chrispederick / tags / cities

Tagged with “cities” (6) activity chart

  1. Back to the Future | James Howard Kunstler | Orion Magazine

    A road map for tomorrow’s cities

    http://www.orionmagazine.org/index.php/articles/article/6336

    —Huffduffed by chrispederick 6 months ago

  2. In Bike-Friendly Copenhagen, Highways For Cyclists : NPR

    Bikers are everywhere in Copenhagen. And now the city is building new, high-speed routes into the city that will make it easier to commute, even from the distant suburbs.

    http://www.npr.org/2012/09/01/160386904/in-bike-friendly-copenhagen-highways-for-cyclists

    —Huffduffed by chrispederick 8 months ago

  3. More or Less: Behind the Stats — Sizing up cities

    Which are the world’s biggest cities, and what are their populations? Two simple questions that we discover are surprisingly difficult to answer. Plus, has the world got heavier or lighter since the industrial revolution? It’s a question posed by a More or Less listener that got us wondering, too. Dr Chris Smith, part of a group of Cambridge University researchers, known as the Naked Scientists, reckons he’s worked out the answer. This programme was originally broadcast on the BBC World Service.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/series/moreorless

    —Huffduffed by chrispederick one year ago

  4. Geoffrey West: The surprising math of cities and corporations

    Physicist Geoffrey West has found that simple, mathematical laws govern the properties of cities — that wealth, crime rate, walking speed and many other aspects of a city can be deduced from a single number: the city’s population. In this mind-bending talk from TEDGlobal he shows how it works and how similar laws hold for organisms and corporations.

    http://www.ted.com/talks/geoffrey_west_the_surprising_math_of_cities_and_corporations.html

    —Huffduffed by chrispederick one year ago

  5. Why Cities Keep on Growing, Corporations Always Die, and Life Gets Faster

    As organisms, cities, and companies scale up, they all gain in efficiency, but then they vary. The bigger an organism, the slower. Yet the bigger a city is, the faster it runs. And cities are structurally immortal, while corporations are structurally doomed. Scaling up always creates new problems; cities can innovate faster than the problems indefinitely, while corporations cannot.

    These revolutionary findings come from Geoffrey West’s examination of vast quantities of data on the metabolic/economic behavior of organisms and organizations. A theoretical physicist, West was president of Santa Fe Institute from 2005 to 2009 and founded the high energy physics group at Los Alamos National Laboratory.

    —Huffduffed by chrispederick one year ago

  6. Growing Green Cities

    We look at the world’s greenest cities and how a greener planet can start where population is most dense.

    —Huffduffed by chrispederick 3 years ago