Documentos de Académico
Documentos de Profesional
Documentos de Cultura
WS
2017/18
Karlsruhe
Ins4tute
of
Technology
(KIT)
Ins4tut
Entwerfen
von
Stadt
und
LandschaC
Fachgebiet
Stadtquar4ersplanung
Prof.
Markus
Neppl
Dr.-‐Ing.
Kris4n
Barbey
SUSTAINABILITY
Sustainable
development
is
development
that
meets
the
needs
of
the
present
without
compromising
the
ability
of
future
genera8ons
to
meet
their
own
needs.
It
contains
within
it
two
key
concepts:
The
concept
of
‚needs‘,
in
par8cular
the
essen8al
needs
of
the
world's
poor,
to
which
overriding
priority
should
be
given;
and
The
idea
of
limita8ons
imposed
by
the
state
of
technology
and
social
organiza8on
on
the
environment's
ability
to
meet
present
and
future
needs
(Brundtland).
Source:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sustainability
SUSTAINABLE
DEVELOPMENT
Requirements
à
Consistency:
Subs4tu4on
of
fossil
energies
by
renewable
energies
à
Efficiency:
more
efficient
energy
conversion
and
use,
avoidance
of
energy
use
and
the
replacement
of
high-‐grade
energy
with
less
‘valuable’
Energy
à
Sufficiency:
Reduced
energy
consump4on
by
changing
lifestyles
and
consump4on
habitudes
Everybody’s
self-‐responsible
ac4on:
Conscious
renuncia4on
of
energy-‐intensive
products,
meat
consump4on
or
excessive
mobility,
wise
selec4on
of
food
or
transporta4on
means
[and
reduc4on
of
waste]
Out
of
the
awareness
that
the
habit
“ever
further,
ever
faster
and
ever
more”
isn´t
sustainable
in
the
long
run,
the
values
people
live
by
in
the
industrialized
countries
could
shiC
towards
the
aim
of
“living
beaer
instead
of
having
more”.
CLIMATE
PROTECTION
and
CLIMATE
ADAPTATION
Climate
Protec8on
-‐
Climate
change
mi8ga8on
reducing
human
(anthropogenic)
emissions
of
greenhouse
gases
à
to
limit
the
magnitude
and/or
rate
of
long-‐term
climate
change
Climate
Adapta8on
an7cipa7ng
the
adverse
effects
of
climate
change
+
taking
appropriate
ac7on
to
prevent
or
minimise
the
damage
they
can
cause,
à
to
protect
human
lives,
biological
systems,
spa7al
structures
and
economies
Source:
Report
of
the
Intergovernmental
Panel
on
Climate
Change:
IPCC
-‐
Climate
Change
2007
Tipping
points:
PotenSal
Anthropogenic
Tipping
Elements
in
the
Earth
System
1 Arctic Sea Ice Loss 7 Darkening of the Tibetan Plateau
2 Melting of Greenland Ice Sheet 8 Disruption of Indian Monsoon
3 Methane Escape from Thawing Permafrost Regions and Continental Shelves 9 Re-Greening of the Sahara + Sealing of Dust Sources
4 Boreal Forest Dieback 10 West African Monsoon Shift
5 Suppression of Atlantic Deep Water Formation 11 Dieback of Amazon Rainforest
6 Climatic Change-Induced Ozone Hole over Northern Europe 12 Change in Southern Pacific Climate Oscillation
Poten4al
Anthropogenic
Tipping
Elements
in
the
Earth
System,
Source:
Himmel
und
Erde,
PIK,
Potsdam
2007
Regional
differences
of
possible
climate
change
Countries, which contribute to climate change the most by the highest cumulative CO2 emissions per capita (1950-2003) (gray)
Countries with the highest vulnerability to climate change (red)
Countries, which belong to both groups (hatched)
