The History of U.S. Cities (Review - 10 minutes)
Choose a historical starting point to discuss the relationships between urban planning, transportation and the development of modern cities. This can be looked at through historical markers in World or U.S. History. For example:
• From Trails to Roads - Discuss the development of road infrastructure between the 13 colonies and the mid and late 1600s
• The Horse Drawn Carriage - when was the horse drawn carriage used primarily in the United States? What kinds of road modifications were necessary for these new vehicles. How long did it take to travel between major cities like Boston and New York in a carriage?
• The Locomotive and Manifest Destiny - At the beginning of the 19th century, rivers, canals and horse-drawn coaches were the options for moving people and goods within the country. Railroads enabled an efficiency and carrying capacity that had never been seen before. They linked different parts of the nation, carrying people, raw materials and agricultural products. The "Best Friend of Charleston," the first steam powered train, carried 141 people six miles on its initial run in 1830.
• Robert Fulton’s Steamboat - The Steamboat changed how waterways were used. Rivers like the Hudson became transport and trade corridors allowing people to travel longer distances in a shorter amount of time.
• The Model T - by the early 1900s Ford’s Model T had changed the transportation industry making the ownership of a car affordable and possible for many Americans.
• The Highway - By the 1950s Highways had stretched across all 50 states - how did the highway system increase and encourage car usage?
Highways were a mojor innovation in the way we transport goods and persons, though we may see the design of highways as very common today.
Choose some historical events to discuss and help students better understand the roles of urban planners and designers. Urban, city, and town planning integrates land use planning and transport planning to improve the built and social environments of communities. If possible, ask a local urban planner to come visit your classroom and talk about what he/she does.
Discuss the urban planner’s role as a designer and as a liaison between architects, city officials and citizens. What kinds of issues do you think they deal with on a daily basis and throughout their service to a town or city? In many ways, urban planners must be excellent listeners, considering the needs of local citizens while balancing the needs of businesses, industry and our environment.
End your discussion by asking how urban planning is connected to the word sustainability or the environment? How do these two concepts intersect? Explain that urban planning is intimately concerned with the natural and built (or man-made) environment. In many ways, almost all of the jobs and decisions a city or urban planner makes is related to the environment because our roads affect water quality, air quality, climate change and land-use among many other environmental issues. For instance, every time we use a car that needs gasoline or other fossil fuels, we are discharging emissions and greenhouse gases into the air. When new roads and highways are built, vast amounts of natural resources are consumed and habitats are compromised.
To enrich this lesson, look at the Smithsonian’s past exhibition, “
On the Move” which chronicles the history of transportation in the United States complete with excellent online learning resources that provide activity ideas and images for students to look through.
As a great research extension assign teams of students to investigate one time period covered by the exhibition:
1. Transportation in America: Before 1876
2. Community Dreams: Santa Cruz, California, 1876
3. Delivering the Goods: Watsonville, California, 1895
4. A Streetcar City: Washington, D.C., 1900
5. People on the Move
6. The Connected City: New York, New York, 1920s
7. Crossing the Country: Somewhere in Wyoming, 1903
8. Americans Adopt the Auto
9. Lives on the Railroad: Salisbury, North Carolina, 1927
10. The People’s Highway: Route 66, 1930s-1940
11. Roadside Communities: Ring’s Rest, Muirkirk, Maryland, 1930s
12. Family Camping: York Beach, Maine, 1930s
13. On the School Bus: Martinsburg, Indiana, 1939
14. Suburban Strip: Sandy Boulevard, Portland, Oregon, 1949
15. City and Suburb: Chicago and Park Forest, Illinois, 1950s
16. On the Interstate: I-10, 1956-1990
17. Transforming the Waterfront: San Francisco and Oakland, California, 1960-1970
18. Going Global: Los Angeles, 2000
Making it Local (10 minutes - Investigate)
After discussing some historical connections, investigate local urban planning and design initiatives in your area. What is the history of the road and transportation infrastructure in the area? Is there a train station nearby? Subways? Just highways? Are there any future plans?
Use local maps to discuss how design and transportation affects your local community. Make sure to present this from the student’s perspective - perhaps as a passenger in a vehicle, as a bike rider or pedestrian. Is it easy for you to walk from home to school? To downtown or a local market? Why or why not?
Make a list of local transportation concerns on the board. Encourage each student to write down a story about getting around the local neighborhood or community. What is it like traveling to and from school, from sporting practices to friend’s homes? Have each student write down one story about traveling. Ask each student to share their stories by talking with a partner and creating maps of their journey that helps to illustrate the story.
As a research extension, ask each student to conduct some individual research about the region. Each student or group of students should begin by investigating local information about major transportation projects and considering the modes and needs for transportation in the area (ie. Local access roads, farm to market roads, interstates, public transportation for commuting, bike lanes etc.).
Environmental Impacts (5-10 minutes - Frame/Reframe)
After delving into local issues, take this opportunity to divide students into design teams. Have each team begin thinking about their findings from the previous discussion or research they conducted. Discuss with students some of their stories about moving around the region. Can you begin to see any patterns or relationships emerge? Problems or solutions with the transportation system in your area?
Ask students to consider some environmental impacts that are current problems facing many communities around the country:
• Air Quality - Cars contribute a great deal of air pollution to a community.
• Greenhouse Gases/Climate Change - Most cars use petroleum based fuels which consume fossil fuels and release greenhouse gas emissions into the air.
• Land Footprint - Roads, highways and other infrastructure fragment habitats and natural areas like swamps, meadowlands and other fragile ecosystems.
