The Living City:
Ecological Design for the Toronto Region
 

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Presented by Design Exchange in partnership with the Sustainable Innovation Network, Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (TRCA) and the Canada Green Building Council.
 
Sponsored by Sustaining Design Fund of Tides Canada Foundation.
 
Date: February 23, 2007
Time: 9:30am – 5:30pm
Location: Design Exchange, 234 Bay Street, Toronto
Cost $75 per person; $60 for DX members, students, TRCA, CaGBC
 
 
 

The growing impact of cities on the natural environment is an increasingly critical issue. Given that we have no viable alternative for cities, we need to develop new strategies for integrating the urban and the natural environment in a cooperative and sustaining fashion. These and other increasingly complex and far-reaching environmental challenges require inter-disciplinary approaches. At the same time, the research and design disciplines are trending towards even greater specialization, inhibiting communication and collaboration amongst professionals. The public has largely been left out of the dialogue.

This workshop will bring together a broad range of design professionals, industry representatives, civic leaders, students and members of interested organizations to discuss how the urban and natural environments can sustain each other. It will explore an emerging approach to bioregional planning that emphasizes the symbiosis between:
• dense, ecologically sensitive, convivial development
• sustainable commerce and governance
• connected, healthy green spaces

We will provide frameworks and case studies of both “eco-density” and multi-functional landscapes providing a wide range of ecosystem services. We will explore the institutional and financial models that might enable what Toronto and Region Conservation calls the “The Living City.” Participants will have a chance to test these ideas using the Conservation Economy Pattern Language and “open space” dialogue, resulting in a vivid and compelling vision for the greater Toronto region as it adapts to a carbon constrained, post fossil fuel world.

During the morning session, we will present the Conservation Economy Pattern Language, develop broad goals for green development, and discuss specific urban/environmental issues and opportunities in the Toronto region. After lunch, multi-disciplinary teams will tackle specific issues of common interest. The teams will have an opportunity to present preliminary and final results to the larger group.


Agenda
 

9:30-10:00am

Open workshop; update on “Living City” initiative
 
10:00-12:45pm Presentations and case studies on the Conservation Economy
Pattern Language, Ecological Design, broad goals for green development, and urban/environment constraints and opportunities in the Toronto Region (includes 15 minute break)
 
12:45-1:45pm Lunch
 
1:45-3:30pm Form working groups around specific, tangible and relevant issues.
First round of discussions followed by presentations of preliminary results.
 
3:30-3:45pm Break
 
3:45-5:15pm Second round of working group discussions followed by presentations of final results.
 
5:15-5:30pm
Workshop wrap-up and discussion of next steps.
 
Workshop presenters include:
 
Andrew Bowerbank
Manager of Sustainable Development, Toronto and Region Conservation Authority
Executive Director, Greater Toronto Chapter, Canada Green Building Council

Andrew Bowerbank regularly draws from his diverse background in his efforts to engage community leaders and encourage "green" development strategies. He is a Ministry certified professor of design and a member of the Ontario College of Teachers. Andrew is also a certified industrial designer, operating his own Toronto based design form from 1994 to 2000. As a published author, Andrew has had two of his books on the Canada "best sellers" list in their subject matter. His most recent publication was produced for the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority titled "Green Building Strategies for High-Rise Residential Development."
 
Carmela Canzonieri
Assistant Professor, Environmental Studies, York University, Urban design and landscape ecology

Carmela Canzonieri’s research looks at the broad range of conditions related to the integrity of the ecosystem. It deals with the process of revealing and maintaining the qualities of endangered landscapes in areas of rapid transformation. A significant part of this approach is to rediscover systems that are no longer in the immediate consciousness of people so that the consequences of their losses are not foreseen. This applies to features of the natural landscape when they are just taken for granted, and to cultural landscapes when more recent changes erase the previous ones, instead of layering and integrating cultures. Her research is action oriented and offers paths for planning and design decisions to communities that might otherwise lack access to resources.
 
Stuart Cowan
General Partner, Autopoiesis LLC
Portland, Oregon

Stuart Cowan is a General Partner of Autopoiesis LLC, which offers design, development, and finance services internationally for large-scale sustainability projects. The firm has worked with a wide range of financial institutions, municipalities, state and federal agencies, non-profits, utilities, companies, and religious orders. Current projects include a biomass energy facility utilizing restoration forestry by-products for a tribal entity and several green mixed-use infill projects in Portland, Oregon.

Stuart Cowan served as Research Director at Ecotrust (www.ecotrust.org), an innovative sustainability non-profit in Portland. He led the development of a comprehensive framework for local living economies and bioregional sustainability available at www.conservationeconomy.net. This framework provides a fractal integration of natural, social, and economic capital, and has been used internationally for strategic planning purposes.
 
Facilitator:
 
Norbert Hoeller
Principal, Sustainable Innovation Network

After a varied career at IBM, most recently as an Information Technology Architect and technical project manager in charge of major infrastructure implementations, Norbert Hoeller started a consulting practice in organisational innovation. He has been working closely with the Biomimicry Guild and Biomimicry Institute on improving communications within the Biomimicry community as well as coordinating university education activities throughout North America.
 

Partners:





Sustainable Innovation Network



 
Sponsor:

Acknowledgements:
Earth Angels (Adopt a Stream Crossing images)
Environmental Youth Alliance (Urban Agriculture in Vancouver images)



For more information contact:

 


Daniela Bryson
Professional Development Coordinator
daniela@dx.org
(416) 216-2126

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