Globally, cities face growing social and environmental challenges while fighting to improve their liveability. An anchored attitude within the field of urban design argues that just as much as being part of the problem, cities are pivotal players in the solution. This paper scrutinizes and discusses which recent trends, strategies, and paradigms affect urban life strategies (and, thereby, liveability of the cities) and how they are approached. Jan Gehl has (together with allies), through half a century, been the master of articulating and displaying the interconnection between urban design and public life. Gehl and well-known analysis and diagrammatic overview of the development of public life (in: “How to Study Urban Life,” 2013 (p. 157), on which they partially based their urban life methodology, extends from 1880 to 2005. The model points to central urban topics such as ‘pedestrian streets’, ‘public life and urban activities’, traffic calming, and the ‘resurgence of bicycles’. Since the publication of their analysis and methodology, agendas such as climate adaptation, the need for increased biodiversity in urban settings, a growing aging part of the population, gender awareness, effects of mass tourism, and a growing focus on community building, which all spawn from current social and environmental challenges have dominated the approach and discussion on future urban design. Based on analysis of planning documents and -policies and a row of expert interviews with Gehl and Svarre, City Architects (from cities where the above-mentioned methodology and approach have been embedded), and leading practitioners and academics within urban design, the paper presents an extrapolation and discussion of topics in order to update the known model, and how the new agendas influence and expand methods for a contemporary approach to the study and implementation of urban life strategies.
Anne Corlin is an Assistant Professor at the Aarhus School of Architecture, where she teaches Urban design at the master´s program Desirable Densities. Her research has revolved around social sustainable urban design and how to design neighbourhood for community building, focusing on both the design processes and the spatial and physical design.
Rune Chr. Bach is cand. arch. from the Aarhus School of Architecture (2003), from where he also obtained his Ph.D. (2008) and is currently an associate professor with research and teaching within urban design and landscape architecture. Rune’s research spans from the relation between the city and the landscape to how the design of different urban components/elements and their transitions can nurture urban life. In addition, Rune has contributed with articles about social housing and regional, strategic, and urban planning. Rune has 12+ years of practical experience as a project-leading architect in urban design and urban planning, landscape design, and strategic planning.