Towards a healthier, happier, eco-effective Barcelona.
Greening the city, connecting communities, C2C city
Many of us in Barcelona en Transició believe that Barcelona city is in a very good position to become an urban leader once again, as it has been before, especially 150 years ago with the Eixample vision of Ildefons Cerdà. Those that are in the position to make calls for how the city moves foreward could take bold steps to try to make the city demonstrate to Europe and the world what a sustainable city could be. We in the Transition group have ideas we wish to share about what such eco urban visions might be…
THE SELF-SUFFICIENT CITY: Envisioning the habitat of the future was a recent architectural competition run by IAAC (Institute for Advanced Architecture of Catalonia). A submission from one of the Barcelona en Transició collective, based on Transition and Permacultural ideas, was selected as a finalist, published in IAAC´s book, and its 1 minute film summary of the proposal was screened in CCCB.
150 word Summary of the proposal and the 1 minute film screened in CCCB:
Create urban greenway / CPUL mesh
Develop more bikeways/ walkways to easily connect from within city centre to nature: rivers, sea, surrounding hills. Allow all abandoned spaces to become indefinite temporary gardens. Specify strategic zones as permanent community gardens, including within all existing public parks and schools. Connect these nodes by greenways. Turn greenways into CPUL´s (Continuous Productive Urban Landscapes), Plant fruit and nut trees, berry hedges, diverse vegetation, food. These bio threads allow nature into the city; butterflies, song birds, pollen. Use city roofspace(s) as one vast CPUL, solar energy harvest, water collection zone and new Public Park. As private car use diminishes turn old “car lanes” into “food lanes”. Create mixed use clusters around gardens, part of the urban fabric: play area, sport complex, café. Make spaces experimental, adaptable and open to everyone. Let all life adapt and grow.
Here is the submission in its totality. Below are the 3 A3 panels that were submitted, click on each panel to view in closer detail. Underrneath is a summary of the ideas examined.
PANEL 1
PANEL 2
PANEL 3
NOTE – C2C stands for Cradle to Cradle city, which is inspired by the copyrighted ideas of Michael Braungart and William McDonough
Proposal outline in more detail:
__________________________
9 simple, immediate, intelligent steps for a healthier, happier, eco-effective Barcelona
1 – Healthy cities address their rivers lovingly.
2 – Make a mesh of connected greenways in the city.
3 – Turn greenways into CPUL threads.
4 – Edible Barcelona
5 – Use the city to cleanly power its transport
6 – Barcelona has a water crisis. Time to start using water smartly.
7 – Make urban wandering more joyful
8 – “Let the Eixample mosaic of hidden green zones sparkle in the city”
9 – Passeig de Sant Joan Park
1 – Healthy cities address their rivers lovingly.
These zones could / should become a very high use and very important zone for the city. Recently the river Besos’s edges have been improved and one side included for the Ronda Verde greenway. Presently there is just endless space taken up by grass. We suggest a mix of use, designed in a creative and appealing way. Diversify the land with the inclusion of areas to eat, play, plant food, compost, make art and engage in education. Also include many areas of wildness, biodiversity and habitat. Easy and safe bike access from the city is desirable. Many Aula Ambiental’s should also exist here. Possible future architectural competition zone.
2 – Make a mesh of connected greenways in the city.
Closing the Loop(s): Develop more bikeways/ walkways to easily connect from within city centre to nature: rivers, sea and the surrounding hills. Use these routes to connect presently disconnected nodes: nature spots, city parks, community gardens, schools, libraries… Routes become critical urban threads, developing ecologically with time. Create new nodal points on threads for more amenities as use increases: Expect to grow more eco roots (routes) from nodal points. Ensure all urban street bike routes have edge ramps, for safety reasons. Make all urban bikeway surfaces permeable.
3 – Turn greenways into CPUL threads.
Create CPULS (Continuous Productive Urban Landscapes) for the city. Allow all abandoned spaces to become indefinite temporary gardens. Specify strategic zones as permanent community gardens, including within existing public parks and schools. Connect these nodes by greenways. Turn lands alongside greenways into green zones by planting trees and diverse vegetation, these bio threads allow for flows of animal life, thereby bringing nature into the city; butterflies, song birds. Create mixed use clusters around gardens, part of the urban fabric: play area, sport complex, café. Make spaces experimental, adaptable and open to everyone.
4 – Edible Barcelona
Allow for all parks to have community gardens. Use city roofspace(s) as one vast CPUL, slar energy harvest and water collection landscape, as well as new Public Park. Make Tree lined streets with edible trees; nuts and fruits. Introduce urban berry hedges. As private car use diminishes turn old “car lanes” into “food lanes”. Offer incentives to people to plant own food everywhere. Havana has done it, Middlesborough is doing it.
