http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2012/apr/29/singularity-university-technology-future-thinkers !
Archive | April, 2012
Singularity University: meet the people who are building our future | Technology | The Observer
European energy grids
April 12, 2012
Interesting statistics such as 800 tonnes of copper per km for undersea transmission cables.
The Urbanist: where’s the money for public transport?
April 5, 2012
The Urbanist: where’s the money for public transport?Alan Davies of Crikey blog The Urbanist writes:It seems Australian governments don’t want to tax and they don’t want to spend. Given the enormous changes happening in our cities, that’s an untenable strategy.As I noted recently, the revenue foregone by the abolition of indexation of the fuel excise is now estimated to be $5 billion per annum but the government isn’t prepared to do anything about it. At the same time, Wayne Swan isn’t merely afraid to spend, he wants to cut 2.6% out of the Australian economy in 2012-13 so the government can honour a political promise to balance the budget.Tim Colebatch says the impact on the economy would be “equivalent to shutting down the entire electricity industry, all arts and entertainment venues and all airline travel for a year”. It could be catastrophic:”That is 2½ times the fiscal contraction imposed by the Hawke government in 1986-87, or the Howard government in 1996-97. It is the stuff recessions are made of.”The reluctance to tax and spend is likely to have very severe implications for our cities. If they keep growing, if established suburbs continue to densify, and if travellers continue to shift from cars to public transport — all of which seems highly likely — then the demand for urban infrastructure will soar to unheard of heights.
Living on the fringe can make people sick
April 4, 2012
Living on the fringe can make people sick
March 15, 2012
OPINION
Public health must be an objective of urban planning.
AFFORDABLE housing is something that every state government likes to say it has delivered, and every opposition likes to say is no longer attainable. The prospect that home ownership might slip from the grasp of most people is so potent a political threat that in recent decades governments of both persuasions have yielded to pressure from developers to release cheap new land on the urban fringe.
As we report today, however, the relentless expansion of the urban boundary is itself imposing a massive cost on taxpayers, in the form of chronic health and social problems in the new suburbs.
In evidence presented to the Legislative Council’s environment and planning committee, outer suburban councils have presented an alarming picture of poorly planned housing developments without basic community services. In parts of the City of Wyndham in Melbourne’s west – the fastest growing municipality in Australia in percentage terms – people have either no or very little access to public transport, coupled with insufficient parkland and leisure facilities.
Sick suburbs
April 4, 2012
Sick suburbs
March 15, 2012
Point Cook resident Loren Bartley and her children Owen, 8, Zoe, 3 and Elliott, 6. Photo: Jason SouthPoorly planned new housing estates on Melbournes fringes are causing an outbreak of anxiety, diabetes and obesity among residents.ONE wet Saturday morning, Loren Bartley bundled her three young children into their waterproof jackets and packed their towels and bathers into a bag. Despite the torrential rain, they were making a trip on public transport from their home in Point Cook, a growth suburb in Melbournes outer west, to their nearest indoor public swimming pool.A member of the Point Cook Residents Association, Bartley wanted to use the expedition to demonstrate to Wyndham Council the need for an aquatic leisure centre in her suburb, which the group says has a dearth of indoor recreation facilities.
via Sick suburbs.
April 29, 2012
0 Comments