc from @placemakingx and @dominique_hes27 from @greenfleetaustralia.

Great to be in Miami after an awesome week in NY for United Nations GA and Leaders on Purpose summit. I participated in a panel discussion for the Bisnow State of the Miami Real Estate Market, where, Francis Suarez, the charismatic mayor of Miami delivered his keynote, highlighting so many of the positive things that are happening in Miami right now! We are certainly having a “Miami Moment” and Francis is doing an amazing job promoting Miami and attracting incredible people, talent, and capital to the Magic City.

Miami ranks #1 in the nation for tech job growth at 29 percent and 1.2 trillion dollars worth of assets under management has moved to South Florida, which is why the mayor calls Miami the “capital of capital” not only financial capital but also human and intellectual capital.

That said, it is important to temper this excitement and enthusiasm with the reality that many people face as Miami becomes increasingly unaffordable for the vast majority of people. So we must provide solutions for affordable, attainable, workforce, and sustainable housing that is pandemic and climate-resilient. We must be proactive in addressing climate change and sea-level rise and tackle these issues head-on. We should become a hub for climate solutions, innovation, and prototyping. This is what I spoke about on my panel.

I know these are tough topics to discuss, but we can’t simply ignore our biggest challenges. I’m very grateful for the tremendous growth and opportunities that have come to Florida, mainly as a result of migration due to the pandemic, however, these benefits don’t come without their drawbacks; overcrowding, suburban sprawl, loss of biodiversity, increased traffic, and housing prices.

The solution: cross-section collaboration at scale and massive investment into social equity and climate solutions. This means that we all need to come together and collaborate on solutions. Government, the private sector, foundations, NGOs, etc. This is the only way forward and something we are passionately working on at Future of Cities

Let’s use this “Miami Moment” to invest in our future and stop borrowing from our children. Let’s co-create a Miami which is for everyone and an exemplary city known for diversity, climate solutions, innovation, and social equity.

Read Article on Bisnow website HERE

With thanks to conversations with Ludo Campbell-Reid, Ralph Webster,
and Frith Walker 

Twenty years ago, the City of Auckland was suffering from a depressed economy, declining public health, and a short-term, self-centric viewpoint called “Auckland disease.” Now a decade later with a ten-fold increase in private investment, public transport patronage doubling every year, and the strengthening of its social and natural systems, Auckland’s embrace of Regenerative Placemaking principles has resulted in this remarkable transformation and the recent recognition as the most liveable city in the world

Employing regenerative thinking in the sense of re-activating and enlivening the city; using the city to support social and ecological capacity; and activating these strategies through fine-grained testing of ideas and active agency of stakeholders; Auckland’s efforts to revitalize the heart of the city have been extraordinary. 

For example, take the transformation of Fort and Elliott Streets. On Fort Street, there has been a 54% increase in pedestrian volumes and a 47% increase in consumer spending, while on Elliott Street there has been a 10% pedestrian and 27% spending increase.

Source, City of Auckland review, 2015 2

However, while these are tangible examples in simple terms, there are many additional reflections to map Regenerative Placemaking components over the past decade in Auckland. Six of note are: 

  1. Living systems thinking

Understood as a philosophy that studies the interrelation and dependence of all stakeholders and environments in a given place, for Auckland this approach was leveraged to emphasize reconnecting to its natural systems – the bay, rivers, and mountains. 

In practice, this was realized by:

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Image source: Ralph Webster

  1. Transdisciplinary knowledge exchange

Focused on consulting with everyone to gain significant ideas and better solutions, Ralph Webster, the Auckland Council’s former program development manager said that working on a Regenerative Placemaking development was not “just a team sport, but an intergenerational team sport.”  

How so? 

  1. Rigorous and inclusive community engagement 

Community engagement done well means that they are agents in the eventual outcome and have a sense of custodianship and stewardship which is critical. This creates attachment and belonging leading to positive social, ecological, and economic outcomes. 

Critically this engagement should not only be about extracting ideas and good will from participants it is ensuring they gain benefit from the experience also as Webster said, “In addition to working with all stakeholders in projects to increase the vitality and vibrancy of a place, one of the most critical parts is to create the potential to have fun, laugh and play through the process and embed it in the end result.”

In Auckland this came to life in practical terms by:

  1. Biophilia and sustainability practices

Throughout Auckland, connection to nature is an integral part of how spaces are looked at, from working with threatened species to how to plan support biodiversity. This is evidenced through experimentation with green roofs on shipping container activation nodes, using them for insects and other small threatened species. 

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Image from Presentation of Ludo Campbell-Reid, international urban strategist, and newly appointed Director of City Design & Liveability at Wyndham City Council.

Auckland’s focus on nature enables them to imagine future potential, and this leads to human benefits such as reduced urban heat and biophilic benefits with a stronger connection to nature. 