5 – Use the city to cleanly power its transport
Towards a zero carbon, car free eco city: Promote car pooling and sharing. All City buses and cars become electrically powered, non CO2 emitting vehicles, powered by cities solar roofscape. “Petrol” garages become quick battery exchange points for vehicles. Stationary vehicles also powered in and by parking lots.
6 – Barcelona has a water crisis. Time to start using water smartly.
City must collect, clean, store and reuse its rain water. Use “living machines” to treat wastewater from sinks, bathtubs, toilets for reuse as irrigation in city gardens and flushing toilets. Reduce our demand on potable water. Make much of the city pervious, to allow water back into the natural water cycle.
7 – Make urban wandering more joyful
There are a limited amount of small public parks throughout the city. Presently many parks remain closed until 9am, by which time many people are already at work. Best situation is where parks never close; when not possible insist parks open at 8am. Encourage more entry / exit points for parks, so they become flow through zones. Make parks landscapes of colours, sounds and smells. Create water capturing and storage systems between parks and neighbouring buildings. Allow for community gardens, composting points, outdoor education, Aula Ambiental’s… Make parks the focal point of new community clusters.
8 – “Let the Eixample mosaic of hidden green zones sparkle in the city”
Cerda’s original plan saw each illa’s courtyard as a beautiful publicly accessible garden. Unfortunately most were filled in. Support ProEixample’s work to transform them back to green zones and encourage more public access to these zones. Make more than one entrance to the blocks, to maximize people flow. Explore food production, composting and water collection in these zones.
9 – Passeig de Sant Joan Park
This fine passageway should be finished to the degree it deserves. Presently it is composed of three sections that form an edge to the old town and makes a direct connection between Gracia and the cities lung; Parc de la Ciutadella. The first section is the most pleasant, Travessera de Gracia to Avinguda Diagonal, a continuous zone of rest, play, flowers and fine old trees. Its final section, Arc de Triomf to the park along Passeig de Lluis Companys, is a classical tree lined avenue with some zones for petanca. We suggest that the missing section needs the same area given over for pedestrian and bike use, greenery, food production. This greenway can continue upward via Placa Joanic and Carrer Escorial, to act as a central route way from the city to Parc Guell and beyond to the nearby hills of Collserola.
__________________________
From the block to the table: a closed loop of waste treatment, food production and much much more.
Is a fully self reliant block feasible? Let’s imagine… Intelligent collection and recyclical use of rainwater being the key, green roof sections are introduced to the blocks roof terraces which begin draining rainwater to a strategically placed storage pond in the parks sunny area. External green facades are introduced on the blocks western walls, both inside and out, to protect against difficult solar over heating. These double up as water purifiers for blocks grey waste waters. The end water is recycled for flushing toilets. In time, these facades might bear fruit. Intelligent planting is set around and in the pond, which is transformed into an urban wetland urban wetland, treating the blocks waste black waters, the outcome of which feeds all the blocks plants.
A communal composter is created in the park for all organic wastes. The output of which is used in the new areas for food planting in the park. The park wetland has created a unique habitat and biodiversity: fish, frogs butterflies and ducks can be seen and heard. The parks air is now cooler and fresher, breezes flow with scents from aromatic herbs, the parks microclimate is felt to be ideal. A garden school starts in the block; soon families are transforming their roof terraces and balconies into food production zones. Most of the time, the kids are the teachers. Community is the vital word here, without it all else falls apart. Bottom up planning offers opportunities to connect and participate. Gardens and food bring people together. At harvest time the community eats together at tables in their park. The park becomes a model for similar parks nearby, in time all blocks copy its simple eco efficient and intelligent techniques. Parks and projects become the major catalysts for local interaction: spaces for education, trial and error, working and learning together. They take time and love to develop and have their own life force. They are the Eixample’s sacred spaces.
Strangers enter the many parks and enjoy the tranquility of the water and the wildlife. Some rainwater is returned to the natural ground table and much is used to run the block, this alleviates greatly from the municipal system, reducing their energy consumption. The block consumes less potable water; in time maybe it will require none at all. Barcelona is well on the road to being a beautiful and healthy, eco effective city.
__________________________
Via Verde BCN: A series of greenway ripples, radiating out from the green heart of the city
Parc de la Ciutadella is not only the cities strategically placed central green lung; it happens to make up one of the most deeply loaded parts of Barcelona’s, and indeed Catalunya’s, urban and social history. In short; it matters. From this much loved city space, and always connecting back to and through it, are the 3 ripples; a series of radiating greenways that form a simple orbital matrix, the spine of a network. This structure forms the organising system through which all future greenways routes (roots) weave, from within the city out to her sea, rivers and surrounding hills. And from there to the wider networks beyond…
Ronda Verda: An orbital 72 km bikeway that is currently being constructed for Barcelona city. It is the first urban greenway loop. It connects the coastal beaches, the river Besos, the mountain of Montjuic and the cities natural backbone, the hills of Collserola.
