NUDA

NUDA is a non-profit organisation which aims to gather qualified urban designers from the Nordic countries as members for the purpose of stronger promoting urban design as a necessity within city planning.

Nuda pages
Home
About
- Strategy
- Board
- - Håkon Iversen
- - Rob Cowan
- - Asdis Hlokk Theodorsdottir
- - Will Cousins
- - Lars Gemzøe
- - Brian Evans
- - Odd Arne Blindheim
- Organisation
- Aim
- Staff
NUDC
- Conference 2009
- Conference Theme
- Keynote Speakers
- - Matthew Carmona
- - Dr. Mitchell Joachim
- - Cameron Sinclair
- - Vice Pres. Jason Prior
- - Erik R Kuhne
- - Richard Hollington
- - Jonathan Smales
- Program
- Registration Info
Archive
- NUDC08 Gallery
- NUDC08 Theme and Keynotes
- - Theodora Antonakaki
- - Svante Petterson
- - Mogens Lock Hansen
- - Ulrike Brandi
- - Mirjam Struppek
- - Edit Ugrai
- - Miikka Seppela
- - Phillipe Thauaut
- NUDC07 Gallery
- NUDC07 Theme and Keynotes
- - Peter Butenschøn
- - Asdis Hlokk Theodorsdottir
- - Brian Evans
- - Mike Gibbons
- - Fred Kent
- - Peter Davidson
- - Dr. Christian Mikunda
- - Dr. Scott McQuire
- - Christoph Kronhagel
- NUDC06 Gallery
- NUDC06 Theme and Keynotes
- - Rob Cowan
- - Roger Evans
- - Sherin Aminoshe
- - Will Cousins
- - Tim Stonor
- - Annemarie De Boom
- - Lars Gemzøe
- - Arvid Bjerkestrand
- NUDA SUMMER SCHOOL 08
- - NSS08 Gallery
- - Insight
- - Brief
- - Program
- - Keynotes and trainers
- - Rob Cowan
- - Lars Gemzøe
- - Gregory Donovan
- - Aga Skorupka
- - Summary
WFS 2010
- Vision
- WFS Program
- Speakers
- Conference
- Customized training
- Academy
- Information and prices
- Articles and books
- Partners
- - City of Stavanger
- - Cities of the Future
- - Urban Sjofront
- - Network partners
- REGISTRATION
Urban Design
- Gallery
- - Get Inspired Gallery
- WATERFRONT SYNOPSIS
Monitor
News
Calendar
Contact
Nuda articles
Check out: WATERFRONT SYNOPSIS 2010
Check out: DESIGNS FOR OUR FUTURE
Check out: A PLACE FOR CREATIVITY
Check out: 3rd Nordic Passive House Conference
Projects: Hong Kong Waterfront
Projects: Granville Island
Frontpage: WFS 2010
News: Cars and bikes can coexist in vibrant cities
Projects: LÉVA Urban Design AS
Projects: LÉVA Urban Design AS
News: Tracing the Influence of urban design and the CIAM architects
Check out: Routes, Roads & Landscapes
News: When Urban Design is of national importance!
News: Pass the Urban veggies, please!
News: Submission deadline for the Mayor's Urban Design Awards in Calgary
Check out: 09//DRIVING SUSTAINABILITY
News: Transport renewable energy becoming a Nordic forte
News: NZIA takes bold new stance on urban design reform
Check out: Eco City Conference 2009
Check out: Design to live with future flooding
Check out: Urban Design Group - Annual conference
News: Capacity Check, UK
News: Urban Architect talks the walk in Saskatoon
News: Co-founder and partner in Gehl Architects, Jan Gehl, has received the highest honour from the Danish Arts Foundation, the lifelong grant
News: Big screens in public spaces
Check out: NUDA SUMMER SHCOOL SANDEFJORD 2009
Check out: CITISENSE 2009
Frontpage: Urban branding
News: NUDA SUMMER SCHOOL 2009
News: ARCHIPRIX
Check out: Get Inspired
Check out: Nuda Summer School
Check out: Annual Conference
Check out: Student Competition
Projects: 3RW
Projects: Gehl Architects
Projects: PROJECTS // Feleti Design Consultants
Projects: Gehl Architects
Projects: David Lock Associates
Projects: David Lock Associates
Frontpage: Welcome to NUDA
Conference Theme

There is a need to stage a guide for global planning which involves new sustained environmental directions.

While urban designers and architects alone cannot solve the world’s environmental problems, they are responsible for designing the future cities, and therefore in a position to influence the promotion and pursuit of energy-efficient, socially-responsible buildings and public spaces. They are also in a position to influence the future cities through new paradigms of innovation; new thoughts; new perspectives; new methods and rural and urban strategies, where increased use of new technology is a crucial part of the sustainable planning strategies developed. The current urbanisation which attracts people in great numbers from rural areas and small towns raises issues such as prospects for work; housing possibilities; improved lifestyle and education. How does this rapid urbanisation effect the environment? How will rural areas cope with the increased emigration? Is urbanisation as an isolated entity the critical factor generating these environmental issues?

The green city; the inclusive city; the social city; the walkable city; the eco-city are concepts promoted by architects and planners in their work of designing future cities and pursuing environmental solutions while at the same time trying to include a conscious approach towards the social and human aspect of the new urban context. New city concepts claim to accommodate the rapid urbanisation with design strategies enabling the city as an organism to grow accordingly to the growth of population. Is there a real demand for such new cities being planned? Might it be that the real challenge lies in sustaining the existing city, and turning the focus towards rural areas with small towns, villages and communities making them more interesting and attractive to live in so that people don’t move from these places?

Current cities are challenged by future environmental problems escalated from matters such as higher urban density; constraint of land use; rapid urbanisation; increased car use; higher global mobility; higher energy use and an extended consumption of global and cultural resources. Highlighting the concept of the future cities includes discovering the reasons behind the potential environmental disaster. Are the environmental issues our cities are facing only related to what is described in the UN Environmental report? Or could it be a consequence of people’s advanced mobility and change of lifestyle over the past three decades? I.e. new cities adjacent to waterfronts will be major influence on economic growth and tourism, leading to increased consumption of natural resources and undesirable impacts on culturally important heritage sites.