These practices are put into action by asking these simple questions: 

  1. Regenerative placemaking interventions 

Testing within the community was an integral part of the City of Auckland’s processes and their work with stakeholders. Practically, this collaboration has resulted in the Activate Auckland plan to support the 30-year strategic redevelopment plan of the City.

Timeline

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Image: Activate Auckland

  1. Avoiding gentrification

Auckland has attracted its share of critique for increased housing prices, yet this was addressed by creating innovative models to support home ownership and community planning.

For example:

Conclusion

While Regenerative Placemaking is an ever-evolving, living development approach, Auckland demonstrates through its transformation as one of the least to most-liveable cities that with incredible amounts of private investment, collaboration, preservation, and conservation that a socially, ecologically, and socially thriving city can be willed. All it takes is commitment and vision!

Recently we hosted a salon on the Spanish island of Ibiza, a hot spot that brought together developers and financiers with activists and community organizers for a rich dialogue exploring macro-issues such as purpose-driven development, female empowerment, indigenous rights and how we can use technology appropriately to enhance quality of living in cities.

Below you can find a selection of interviews with some of our awesome co-hosts, advisors and partners to learn what was trending at Future of Cities summer 2021 Regenerative Placemaking salon in Ibiza, Spain.

Dr. Tatiana Kazakova, Co-Founder and Chief Strategy Officer of Leaders On Purpose

Leaders on Purpose is a community of purpose-driven corporate leaders promoting an inclusive and sustainable economy that puts purpose at the core and leaves no one behind. What began as a research collaboration between business leaders and experts from Harvard University, Unilever, The World Bank, and The London School of Economics has evolved into a platform that connects the CEO agenda with the United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals. 

Learn more about Leaders On Purpose here

Thomas Ermacora, Founder of Recoded Cities

Recoded City examines alternative urban design, planning and architecture for the other 90%: namely the practice of participatory placemaking, a burgeoning practice that co-author Thomas Ermacora terms ‘recoding’. In combining bottom-up and top-down means of regenerating and rebalancing neighbourhoods affected by declining welfare or struck by disaster, this growing movement brings greater resilience.

Learn more about Thomas Ermacora here and purchase the book here

Lucian Tarnowski, Founder of United Planet

Learn more about what United Planet is up to here

Learn more about Lucian Tarnowski here

To learn more about how you can join or co-host a salon in a city near you, please contact us here.

A dynamic dialogue with Dr. Carlos Moreno, founder of the :15 Minute City

Recently Future of Cities founder, Tony Cho, sat down for a candid conversation at the Sorbonne University in Paris with Future of Cities strategic partner and ally, Professor Dr. Carlos Moreno – the originator of the idea behind The :15 Minute City.

As a vision, the 15 Minute City has captured the imaginations of policymakers and citizens alike. Across the world – from the Mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo, to the Mayor of Miami, Frances Suarez, to the C40 (coalition of major city mayors) – aspirations and declarations to turn urban corridors into :15 Minute Cities abound. But what is the 15 minute city?

Spawned from the idea that we need new ways to transform cities to be more human-centric while moving away from outdated design philosophies that lead to urban sprawl, the :15 Minute City is a new urban design theory that steers urban designers away from mono-functionality towards more dynamic use of shared spaces and resources – where all basic needs can be met from anywhere in the city within a short 15 minute commute.

To learn more about the :15 Minute City, watch Dr. Carlos Moreno’s case for it via TED, below:

Future of Cities partner, Dr. Carlos Moreno, on the 15 Minute City

About Dr. Carlos Moreno

Dr. Carlos Moreno is a Senior University Professor French-Colombian specialised in the intelligent control of complex systems.

Deeply committed to science, progress and creativity in all its forms, he strives to bring together scientific disciplines and professionals in the innovation ecosystem —from industry to start-ups —with a particular focus on a cross-disciplinary approach.

After leading his start-up Sinovia to success, he was Scientific Adviser to the CEO of ENGIE INEO, exGDF SUEZ Group, he goes on delivering today his strategic and foward-looking vision, his scientific expertise, and his international reputation, on the issues of mutation, innovation and added value chain. In particular, in the field of the Human and Living City.

He was named Chevalier de la Légion d’honneur in April 2010.

Introduction by Tony Cho, Future of Cities Founder

This past year has been one of deep global transformation as we continue to navigate through one of the most impactful events in modern human history. The global pandemic has revealed a tale of two worlds, the haves and have-nots. The social and racial inequality gap continues to dramatically widen, and people and governments around the world are reevaluating policies, searching for answers and figuring out what’s next. How do we build back better, more sustainably, more equitably and more inclusively so 100% of humanity can thrive — while remaining in balance with nature?