Countries with low and middle CO2 emissions and vulnerability
Regional
differences
of
possible
climate
change,
Source:
Himmel
und
Erde,
PIK,
Potsdam
2007
PresentaSon
of
the
IPCC-‐Synthesis
Report
2014
in
Kopenhagen,
02.November
2014
Ban
Ki
Moon,
UN
General-‐Secretary,
on
his
right
IPCC-‐Chef
Rajendra
Pachauri
UNEP report: Emissions to be limited by 2030 but more action needed Source:
hap://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment
COP
21
Source:
hap://www.cop21.gouv.fr/en/key-‐dates/
COP
21
Source:
hap://www.cop21.gouv.fr/en/key-‐dates/
COP
21
Source:
hap://www.cop21.gouv.fr/en/key-‐dates/
Source:
hap://www.cop21.gouv.fr/en
Source:
hap://www.cop21.gouv.fr/en/the-‐world-‐talks-‐about-‐parisagreement/
Source:hap://ec.europa.eu/clima/policies/interna4onal/nego4a4ons/future/index_en.htm
Source:hap://ec.europa.eu/clima/policies/interna4onal/nego4a4ons/future/index_en.htm
Source:
hap://unfccc.int/files/mee4ngs/marrakech_nov_2016/applica4on/pdf/marrakech_ac4on_proclama4on.pdf
Source:
hap://newsroom.unfccc.int/unfccc-‐newsroom/marrakech-‐ac4on-‐proclama4on-‐expresses-‐irreversible-‐momentum-‐on-‐climate/
Source:
hap://unfccc.int/files/mee4ngs/marrakech_nov_2016/applica4on/pdf/marrakech_ac4on_proclama4on.pdf
Source:
hap://unfccc.int/files/mee4ngs/marrakech_nov_2016/applica4on/pdf/marrakech_ac4on_proclama4on.pdf
Source:
hap://www.zeit.de/wirtschaC/2016-‐11/erneuerbare-‐energien-‐klimawandel-‐kohleauss4eg-‐klimakonferenz-‐marrakesch
Sustainable
Development
Goals
Source:
hap://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/development-‐agenda/
Sustainable
Development
Goals
Source:
hap://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/development-‐agenda/
ENVIRONMENTAL
SUSTAINABLITY:
A
SPATIAL
QUESTION
Source:
Le
Grand
Pari(s)
Le
Moniteur
Architecture,
2009:
MVRDV,
PLUS!
Energy
Industry
Mobility
Trade
and
commerce
Households
Source:
hap://www.cop21.gouv.fr/en/act/
The
Concepts
of
Sustainable
Urban
Development
+
Principles
of
Climate
Protec4on
and
Adap4on
S Y N E R G E T I C
GREEN
CITY
+
GARDENCITY
GREEN
SPACES
-‐
GREEN
NETWORK,
BIODIVERSITY
FUTURE
CITY
SMART
NEIGHBOURHOODS
+
PARTICIPATIVE
ACTIONS
SOCIAL
TOGETHER
+
HIGH
LIVING
QUALITY
HUMAN
SCALE
+
HIGH
SPATIAL
QUALITY
COMPACT
EUROPEAN
CITY
DENSITY
+
MIXITY:
URBAN
DEVELOPMENT
„INSIDE
CITY
LIMITS“
The
challenges
in
transdisciplinary
Source:
Metropolitan
Region
in
Climate
Change,
Kris4n
Barbey
The
Integrated
SpaSal
Concept
of
InteracSng
Strategies
Climate
ProtecSon
&
AdapSon
àNature-‐orientated,
Climate-‐friendly
Metropolitan
Region
2050
• N A T U R E
D E V E L O P M E N T
qualifiying
the
ecological
poten7als
• U R B A N
R E S T R U C T U R I N G
climate-‐friendly
+
water-‐sensi7ve
inner
city
development
• E N E R G Y
T R A N S F O R M A T I O N
transforma7on
to
a
regenera7ve
energy
supply
on
every
spa7al
level
(Metropolitan
Region
+
City
+
City-‐District
+
Quarter
+
House)
à QualificaSon
of
ecological
potenSals
à
StabilisaSon
of
ecosystems
à
Renewal
of
existenSal
space
substance
à
ConcentraSon
of
spaSal
acSons
+
protecSon
of
precious
