The Green Economy, Metropolitan City, Technological Design: the future of the three in Italy

The number of inhabitants living in urban areas – currently already equal to half the Earth’s population compared to a quarter one century ago – will experience a major increase over the next twenty-five years, reaching six billion people which will be equal to about two-thirds of the world’s popula...

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Main Author: Fabrizio Tucci
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MASTER PRO Ingegneri Associati 2017-04-01
Series:UPLanD: Journal of Urban Planning, Landscape & Environmental Design
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.serena.unina.it/index.php/upland/article/view/5137
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spelling doaj-deb1872dee21456c9ba783f486f9367d2021-01-26T08:31:30ZengMASTER PRO Ingegneri AssociatiUPLanD: Journal of Urban Planning, Landscape & Environmental Design2531-99062017-04-0121253810.6092/2531-9906/51375137The Green Economy, Metropolitan City, Technological Design: the future of the three in ItalyFabrizio Tucci0Department of Architecture Technology and Environmental Design, “Sapienza” Rome University, ITThe number of inhabitants living in urban areas – currently already equal to half the Earth’s population compared to a quarter one century ago – will experience a major increase over the next twenty-five years, reaching six billion people which will be equal to about two-thirds of the world’s population in just a quarter of a century’s time. The challenges that are threatening to squash today’s metropolis are the extremely radicalised ones that were, in essence, already present in 20th-century urbanisation: the challenges of being safe, equal and fair, of offering work, of providing open spaces, places for recreational activities, meeting people and entertainment, of granting economic opportunities and of ensuring compliance with the meta principle of accessibility, which now seems to represent, when present, the greatest wealth; physical and immaterial accessibility to all parts of the metropolis, to community comforts and services, to education and healthcare, to drinking water and clean air. Smart grid and smart cities are, at the present time, appearing on contemporary scenarios in an explosive and innovative manner, yet one that is too fast and technologically advanced to be absorbed and endorsed by the increasingly complex urban governance management processes. The energy-environment category of problematic observations undoubtedly represents the key issue of today’s metropolis, which will strongly come to the fore when looking at the observations in this article below concerning the specific characteristics of the 'Italian metropolis'.http://www.serena.unina.it/index.php/upland/article/view/5137Green EconomyCity FutureTechnological DesignEnergy-environmental questionMetropolitan City
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fabrizio Tucci
spellingShingle Fabrizio Tucci
The Green Economy, Metropolitan City, Technological Design: the future of the three in Italy
UPLanD: Journal of Urban Planning, Landscape & Environmental Design
Green Economy
City Future
Technological Design
Energy-environmental question
Metropolitan City
author_facet Fabrizio Tucci
author_sort Fabrizio Tucci
title The Green Economy, Metropolitan City, Technological Design: the future of the three in Italy
title_short The Green Economy, Metropolitan City, Technological Design: the future of the three in Italy
title_full The Green Economy, Metropolitan City, Technological Design: the future of the three in Italy
title_fullStr The Green Economy, Metropolitan City, Technological Design: the future of the three in Italy
title_full_unstemmed The Green Economy, Metropolitan City, Technological Design: the future of the three in Italy
title_sort green economy, metropolitan city, technological design: the future of the three in italy
publisher MASTER PRO Ingegneri Associati
series UPLanD: Journal of Urban Planning, Landscape & Environmental Design
issn 2531-9906
publishDate 2017-04-01
description The number of inhabitants living in urban areas – currently already equal to half the Earth’s population compared to a quarter one century ago – will experience a major increase over the next twenty-five years, reaching six billion people which will be equal to about two-thirds of the world’s population in just a quarter of a century’s time. The challenges that are threatening to squash today’s metropolis are the extremely radicalised ones that were, in essence, already present in 20th-century urbanisation: the challenges of being safe, equal and fair, of offering work, of providing open spaces, places for recreational activities, meeting people and entertainment, of granting economic opportunities and of ensuring compliance with the meta principle of accessibility, which now seems to represent, when present, the greatest wealth; physical and immaterial accessibility to all parts of the metropolis, to community comforts and services, to education and healthcare, to drinking water and clean air. Smart grid and smart cities are, at the present time, appearing on contemporary scenarios in an explosive and innovative manner, yet one that is too fast and technologically advanced to be absorbed and endorsed by the increasingly complex urban governance management processes. The energy-environment category of problematic observations undoubtedly represents the key issue of today’s metropolis, which will strongly come to the fore when looking at the observations in this article below concerning the specific characteristics of the 'Italian metropolis'.
topic Green Economy
City Future
Technological Design
Energy-environmental question
Metropolitan City
url http://www.serena.unina.it/index.php/upland/article/view/5137
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