• Water Quality - Runoff from roads impacts water quality nationwide.
After talking about these issues, relate them to your own community. What kinds of water and air quality issues may stem from how your transportation system is organized? What about land use and gas consumption?
Follow this up by ending with a discussion about some positive trends that are beginning to address these major issues including:
• Fuel Efficiency - To reduce CO2 emissions, automakers are continuously improving automotive fuel economy through the adoption of advanced technologies that ensure more efficient engines, drive systems, reduced air resistance and lighter vehicles.
• Smoother Traffic Flow - A measure that increases traffic flow by alleviating congestion and upgrading road infrastructure contribute greatly to CO2 reduction.
• Clean Energy Vehicles - Automakers are actively promoting the greater diffusion of hybrids and other clean-energy vehicles that run on alternative fuels such as electricity, natural gas and liquid petroleum.
• Improving Air Quality - Automakers and manufacturers continuously develop new technologies for further reductions in tailpipe NOx emissions (that’s nitrogen and oxygen which equals nitrous oxides) and PM (particulate matter, a fancy word for small particles like dust and soot).
• Hazardous Materials - To reduce the environmental impact of automobiles at the time of end-of-life processing and are instead trying to use more water-based materials to replace the glues and paints used in most vehicles.
• Recycling - Cars have a lot of really useful parts, so before they get thrown away, sustainable designers are developing ways to recycle major parts of vehicles. The metals, glass and plastics used vehicles are a great source of raw material that can be used in any number of ways.
After presenting some of these environmental concerns and solutions, talk with students about a design challenge each team will have to complete. Each team will be presented with an urban planning and transportation scenario set in different areas around the country. Students must reflect on historical and future transportation issues in that region and come up with a design solution that addresses local environmental concerns while attending to the needs of the community.
Green City Design Lab: Part One (10 Minutes - Generate)
In this section, students will engage in a collaborative design lab to think about ideas for a green city that considers transportation issues in relationship to the local environment.
Before beginning your design lab, talk with students about an example of an innovative planning and transportation solution being developed by MIT from the
2010 National Design Triennial.
MIT CityCar - Conceived by the Smart Cities group of MIT’s Media Lab, CityCar is a stackable, two-passenger electric vehicle for urban areas where users swipe a card and take the first fully charged vehicle at any charging station. Vehicles being returned are stacked and electrically recharged. When folded and parked, CityCar is only five feet long, and three to four cars can fit into a traditional parking space. It is designed for start-and-stop urban traffic, and the wheel robots allow the car to spin on the spot. A sophisticated electronic information and management system is envisaged to control the supply and demand of cars in its network of sites. Although the CityCar must still operate on congested urban streets, the vehicle provides a non-polluting, noise-free, energy-efficient, and convenient alternative to current modes of short-distance travel.
After discussing this example, ask students to identify some of the environmental problems being addressed by this new system and concept.
Now break into design teams. Discuss the role of a transportation planner in this design challenge. How can a transportation planner use design to engineer and motivate solutions that will impact your community and larger region?
Talk about some of the potential solutions that transportation engineers and designers are using today:
• Planners can choose more environmentally friendly materials for infrastructure
• Planners can be inclusive of pedestrians and bicyclists when redesigning roadways
• Planners can think more critically about multi-use corridors and spaces that are not just for cars but also people
• Livable streets - planners can integrate road architecture that slows down traffic and improves the quality of street life
• Buffer zones - planners can create buffer zones with trees and native plants to absorb air emissions and runoff areas that help to filter runoff from road surfaces.
Each team will be presented with a scenario. For example:
New York City
• Past - NYC has been a leader in public transport for centuries, but in the 1950s a man named Robert Moses proposed many controversial road projects that fragmented and transformed many NYC neighborhoods and landscapes.
• Present - NYC has nearly 9 million residents. Subway, roads and pedestrian ways are at full capacity, yet more people are expected to move to the city’s already crowded island. The city also has the 2nd poorest air quality in the country and very few incentives for bicyclists or public transportation users.
• Future - How can NYC become more bike-friendly; expand the capacity of its public transportation system? How can the city reduce the number of cars and commuters that clog its streets?
Birmingham, AL
• Past - Birmingham used to be an industrial city with lots of trade. Many roads however would flood because of major storms and the their proximity to nearby rivers.
• Present - Because of disrepair, many roads have large potholes and roadways near the river basin have been closed.
• Future: How can Birmingham reclaim space along riverfronts around the city? Can native plantings and ecological planning help? What would a redesigned riverfront look like for bicyclists, pedestrians or cars?
Sheldon, Ohio
• Past - Sheldon was classically a farming town of 3,500 residents. Most of the roads were state funded county roads and farming byways.
• Present - Sheldon’s population has tripled in the past 20 years, now a suburban center outside of downtown Cleveland. The city has not been able to plan for proper flow of traffic, pedestrians or for bikes. Traffic jams, congestion and many parking lots fill the city.
• Future: Sheldon wants to make their city walkable and bike friendly. What would a transportation plan look like to help Sheldon achieve this?
Green City Design Lab: Part Two (10 minutes - Edit and Develop)
Allow each team to brainstorm, sketch and think through solutions to their scenario. Encourage students to think about historical and contemporary issues in transportation to help them with their designs.
After brainstorming, allow each team to draw on a larger piece of poster paper a map and description of their transportation plan re-design.
Each team should present their ideas in addressing their scenario to the class. If time permits, setup a community board in the classroom to evaluate each design. (Share and Evaluate)