landscapes
+
AppreciaSon
of
nature
in
a
cultural-‐aestheScal
sense
C l i m a t e
C h a n g e
à
C h a n g e
A c S o n
Focus
of
all
Strategies
Climate
ProtecSon
&
AdapSon
&
StarSng
Point
of
SpaSal
Planning
and
AcSon:
Natural
CondiSons
Source:
Metropolitan
Region
in
Climate
Change,
Kris4n
Barbey
The
Integrated
SpaSal
Concept
Climate
ProtecSon
&
AdapSon
à
CONTENT
BASIS
à
Nature-‐orientated,
Climate-‐friendly
Metropolitan
Region
2050
T h e
P R O J E C T
N A T U R E
Gernot Böhme
„…die Natur ist endgültig zu etwas geworden, was vor uns liegt,
zu einem Projekt.“
„Dabei geht es nicht mehr nur um die Bewahrung von Natur als dem Gegebenen,
sondern vielmehr bereits um die Herstellung von Natur, nämlich eines Naturzustandes,
[…] der in absehbarer Zukunft ein menschenwürdiges Dasein ermöglicht. […]
Martin Seel
achtende Anerkennung + umsichtige Aneignung
anstatt der eskalierenden Ausbeutung der Natur
Jürgen Habermas
unmittelbare ästhetische Erfahrung der Natur als Voraussetzung
deren Wertschätzung + des verantwortungsvollen Umgangs
Source:
Metropolitan
Region
in
Climate
Change,
Kris4n
Barbey
The Integrated Spatial Concept Climate Protection & Adaption à ROADMAP 2050
àNature-‐orientated,
Climate-‐friendly
Metropolitan
Region
2050
• N A T U R E
D E V E L O P M E N T
qualifiying
the
ecological
poten7als
• U R B A N
R E S T R U C T U R I N G
climate-‐friendly
+
water-‐sensi7ve
inner
city
development
• E N E R G Y
T R A N S F O R M A T I O N
transforma7on
to
a
regenera7ve
energy
supply
on every spatial level (Metropolitan Region + City + City-District + Quarter + House)
Metropolitan
Region
NATURE
DEVELOPMENT
–
URBAN
RESTRUCTURING
–
ENERGY
TRANSFORMATION
City+City
District
NATURE
Developing
nature-‐orientated
open
spaces
in
the
city
CITY
Inner
city
development
+
Development
of
the
exis4ng
building
stock+
Energe4c
urban
redevelopment
ENERGY
Integra4on
of
renewable
energies
in
the
city
MOBILITY
Expansion
of
the
public
transport
system
and
climate
neutral
E-‐Mobility
Quarter
Climate
equalisa4on
Parc
+
Garden,
Reten4on
area
Open
Space
+
Coutyard,
Energy
cluster
Quarter
House
Energy
system
House
–
Climate
equalisa4on
+
Reten4on
area
Garden
à
Nature-‐orientated
–
Climate-‐friendly
Metropolitan
Region
2050
Source:
Metropolitan
Region
in
Climate
Change,
Kris4n
Barbey
IntegraSve
SpaSal
Concept
1
(basic
contents)
AESTHETIC
PRINCIPLES
of
a
nature-‐orientated
spa4al
development
concentraSon
and
protecSon
(ressource
saving
and
energy
efficiency)
local
referencia7on
and
integra7on
in
the
environmental
context
emphasizing
the
natural
characteris7cs
forma7on
of
specific
spa7al
characters
spa7al
diversity
and
differencia7on
development
of
contrasts
in
the
spa7al
structure
simplicity
of
spa7al
expression
con7nuance
of
exis7ng
poten7als
spa7al
concentra7on
of
structural,
natural
and
energy-‐technical
interven7ons
spa7al
characterized
choice
of
loca7on
(choice
of
the
adequate
loca7on,
by
weighing
up
climate
protec7on,
climate
adap7on
and
spa7al
aesthe7cs)
à
spaSal
strategies
climate
protecSon
and
adapSon:
chance
for
natural-‐
and
urban
spaSal,
i.