Ronda Azul: The 25 km blue loop is a very important strategic greenway. It branches from the first loop at Montjuic and Forum and links directly to the 2 major urban nodes that are the train stations of Sants and Sagrera; the future high speed AVE station and expected gateway to the city. It also connects the city to its balcony; los Tres Turons, the 3 hills, the green zone within the city which include Parcs Putxet, Güell, Del Carmel and Guinardo. The remainder connects the treelined walkways of Rambla de Prim and Avenue de Tarradellas with many smaller parks and food gardens of Vallcarca, Maragall and Sagrera.
Ronda Rojo: A 5 km red loop through the heart of the city: From the very sculptural Parc de l’estació del Nord, through Arco de Trinfo and Passeig de Lluis Companys, this greenway passes through Parc de la Ciutadella, crosses its new eco-city bridge to Parc Barcelonetta and onto the sea. After a swim, one can weave back through Hospital Del Mar´s green zones to connect with the parks recently built over the underground rail lines.
Parc de la Ciutadella and her roots:
A series of root like threads weave outward from the park through the urban orbital spinal network, creating new urban nodes: The premiere greenway seeks water: through Parc de les Glóries Catalanes, Sagrera AVE station, to the new Besos river connection at Trinitat. Another leads through the 2 modernista architectural gems of Hospital St Pau and Gaudi’s Sagrera Familia, toward Guinardo Park and Hortas greenway. In time more roots and sub roots connect as citizens adapt it to their needs; an ever growing, organic, open network.
From the city to the sea: Parc de la Ciutadella Closes the Loop
The final and most strikingly visual section which closes the loop of the entire greenway network are the changes to the green heart of the city; her park. With the removal of the zoo to Forum, the park expands over her old barriers, the dirty old rail and car arteries, and connects to the “sea side” with a spectacular new colourful tree filled bridge. From the Sagrera gateway along the greenway to the sea; Barcelona has a bold new eco-urbanism!
[…] post for Barcelona city posted here: Greening the city – IAAC + A Transition Vision For Barcelona City GA_googleAddAttr("AdOpt", "1"); GA_googleAddAttr("Origin", "other"); […]
“THE SELF SUFFICIENT CITY – Envisioning the habitat of the future” Stories of hope from Dublin
3 page A3 PDF submission of the actions, experiences and stories of hope from normal people in Dublin who tried to make a greener city for themselves…
– Towards a healthier, happier, eco-effective Barcelona (9 page PDF – http://global-ecoforum.ning.com/forum/attachment/download?id=2251574%3AUploadedFi38%3A1374
Info on Global Eco Forum blog – http://global-ecoforum.ning.com/forum/topic/show?id=2251574%3ATopic%3A1375
[…] Viernes 13 de Mayo, 20h: Una visión transicionista por la ciudad de Barcelona : En el local de barcelonya, Espai S.T 3, C/ Santa Teresa 3, […]
[…] aqui mas infos – A Transition Vision For Barcelona City […]
[…] This is the first tour we are doing, we are learning as we go. The tour will be led by Dunk, an eco architect from Ireland, a city tour guide, global communications activist in Placa Catalunya and part founder […]
[…] This is the first tour we are doing, we are learning as we go. The tour will be led by Dunk, an eco architect from Ireland, a city tour guide, global communications activist in Placa Catalunya and part founder […]
[…] – A Transition Vision For Barcelona City […]
[…] are a group of architects, musicians, tour guides, gardeners, barmen, photographers, designers, teachers, dentists, […]
Programa de televisión de Canadá que trabajan en las historias de Barcelona
Hola. Sería muy apreciado si podía enviar este e-mail a alguien que hable Inglés o Francés en la organización. Actualmente estoy en busca de información. Gracias.
Hello,
I’m a freelance researcher for a series for History Channel Canada–and I’m exploring the possibility of doing a show that will focus on Barcelona (see attached document for more information). The show is called Trashopolis–the idea being that cities have been shaped by they dealt and deal with waste (and this is an extremely broad definition–from, let’s say, trash-inspired art, artful landfills, recycling from the textile industry, sewers, underground public trash systems to ….you name it).
This approach is fascinating and allows us to discover cities from around the world from fresh angles….we are now working on developing Barcelona. A city iconic for its artful way of life and planning!
Right now I’m looking for different people to talk to about a whole range of subjects so I can get a good idea of the potential stories we could do in Barcelona: I’m looking for historians, experts, tour guides, city officials, anyone, basically, with some knowledge and interest in the city who I could talk to explore some of the ideas outlined below and to perhaps suggest other ideas I could explore. Right now, this is all preliminary research that we are doing quickly to gauge which cities we will focus on—so the essence here is for me to get in touch with people fairly quickly in an unofficial capacity to gather basic –and interesting information. Once we’ve selected our final cities, we will dig more deeply and make a final, formal selection of experts.
