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INVITERER TIL INTERNASJONAL SJØFRONTKONFERANSE I STAVANGER
WFS 2010 PROGRAM
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Stavanger Kommune er vertskap for en omfattende internasjonal sjøfrontkonferanse 15. – 17. September med Framtidens Byer og Urban Sjøfront som viktige lokale bidragsytere.
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Agenda: Utvikling av sjøfronten og sjønære by områder
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Konferansen omhandler utvikling av sjøfronten og sjønære by områder, og har et sentralt fokus på bærekraftig utvikling der fokus ligger på transformative ideer og metoder for å skape: Flerbruks destinasjoner, skape ny plass arkitektur, skape gode bymiljøer rundt transport og infrastruktur og hvordan skape god lokal økonomi for vitalisering av by nære områder.
Stavanger ser det som viktig å ha visjoner for hvordan vi fremover vil arbeide videre med det langstrakte landskapsrom melleom sjø og land.
Vi inviterer til en internasjonal konferanse for å få nye ideer og økt kunnskap om hvordan sjøfronten kan utvikles i samtråd med resten av byens struktur.
Stavanger har i likhet med mange andre byer en rekke spennende arealer langs sjøfronten som er under endring fra industri- og havneformål til bolig- og næringsområder. I norsk målestokk har Stavanger stor mangel på nye utbyggingsarealer slik at utnyttelse innenfor den utbygde byen er helt nødvendig. Sjøfronten er et sentralt element i utviklingen med mange kvaliteter og store utfordringer i forhold til utbygging.
Waterfront Synopsis er et samarbeid mellom Stavanger Kommune, Framtidens Byer,Urban Sjøfront, Nordic Urban Design Association (NUDA) og Project for Public Spaces (PPS).
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WATERFRONT SYNOPSIS 2010 |
| Waterfront Synopsis 2010 er delt inn i to deler: KONFERANSE og AKADEMI. Konferansen holdes 15. – 16. September og Akademiet holdes 16. – 17. September. De kan deltas på uavhengig av hverandre, eller samlet. Det oppfordres til en samlet deltakelse da teori blir satt ut i praksis på Akademiet. |
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KONFERANSEN 15. – 16. SEPTEMBER |
WFS 2010 PROGRAM (engelsk)
14TH - OPTIONAL GUIDED TOUR 1400 Guided tour around the waterfront Fred Kent and Kathy Madden, PPS Lise Storås, Chief Architect, City of Stavanger 1600 End of tour
15TH, September - DAY ONE CONFERENCE PROGRAM, Clarion Hotel Stavanger WELCOME
0800 Coffee and tea, registration
0845 Welcome and introduction to WFS 2010 0900 How Norway Is Addressing the Future of Cities Ministry of Environment (not yet confirmed)
0915 Introduction to PPS and Waterfronts as Multi-Use Destinations Fred Kent, Project for Public Spaces
1000 Welcome to Stavanger Deputy Mayor of Stavanger
1015 Participant Introductions and Break Rob Cowan, Urban Design Skills 1045 LOCAL ECONOMIES, COMMUNITY HEALTH AND PUBLIC MARKETS Historically, markets have played an important role in the development of waterfronts and continue in this role today. From small neighborhood farmers markets to urban market districts, public markets are not only great community gathering places, they can also be economic generators that have a broad impact on their community’s overall development. Markets located on waterfronts play a particularly important role in establishing a connection between the waterfront and the rest of a community.
Lighter, Quicker, Cheaper: The Case for Time Intensive, Human Scale, Less Capital Intensive Development
Eric Reynolds, Founding Director, Urban Space Management UK
The Soul of Seattle: Pike Place Market Carol Binder, Executive Director, Pike Place Market, Seattle, WA
1200 Lunch
1300 MULTI-USE DESTINATIONS IN WATERFRONT CITIES Multi-use destinations define what a city is about and are the premier public spaces in a city that attract and highlight the local assets and unique talents and skills of the community. The combination of uses – educational, cultural, retail, and commercial – are open and available for visitors to freely partake in and are accessible physically, and in terms of how they are perceived. Successful multi-use destinations are always changing because they are flexible enough to easily adapt to different times of day and year and they are proactively managed to take advantage of these differences.