e.
for
an
ecological
+
aestheScal
qualificaSon
Source:
Metropolitan
Region
in
Climate
Change,
Kris4n
Barbey
IntegraSve
SpaSal
Concept
2
(draC)
THE
CONCEPT
OF
INTERACTING
STRATEGIES
Climate
ProtecSon
and
AdapSon
NATURE
DEVELOPMENT
Forest
transformaSon
and
Forest
development
ProtecSon
and
development
of
open
space
Development
of
inner-‐city
green
space
Space
for
the
river
Groundwater
ProtecSon
Organic
farming
URBAN
RESTRUCTURING
Development
of
the
inner
city
Development
of
the
exisSng
building
stock
EnergeSc
urban
redevelopment
Climate-‐friendly
and
water-‐sensiSve
urban
development
ENERGY
TRANSFORMATION
SpaSal
concentraSon
of
wind
turbines
Urban
concentrated
use
of
photovoltaic
Use
of
regional
potenSals◊
geothermics
Use
of
regional
and
local
potenSals
◊
bioenergy
Use
of
regional
potenSals
◊
hydraulic
energy
Expansion
of
the
public
transport
system
and
climate
neutral
E-‐Mobility
Expansion
of
the
electricity
network
and
energy
storage
SPATIAL
AIMà
NATURE-‐ORIENTATED,
CLIMATE-‐FRIENDLY
METROPOLITAN
REGION
2050
Source:
Metropolitan
Region
in
Climate
Change,
Kris4n
Barbey
IntegraSve
SpaSal
Concept
2
(draC)
NATURE
DEVELOPMENT
1:
Forest
TransformaSon
and
Forest
Development
à
New
forests
in
the
Rhine
valley,
in
the
Kraichgau,
as
lowland
forests
along
the
Rhine,
as
urban
forests
and
in
the
Odenwald
à
+
50.000
ha
Source:
BÖLW,
2009
in:
Metropolitan
Region
in
Climate
Change,
Kris4n
Barbey
Source:
UBA,
2008
in:
Metropolitan
Region
in
Climate
Change,
Kris4n
Barbey
Source:
1.
IBA-‐
Hamburg
2010,
2.
UBA,
2008
in:
Metropolitan
Region
in
Climate
Change,
Kris4n
Barbey
IntegraSve
SpaSal
Concept
2
(draC)
URBAN
RESTRUCTURING
4:
Climate-‐Friendly
and
Water-‐SensiSve
Urban
Development
Nes
à
Development
of
climate-‐responsible
condi4ons
for
the
inner
urban
and
green
space
development
à
Establishment
of
resilient
spa4al
structures
à
20
geothermal
power
plants
Source:
Metropolitan
Region
in
Climate
Change,
Kris4n
Barbey
IntegraSve
SpaSal
Concept
2
(draC)
ENERGY
TRANSFORMATION 4
+
5:
Use
of
Regional
+
Local
PotenSals
Hydropower
and
Bioenergy
1,7%
the
expected
electricity
demand
In
the
MRN
in
2050
10,7%
the
expected
electricity
demand
In
the
MRN
in
2050
à
Use
of
the
exis4ng
poten4als
hydropower
and
bioenergie
Source:
Metropolitan
Region
in
Climate
Change,
Kris4n
Barbey
IntegraSve
SpaSal
Concept
2
(draC)
ENERGY
TRANSFORMATION
6:
Expansion
of
the
Public
Transport
System
&
Climate
Neutral
E-‐Mobility
energy
savings
ca.
-‐
50%
CO2
savings
ca.