I’m interested in looking into the stories and history of a city that has been able to control a lot of what happens within its boundaries—and, of course, I’m interested in looking at what is not controllable. I’d also love to understand how recycling and dealing with waste is dealt with by the city.
Some of the avenues I would like to explore include:
– Special waste and trash issues relating to the sea and tourism and boats…Barcelona, being the Europe’s largest metropolis on the Mediterranean coast.
– Barcelona seems to have a special relationship with farmers—even though it si a very urban place—are there any issues that would be relevant to our show
– How Barcelona transformed itself from a city that did not know what to do with its trash to a city filled with innovative ideas—an exploration of some of these ideas.
– fountain network and water and waste issues
– beach maintenance, history, sanitation
– why it seems to be such a clean city -2 times a night + they clean the bins-how garabge pick-up works as well as recycling and sorting of trash
– underground garbage vacuum system
– getting creative with waste-bean bags out of car upholstery-with prison program
– electric garbage trucks
– two beautifully-designed eco-centres that burn waste
– redesign from past 1852-old city-Olympics
– landscaped landfill-beautiful
– sewer museum
– pickpockets-what happens to the lost wallets?
– very rich history-roman ruins, Visigoths, Olympics in 1992, separatist history, incredible architecture, history in textiles
– -possible theme: creative trash-everything seems to be done here with a bit of an original twist and with a conscience-makes sense when you think this is the city of Dali, and Picasso
– explore the rumour that Barcelona has some of the world’s prettiest saniation officers
– how waste is managed and policed in Barcelona
– sanitation history
– archeological –architectural stories anecdotes (Gaudi, Gothic architecture) that would be relevant?
– waste and trash from religious rituals and perhaps garbage-men’s relationship to any particular patron saint?
– current waste and trash issues and stories
– architecture and trash
– water management
Every city we have featured on our show have had to deal with waste in various ways—and we’ve discovered that each city is unique in the way it deals with these problems, and that each city has unique stories to tell on that front.
I’m looking for all sorts of stories along those veins–as well as suggestions for stories (modern and old). Would love as well ideas and suggestions of names of experts, historians, etc, to whom I should talk to. It would be greatly appreciated if I could talk to people in your public works department, water works, recycling, and green initiative programs—and any other person you think might be helpful for my research. Your help, ideas, suggestions in this would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you!
Heidi Miller
_____
heidi, are you still interested in working on this, we missed this mail for a while. plenty going on since this article, see latest article: Changing the world in the Network Age https://barcelonaentransicio.wordpress.com/2012/01/10/network-age/
[…] project being developed by the eco cooperative Barcelonya. The tour will be led by Dunk; Irish eco architect, city tour guide, #acampadaBCN global communications activist, part founder of […]
[…] project being developed by the eco cooperative Barcelonya. The tour will be led by Dunk; Irish eco architect, city tour guide, #acampadaBCN global communications activist, part founder of Barcelona […]
[…] project being developed by the eco cooperative Barcelonya. The tour will be led by Dunk; Irish eco architect, city tour guide, #acampadaBCN global communications activist, part founder of Barcelona […]
[…] This is the first tour we are doing, we are learning as we go. The tour will be led by Dunk; Irish eco architect, city tour guide, #acampadaBCN global communications activist, part founder of Barcelona […]
[…] This is the first tour we are doing, we are learning as we go. The tour will be led by Dunk; Irish eco architect, city tour guide, #acampadaBCN global communications activist, part founder of Barcelona […]
[…] project being developed by the eco cooperative Barcelonya. The tour will be led by Dunk; Irish eco architect, city tour guide, #acampadaBCN global communications activist, part founder of Barcelona […]
[…] are a group of architects, musicians, tour guides, gardeners, barmen, photographers, designers, teachers, dentists, […]
[…] en Transició is sending over 2 of its members to plug in and participate; Juan del Río and Duncan Crowley. The first is from the island of Mallorca and has been living in Barcelona for some years (he […]
[…] type of barcelona could these actions lead to: A Transition Vision For Barcelona City Like this:LikeBe the first to like this […]
[…] Greening Barcelona > A Transition Vision For Barcelona City […]
[…] side of that important word; crisis) things began to change. Oil prices going up (again the transitionistas had been telling us all about this) which sparked food prices going up and unemployment spreading […]
[…] side of that important word; crisis) things began to change. Oil prices going up (again the transitionistas had been telling us all about this) which sparked food prices going up and unemployment spreading […]
Loads of podcasts in English here on the Spanish Civil War https://soundcloud.com/search?q=spanish+civil+war+