URBAN Design - an Overview
toward a better understanding of urban planning and design
Description
This course will give you an introduction to URBAN DESIGN. The course is intended for students who are new to URBAN DESIGN. The content promotes positive learning, and the course lectures, notes, and videos will help you understand planning and design better. It lays the groundwork for all future urban studies. This course delves into key substantive areas and concepts in urban and regional planning. By better understanding how and where we choose to live, we can begin to address global, regional, and local issues of unsustainable development priorities. This course provides a broad overview of social science theories and analysis methods for investigating how people, communities, and governments plan cities.
Uses theories and methods from a variety of social science disciplines. This course also introduces students to the scientific study of ecosystems, with a focus on how natural ecological systems function, how human activities affect these systems, and how constraints on these systems affect society.
The course will provide the following learning outcomes:
· Understanding the basics of Urban Design
· The role of Urban Design in Neighborhood Development
· Key framework for Sustainable neighborhood panning
· A recent trends in New Urbanism
· Key developments, innovations and debates in Urban Planning and Design.
· Exploring the role and impact of Urban Design
Each module that follows will be a self-contained graphical presentation of a group of ideas and visuals.
What You Will Learn!
- This course expand knowledge in Urban Design Contexts, issues and solutions
- Explains principles and elements of Urban Design
- To encourage participants to analyse social and spatial relationships in planning
- The importance of Urban Design to create placemaking and imageability
- Helps to understand the role of urban design for liveability
Who Should Attend!
- Urban Designers, Urban Planners, Architects, Politicians, Social activists and students of architecture and urban design