-‐70%
with
the
use
of
renewable
energies
in
E-‐
Mobility
à
Ak4va4on
of
the
rail-‐bound
local
public
transport
network,
and
waterways
as
`guideline´
for
climate
neutral
mobility
Source:
Wuppertal
Ins4tut
für
Klima,
Umwelt,
Energie
GmbH
in:
Metropolitan
Region
in
Climate
Change,
Kris4n
Barbey
IntegraSve
SpaSal
Concept
2
(draC)
ENERGY
TRANSFORMATION 7:
Expansion
of
the
electricity
network
and
energy
storage
à
underground
cables
in
connec4on
to
the
transna4onal
network
Source:
Metropolitan
Region
in
Climate
Change,
Kris4n
Barbey
IntegraSve
SpaSal
Concept
2
(draC)
-‐70%
CO2
-‐ 50%
Energy
+100
%
Renewable
Energies
(Electricity)
à
Nature-‐orientated
–
Climate-‐friendly
Metropolitan
Region
2050
Source:
Metropolitan
Region
in
Climate
Change,
Kris4n
Barbey
Concept
Green
Metropolis
+
Development
of
the
Inner
City
+
Energy
Efficiency
+
Energy
Gain
+
+
European
metropolitan
regions
are
important
players
in
the
efforts
towards
climate
protec7on
and
climate
adap7on
on
a
global
level.
Only
in
the
network
of
the
metropolitan
regions
and
their
spa7al
strategies,
the
important
effects
of
climate
protec7on
and
climate
adap7on
can
be
created
on
a
global
level
and
the
goals
of
climate
protec7on
and
climate
adap7on
can
be
achieved.
Source:
Metropolitan
Region
in
Climate
Change,
Kris4n
Barbey
RealisaSon
(Players
–
Areas
of
Ac4vity)
CondiSons
of
the
RealisaSon
of
Climate
ProtecSon+AdapSon:
The
Concept
of
InteracSng
Strategies
Climate
ProtecSon
+
AdapSon
NATURE
DEVELOPMENT–URBAN
RESTRUCTURING–ENERGY
TRANSFORMATION
and
the
Principles
of
ConnecSng
+
Linking
and
of
CooperaSng
+
InteracSng
on
the
EssenSal
Level
of
PreparaSon
:
CONCEPT
CLIMATE
POLICY
–
SPATIAL
CONCEPT
–
CLIMATE
ECONOMICS
on
the
Level
of
RealisaSon
:
PLAYERS
CITY
–
ENERGY
PROVIDER
–
ENTREPRENEUR
–
CITIZENS
–
PLANNER
–
UNIVERSITY
on
the
SpaSal
Level
:
SPACE
QUARTER
+
CITY,
METROPOLIS
+
METROPOLITAN
REGION,
METROPOLITAN
REGIONS
+
COUNTRY,
EUROPEAN
METROPOLITAN
REGIONS
Source:
Metropolitan
Region
in
Climate
Change,
Kris4n
Barbey
RealisaSon
Chances
NATURE
DEVELOPMENT–
URBAN
RESTRUCTURING
–
ENERGY
TRANSFORMATION
are
qualifica4on
processes,
which
can
lead
to
an
improvement
of
exis4ng
quali4es.
NATURE
DEVELOPMENT
à
Chance
of
ecologic
(+
aesthe4c)
Qualifica4on
URBAN
RESTRUCTURING
à
Chance
of
aesthe4c
(+
ecological)
Qualifica4on
ENERGY
TRANSFORMATION
à
Chance
of
sociopoli4cal
(+
ecological)
Renewal
In
connec4on
and
interac4on
of
the
strategies
NATURE
DEVELOPMENT
–
URBAN
RESTRUCTURING
–
ENERGY
TRANSFORMATION
a
development
path
of
sustainable
spa4al
development
is
created
in
a
spa4al
ecologic,
spa4al
aesthe4c
and
sociopoli4cal
regard.