This inquiry is at the core of our mission at the Future of Cities, where we aspire to impact the lives of 1 billion people through innovations in the built environment. So, how do we do this and where do we begin? Over the past 3 years, we’ve studied and analyzed Systems-Thinking theories ranging from Buckminster Fuller to the United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals and recognized a need to co-design a new systems-oriented framework for real estate development. This framework we aim to open-source and share widely, putting forward new standards that will be embodied in demonstration projects that can serve as beacons for those interested in new, regenerative pathways for urban development and vitality.

Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) | United Nations
The United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Regenerative Placemaking contributes to a number of SDGs though primarily SDG #11 Sustainable Cities and Communities.

Building on local learnings from creative placemaking derived over the past two decades developing Miami’s Wynwood Art’s District and Magic City Innovation District in Little Haiti, combined with Regenerative Development practices most notably proposed by Bill Reed and Pamela Mang’s team at Regenesis, we’ve set out to co-create and popularize a new framework, entitled Regenerative Placemaking, which aims to accelerate place-based sustainability into new, mainstream industry norms.

In this process of discovery, we were quickly directed to Dr. Dominque Hes, one of the world’s foremost thinkers, theorists and practitioners of Regenerative Placemaking. Dr. Hes has been formulating the Regenerative Placemaking theory for several years and has authored multiple articles on the topic.

We are grateful and honored to welcome Dr. Hes to our global board of advisors for the Future of Cities, and excited to co-create, design and open-source our research on this critical advancement for our industry. The time has never been more urgent for developers to reimagine their role as stewards who are responsible for the wellbeing of communities and cities. And so, we are pleased to introduce you to this newly synthesized and still-emergent body of work, with hope you will be inspired to build the future with these values in motion, to evolve the role of placemaking, and urban development as we know it.

Creating The Future of Cities With Regenerative Placemaking

By Dr. Dominique Hes, Advisor to Future of Cities, with Bill Reed of Regenesis

Addressing Systemic Failures

The world’s urban population is playing a game of chicken with our environment and global economy. By 2050, more than 6.6 billion people, or 68.4 percent of the population, will live in cities. However, whether the threat of pandemic, sea level rise, food deserts, or myriad of other challenges, this growth is going unchecked. 

Does this mean a moratorium should be placed on urban density in favor of suburban sprawl? Or is a solution that is more evolutionary and redefines urban living and development more feasible? 

The answer is that we must create places that support the future of cities. Places designed for living, working, creating, and contributing, combined with strategies that incorporate nature integration and the non-human aspects of life critical to all local ecosystems. Enter, regenerative placemaking. 

Enter: A New Design Paradigm

Defined as a strategic process of (re)igniting people’s relationship to socio-ecological systems through place-specific activations, regenerative placemaking harnesses the key strengths of regenerative development and placemaking practices. 

The merging of these two practices delivers places designed for both humans and non-humans, shifting city-making from a largely anthropocentric practice to one aligned with living systems, by which people are empowered as cultural and environmental stewards.

The result is the creation of a way to interact with a geographical location that enables continual adaptation, health, and wellbeing. The aim is not to create utopia, but a realistic way to engage with the problems and potentials of a place and all its complexities. 

The regenerative development component creates the ways to understand a place, to see its essence, its potential and the ways to understand what healthy, vital, viable and abundant looks like. The placemaking component ties these ideas to a specific place, with the local stakeholders, supporting them to be a critical part of the potential of the place and its capabilities.  

Pandemic Lessons and Proper Practices

While the effects on populations and economies were severe, what the pandemic showed was how changes in urban living could influence our environment. From better air quality and cleaner water ways to decrease greenhouse gas emissions, the global population can slow and reverse negative climate impacts. 

To start creating regenerative placemaking demonstration projects, what is needed is a process to guide design and development, and to enable the ability to learn, understand, and grow. Key components in moving regenerative placemaking forward include:

Measuring and Refining Success

Having developed the ways to enact the above processes, how does a project understand how well it has done? 

The first step is to understand that measurement serves a developmental process, not as a way to ‘score’ an effort. The second step is to evolve and adapt measurement as within regenerative placemaking, fixed and adaptable system measures can change over time in negotiation with stakeholders. We ask: what are the signs of life of a healthy place (fixed) and what are the unique traits of thriving and abundance of the place that may change as it matures (adaptable)?

However, while the measures and benchmarks can shift, the objective does not. Regenerative Placemaking is about contributing to improved social, ecological, and economic outcomes by building local capacity and potential. This means looking at the richness of the relationships – individual, community, built and natural environment – contributing to these outcomes.

Though not a perfect example of the full potential of Regenerative Placemaking, a project that illustrates the importance of building relationships to the flows through a place is the Cheonggyecheon Stream Restoration Project.  In this example, water flowing through a community is of no benefit in a pipe where it cannot contribute positively through relationship (habitat, urban cooling, watering, recreation, etc.), similarly, money flowing through a place is only beneficial if it nourishes and contributes to the area. Michael Shuman has shown that every dollar spent at a locally owned business generates two-to-four times the jobs, income, wealth, and taxes as a dollar spent in a comparable nonlocal one (link). 