The Vision, the Reality and the Results Representative from Aker Brygge, Oslo, Norway
Place Marketing and the Experience Economy Scott Taylor, Chief Executive, Glasgow City Marketing Bureau
1415 BUILDING COMMUNITY THROUGH TRANSPORTATION In the last 100 years cities, (particularly waterfronts), have been defined by transportation decisions that were geared largely in favor of the car. The result is a system of streets and highways that reinforce a design ethos that is more about seeing or viewing rather than participating in communities. However, we are now seeing a massive shift in cities throughout the world where people want to get back to the idea of place, connecting within communities, supporting local services, spending time in public spaces and being part of local communities rather than in disjointed, unconnected places with no local character. In this new vision, the automobile plays a secondary role to transit, bicycles and the pedestrian. Waterfronts are the key place in cities where these issues are enacted. TBD (two keynotes from Denmark and Netherlands will be confirmed soon)
1500 Break
1530 ARCHITECTURE OF PLACE In many ways, iconic buildings have defined the past 50 years of modern architecture in cities. However, as cities and waterfronts evolve, a new idea of design is emerging called an “architecture of place”, which indicates that cities will become more livable, sustainable and authentic in the future. Public institutions such as museums, government buildings and libraries will become important anchors for civic activity that host a broader range of activities than they currently do and a new type of design will support that quest.
Kids, Families and the Paris Plage: Can it work Full Time? Architect of Paris Plage
A Critique of Urban Spaces and Institutions on Stockholm’s Waterfront Alexis Pontvik, Professor in urban design, KTH Architecture and the Built Environment
SUMMARY
1645 Day 1 Summary
1730 End of Day 1
TAPAS (Optional – Additional Cost) 1845 Arrive Hall Toll for cocktails
1900 Tapas is served. Meet the other delegates and keynotes for good discussions and an enjoying evening!
16TH , September - DAY TWO CONFERENCE PROGRAM, Hall Toll WELCOME
0830 Coffee and tea, registration
0900 The Six City Experiment – Lessons Learned In 2001 The Norwegian Ministry of Environment initiated a collaborative partnership with six norwegian cities; Bergen, Stavanger, Tromsø, Trondheim, Skien and Fredrikstad to carry through a four year networked pilot project with the aim to improve higher standard of city planning and waterfront developments. Several high profiled projects was initiated throughout the four year program as individual projects in each of the selected cities. The primer focus was to draw experience from the collaborative processes between the public and private sector in relations to how complex city planning issues could be managed through private and public partnerships.
1000 Waterfront Cities of the Future Speakers from Singapore, Hong Kong, Abu Dhabi and Australia
(with 30 minute break)
1230 Summary and Next Steps
1300 End of conference
*(Coffee, tea, water, and bagels served during the session)
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AKADEMIET 16. – 17. SEPTEMBER |
ACADEMY PROGRAM (engelsk)
The Academy will be an extension of the 2-day Conference, bringing together interested professionals and students for an intensive 1 ½ day hands-on PPS training program based around the concept of “Placemaking and Waterfronts.”
Participants will become aware of waterfront issues and opportunities, understand how people use public spaces, learn how to evaluate a place based on PPS’ Place Evaluation Game and how to apply the Principles of Placemaking in their own projects.
Participants will receive a high quality introduction to Placemaking through a real case study, as well as participate in developing recommendations for the site. The result of each of the groups will be summed up in a final report and handed to City of Stavanger as a preliminary platform for further strategical work.
16TH , September -DAY ONE OF ACADEMY PROGRAM, Hall Toll WELCOME
1400 Registration
1430 Welcome Introductions & Course Objectives Håkon Iversen, President - NUDA
1445 Placemaking and Sustainability on Waterfronts Fred Kent and Kathy Madden – PPS
1545 Site visits to surrounding areas around Stavanger
1645 Summary and discussion of next days events
1715 End of first day
17TH , September - DAY TWO OF ACADEMY PROGRAM WELCOME
0900 Coffee and tea
0930 PPS introduction to Place Evaluation Game Fred Kent and Kathy Madden, PPS
1000 Place Performance Evaluation 1000 Place Game 1100 Discuss/Consolidate findings and recommendations
1200 Lunch
1300 Instructions on developing a Placemaking Plan Kathy Madden, PPS
1330 Working session to evolve evaluation into plan and program Teams will be required to:
- Further develop the vision statement
- Clarify the program, describing activities, concepts and management activities
- Develop a concept plan for activities that are to occur in the space
1430 Prepare short 10 minute presentation on plan and program
1500 Report back to entire group
1600 Question and Answer/ Discussion
1700 End of Academy
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| ”Waterfront Synopsis 2010 vil kunne inspirere både fagmiljøene i privat og offentlig sektor. Den skal bidra til å gi innsikt og kunnskap om hvordan vi vil videreutvikle sjøfronten vår”, Anne S. Skare, Plansjef – Stavanger Kommune. |
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