Source
:
Prinzessinengärten,2012
,
H
&
de
Meuron,
AGENCE
TER,
eigene
Aufnahmen
S Y N E R G E T I C
GREEN
CITY
+
GARDENCITY
GREEN
SPACES
-‐
GREEN
NETWORK,
BIODIVERSITY
SOCIAL
+
PARTICIPATIVE
CITY
SMART
NEIGHBOURHOODS
+
PARTICIPATIVE
ACTIONS
SOCIAL
TOGETHER
+
HIGH
LIVING
QUALITY
HUMAN
SCALE
+
HIGH
SPATIAL
QUALITY
FUTURE
CITY
The
challenges
in
transdisciplinary
COMPACT
CITY
DENSITY
+
MIXITY:
URBAN
DEVELOPMENT
„INSIDE
CITY
LIMITS“
planning
and
building
processes:
CITY
OF
SHORT
DISTANCES
+
SMART
MOBILITY
INTEGRATED
PUBLIC
TRANSPORT
SYSTEMS
is
the
equivalent
combina7on
of
aesthe7cal,
ecological
&
technological
RESOURCE
+
SPACE
SAVING
CITY
ENERGY
EFFICIENCY
+
WASTE
REDUCTION
strategies
to
create
convincing
USING
ECO
MATERIALS
+
RENEWABLE
ENERGIES
S P A T I A L
&
L I V I N G
Q U A L I T I E S
ENERGY+
BUILDINGS
+
RENEWING
THE
EXISTING
BUILDING
STOCK
as
well
as
synerge7c
climate
protec7on
and
adap7on
effect
REGENERATIVE
CITY
+
BACK
GIVING
CITY
ENERGY+
CITY
+
RESILIENT
CITY
(THE
LIMIT
OF
DENSITY?)
CLIMATE
PROTECTION
+
ADAPTATION
CHANGE
OF
LIFESTYLES
Lectures 2015/16
ENERGY:
Berlin,
Barcelona,
Paris,
Masdar
CITY
and
à
METROPOLISES
and
MEGACITIES:
Tokyo,
New
York,
Chicago,
Sao
Paulo
SUSTAINABLE
CITIES:
Hamburg,
Kopenhagen,
Vancouver
CLIMATE-‐FRIENDLY
METROPOLITAIN
REGION:
Rhein-‐Neckar
S Y N E R G E T I C
FUTURE
CITY
SMART
C
ITY:
Karlsruhe,
URBAN
ENERGY
CONCEPTS
K I C -‐ i n n o
E N E R G Y
Urban
Planning
and
Energy
Karlsruhe
Oststadt
Concept
of
Climate
ProtecSon
&
AdaptaSon
Sustaining
ENERGIEWENDE:
ParScipate
-‐
IniSate!
Karlsruhe
Oststadt
Concept
of
Climate
ProtecSon
&
AdaptaSon
Sustaining
ENERGIEWENDE:
ParScipate
-‐
IniSate!
stadt,
land,
fluss:
L‘Espace,
Climat
&
Énergie,
ENSA
Strasbourg
Students:
Magni7en,
Nivière,
Pinaud,
Schwartzmann
Christophe
Maignien,
Marion
Nivière
QuarSer
2050
-‐
RegeneraSve
City
Harbour
TransformaSon
Strasbourg
Master
Student
Projects
(2013/14)
ENSAS,
École
na4onale
supérieure
d’architecture
de
Strasbourg
Atelier
Master
1
-‐
Urban
and
Architectural
Design
Integrative Spatial Concept Climate Protection & Adaption
à Nature-‐orientated,
Climate-‐friendly
Megacity
2050
Arbeitsstand
Projektphase
2
Experimentelle
Testentwürfe
Ausgangszustand
KLIMOPASS
II
GEO-‐NET
Umweltconsul4ng
/
berchtoldkrass
space&op4ons
/
Prof.
Baumüller
/
Prof.
