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RIZAL TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY

MANALAYSAY, VENSON
PAYNOR, JON CARLO
PLANNING 2

PROF. ARCH’T. EFREN BERME JR., UAP


WHAT IS URBAN DESIGN?
 Urban design is concerned with the arrangement, appearance and function of
our suburbs, towns and cities.

 It is both a process and an outcome of creating localities in which people live,


engage with each other, and engage with the physical place around them.

 It involves the design and coordination of all that makes up cities and towns.

ELEMENTS OF URBAN DESIGN:


 BUILDINGS
 PUBLIC SPACES
 STREETS
 TRANSPORT
 LANDSCAPE

BUILDINGS
Buildings are the most pronounced elements of urban design - they shape and articulate
space by forming the streetwalls of the city. Well designed buildings and groups of
buildings work together to create a sense of place.
EXAMPLES:

RESIDENTIAL BUILDINGS
These are structures where people dwell.

.
COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS

Alphaland Makati Tower Twin Oaks Place, Mandaluyong City


INSTITUTIONAL BUILDING

Philippine International Convention Center (PICC)

Pasay City, Metro Manila

EDUCATIONAL BUILDING

University of San Carlos Main Campus, Cebu City

PUBLIC SPACES
Great public spaces are the living room of the city - the place where people come
together to enjoy the city and each other. Public spaces make high quality life in the city
possible - they form the stage and backdrop to the drama of life. Public spaces range
from grand central plazas and squares, to small, local neighborhood parks.
EXAMPLES:

Market Square: Pittsburgh, PA Washington Square Park: New York, NY

New York’s famous city square, Times Square is located at the junction of Broadway and
Seventh Avenue and stretching from West 42nd to West 47th Streets.

The best known plaza in Madrid, Spain, this impressive city square is one of the main
stops on any tourist visit.
Ayala Triangle Garden, Makati City, Philippines

STREETS
Streets are the connections between spaces and places, as well as being spaces themselves. They
are defined by their physical dimension and character as well as the size, scale, and character of
the buildings that line them. Streets range from grand avenues such as the Champs-Elysees in
Paris to small, intimate pedestrian streets. The pattern of the street network is part of what
defines a city and what makes each city unique.

EXAMPLES:

MAIN STREET

It is usually a focal point for shops and retailers in the central business district, and is
most often used in reference to retailing and socializing. The term is commonly used in
Scotland and the United States, and less often in Canada, Australia and Ireland.
HIGH STREET

Frequently used for the street name of the primary business street of towns or cities,
especially in the United Kingdom and Commonwealth of Nations.

OVERPASS

In the US, an overpass is normally a bridge for motor vehicles to pass over other road
or rail traffic.
It would introduce confusion to call a pedestrian bridge or footbridge an overpass.

SKYWAY

Skyway is usually used in the US for long or high bridges for traffic.

FREEWAY

An express highway, especially one with controlled access.


BOULEVARD

A type of large ROAD, usually running through a city. Multilane arterial thoroughfare,
divided with a median down the center, and perhaps with roadways along each side designed
as slow travel and parking lanes and for bicycle and pedestrian usage, often with an above-
average quality of landscaping and scenery.

AVENUE

Is traditionally a straight route with a line of trees or large shrubs running along each
side.

ALLEY

A narrow passageway between or behind buildings. A narrow street between the fronts
of houses or businesses. This type of alley is found in the older parts of many cities,
including American cities like PHILADELPHIA AND BOSTON.

It can refer to a narrow, usually paved, pedestrian path, often between the walls of
buildings in towns and cities.
TRANSPORT
Transport systems connect the parts of cities and help shape them, and enable movement
throughout the city. They include road, rail, bicycle, and pedestrian networks, and together form
the total movement system of a city. The balance of these various transport systems is what
helps define the quality and character of cities, and makes them either friendly or hostile to
pedestrians. The best cities are the ones that elevate the experience of the pedestrian while
minimizing the dominance of the private automobile.

EXAMPLES:
TRAIN

A train is a form of rail


transport consisting of a series
of vehicles that usually runs
along a rail track to transport
cargo or passengers although
magnetic levitation trains that
float above the track exist too.

TRAIN STATION

Nichols station in Taguig City

BUS

A bus is a road vehicle designed to carry many passengers. Buses have utilitarian
fittings designed for efficient movement of large numbers of people, and often have
multiple doors.

BUS STATION
JEEPNEYS

Jeepney Bus Manila Philippines.


pimped out Jeepney – one of the
many forms of public
transportation.

TAXI

A taxi is an automobile that carries passengers for a fare usually determined by the
distance traveled.

TRICYCLE

A tricycle is a public utility


vehicle consisting of a
motorcycle and an attached
passenger sidecar.
PRIVATE AUTOMOBILES

BICYCLE

BICYCLE LANE
SIDEWALKS

Sidewalks are also considered transport since it allows pedestrian to go to other places.

LANDSCAPE
The landscape is the green part of the city that weaves throughout - in the form of urban
parks, street trees, plants, flowers, and water in many forms. The landscape helps define
the character and beauty of a city and creates soft, contrasting spaces and
elements. Green spaces in cities range from grand parks such as Central Park in New
York City and the Washington DC Mall, to small intimate pocket parks.

EXAMPLE:

Central Park is one of those places


that make New York such a great
place to live. The huge park, 341
hectare large (843 acres), is located
in the center of Manhattan. Its
design has served as an example
for city parks around the world.

The park boasts several lakes, theaters, ice rinks,


fountains, tennis courts, baseball fields, many
playgrounds and other facilities. It is also home
to the Central Park Zoo and the
METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART.
Especially during the weekends, when cars are
not allowed into the park, Central Park is a
welcome oasis in this hectic city.

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