The Cheonggyecheon Stream Restoration Project

Benefits of daylighting the river:

Find more information on the Cheonggyecheon Stream Restoration Project here ⟶ https://www.landscapeperformance.org/case-study-briefs/cheonggyecheon-stream-restoration

Moving Forward

To implement regenerative placemaking principles, a sea change is required in how developers approach projects and their regulation. From the scaling of ESG standards and creating incentives for sustainable development, to further enhancing Opportunity Zone framework and shifting investors’ mindsets to focus beyond triple bottom-line returns, to creating local potential, these adaptations are vital and achievable. 

It is the responsibility of those with the ability to influence change to make it happen, and for stakeholders and communities to help co-create the future in support of better, self-sustaining cities. 


About Dr. Dominique Hes

Holding a PhD in Architecture and Degree in Engineering from the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology and Botany degree from Melbourne University, Hes is an associate of the Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute and award-winning author. She is also the chair of the board of Greenfleet, and an advisor for the Future of Cities; a mission-driven consortium that is part-real estate investment and development company, part-venture capital ecosystem and part-think tank that will cultivate living laboratories to steward regeneration and improve liveability in cities. 

From New York to Shanghai, cities across the globe have been swelling. While already facing compounding challenges, COVID-19 morphed from a public health crisis into an unprecedented global economic crisis, magnifying societal, environmental, and equity issues.

However, in the face of these stressors is tremendous opportunity. 

To address these issues, we need to co-create solutions with the world’s greatest thinkers and doers to foster long-term change, and ensure the livability of our cities for the next 10, 20, and 100+ years

That’s why we’re launching Future of Cities.

Future of Cities is a mission-driven consortium: part real estate investment and development vehicle, part-venture capital ecosystem, and part-think tank focused on transforming communities by adopting & expanding upon best practices in environmental, social and governance (ESG) strategies to improve the quality of urban living.

This platform represents a vision I have developed over two decades of work to revitalize and shape neighborhoods through projects that emphasize impact and transformation in Miami, one of the world’s most dynamic and vibrant gateway cities. This has included founding the Magic City Innovation District in Little Haiti, being one of the pioneers of the celebrated Wynwood Arts District, and creating ChoZen Retreat, which features Florida’s largest Tesla solar roof.  

Leveraging my experience, network and resources to encourage others who have global influence, our shared intention is to make a commitment to collective well-being and create sustainable cities that champion innovation, economic opportunity and positive community impact. 

The moment has come to reimagine how we build our world and scale new sustainable standards. 

Each Future of Cities project will be driven by Regenerative Placemaking, allowing communities to be a living laboratory  for safe, healthy, and resilient practices. 

What is Regenerative Placemaking?

Regenerative Placemaking is a development approach that protects existing neighborhoods by co-creating sustainable, eco-friendly and inclusive projects, emphasizing participatory planning, cross-sector collaboration and financial prosperity for the community.

Unlike other efforts, Future of Cities aims to mitigate gentrification and in turn, displacement, through a more inclusive, equitable, and holistic development approach that is participatory. By embracing regenerative placemaking, the Future of Cities’ will foster diverse and thriving communities.

We support policies that unlock community strength by forging high-performing relationships with leaders across a wide array of disciplines. 

Future of Cities’ will be guided by our advisory board, representing a collection of some of the world’s brightest luminaries in their respective fields, including: Dr. Dominique Hes, formerly of University of Melbourne, Amanda Ravenhill, Buckminster Fuller Institute; Chris Castro, City of Orlando’s Chief Sustainability Office; Alejandro Roman, Global CoCreation Lab (a spinout from MIT); Thomas Ermacora, Recoded City; Caitlin Taylor, MASS Design; Vandana Hart, Fmr. United Nations Women Safe Cities Program; Greg Lindsay, NewCities Foundation; Dr. Andréa Paige, The Institute for Aliveness; Bernie Cahill, Activist Talent Management; and Poonacha Machaiah, of the Chopra Foundation.

Additionally, the Future of Cities believes in the power of cross-sector collaboration to transform the world. The venture capital arm of our platform will make targeted capital injections into key industries and innovations that drive regenerative development, advance sustainability practices, support smart city growth and more. By supporting new sustainable standards and investing in breakthrough technologies and next generation building materials and innovations, we hope to end a cycle of environmental destruction and social inequality. 

Our goal: positively impact one billion people across the globe.

I personally invite you to join the Future of Cities movement. Whether you want to be a full member, investor, advocate or partner, we welcome you to our community of changemakers as the time to take action is now.

Respectfully, 

Tony Cho

Founder, Future of Cities