Groß
93
Karlsruhe
Rheinhafen
Source:
rad-karlsruhe.de
Karlsruhe
Rheinhafen
Source:
Stadt Karlsruhe
FUTURE CITY KARLSRUHE Rheinhafen - Mühlburg
Concept Climate Protection & Climate Adaptation
KIC - inno ENERGY Urban Planning and Energy Infrastructure_ EXERCISE WS 2016/17
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)
Institut Entwerfen von Stadt und Landschaft
Fachgebiet Stadtquartiersplanung
Prof. Markus Neppl, Dr.-Ing. Kristin Barbey, Dipl.-Ing. Markus Peter
Karlsruhe
Rheinhafen
Source:
Stadt Karlsruhe
FUTURE CITY KARLSRUHE Rheinhafen - Mühlburg
Concept Climate Protection & Climate Adaptation
Create an integrative concept of different measures and make proposals how to realise!
(ppt-presentation, map, photos, collages, graphs)
Present the different mesures by sector and as integrated concept, (all strategies and measures in one map)
Respect the „Stadtbild“ and propose aesthetical improvements by creating climate protection & adaption strategies
Discuss and find the best place for every strategy and measure
Beside the presentation in the drawing 2d and 3d present your ideas in scetches, perspectives and photo-collages
to give an impression of your idea
Discribe your concept in a texte (at least one A4)
Mention the title and the source of every reference you present in PPT and/or texte
Prepare for the presentation PPT + PDF + texte + dxf of the concept
and the printed version A4 of the presentation and the texte
Use layers in the dxf as 01_ENERGY, 02_GREEN SPACE, 03_ MOBILITY, 04_WATER, 05_WASTE + 01.1photovoltaics,...
KIC - inno ENERGY Urban Planning and Energy Infrastructure_ EXERCISE WS 2016/17
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)
Institut Entwerfen von Stadt und Landschaft
Fachgebiet Stadtquartiersplanung
Prof. Markus Neppl, Dr.-Ing. Kristin Barbey, Dipl.-Ing. Markus Peter
Karlsruhe
Rheinhafen
Source:
Stadt Karlsruhe
FUTURE CITY KARLSRUHE Rheinhafen - Mühlburg
Concept Climate Protection & Climate Adaptation
Climate Protection
energy efficiency: renewing technical infrastructure
energetic urban renewal: house insulation, heatpumps,...
renewable energy supply: solar energy, bio energy, geothermal energy
block heat and power plants, powered by bioenergy (attention emissions!)
solar power plants
extension of the public transport system, climate neutral mobility, bike paths
car free districts, car-sharing,...
Climate Adaption
estabilshment of a green space network
green spaces, parks and gardens, green roofs, green facades
optimisation of the climatic interacting system of the quarter
by different green spaces and green measures
resilient spatial structure, removing sealing: integration of heavy rain protection
Green spaces as retention areas of rainwater
multifunctional use of space (green space garden and retention area)
organic farming, urban gardening,...
KIC - inno ENERGY Urban Planning and Energy Infrastructure_ EXERCISE WS 2016/17
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)
Institut Entwerfen von Stadt und Landschaft
Fachgebiet Stadtquartiersplanung
Prof. Markus Neppl, Dr.-Ing. Kristin Barbey, Dipl.-Ing. Markus Peter
Karlsruhe
Rheinhafen
Source:
Stadt Karlsruhe
TIPPING
POINTS
HAMBURG
ZÜRICH
NATURE-‐ORIENTATED
–
CLIMATE-‐FRIENDLY
METROPOLIS
2050
This
material
is
intended
only
for
internal
training
purposes.
Any
(also
in
extracts)
publicaSon,
duplicaSon,
hosSng
or
transfer,
as
well
as
dissimilar
use
is
prohibited.
WS
2017/18
Karlsruhe
Ins4tute
of
Technology
(KIT)
Ins4tut
Entwerfen
von
Stadt
und
LandschaC
Fachgebiet
Stadtquar4ersplanung
Prof.
Markus
Neppl