Urban
opportunity
education
information
community
action
arium
expression
understanding
participation
discourse
ritual
arium
responsibility
utility
opinion
voice
retreat
arium
exposure
process
insight
engagement
energy
arium
improvement
intelligence
platform
critique
evaluation
arium
example
health
design
landscape
ideas
arium
Sep 22
07:00 PM - 09:00 PM
This event is: Public
Admission Fee: Free

About the event

Speaker: Jeff Kenworthy, Professor in Sustainable Cities, Curtin University, Perth Western Australia and Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences, Germany

This presentation will provide an overview of comparative urban transportation characteristics and related patterns in over 40 cities worldwide. Kenworthy will discuss how these characteristics changed in the important decade between 1995 and 2005 when peak car use first appeared. The talk will examine the phenomenon of peak car use at a national and urban level and looks at some of the reasons that lie behind it. Together with the advent of peak car use, it is shown through an original set of data, how GDP growth has now decoupled from growth in car use, particularly in urban regions, meaning that cities can now increase in economic well-being while at the same time reducing their vulnerability to peak oil and their transportation contributions to climate change, while simultaneously improving urban livability and the human attraction of cities. The talk is extensively illustrated throughout with examples from around the world of some of the key changes that are occurring in different cities in response to what could be one of the most significant changes in this century: the end of dependence on the automobile (though certainly not the end of the automobile).

Moving the City Lecture Series

This event is part of the SFU Urban Studies program's Moving the City lecture series: Vancouver and its Canadian counterparts (Montreal and Toronto) were founded to facilitate the movement of people and goods between international seaports and inland mobility infrastructure (portages, canals, and railways). What can we learn from their extended engagement with local and global mobilities? And what can the world’s experience with building, deconstructing, and repurposing mobility infrastructure teach Vancouver in its quest to become the greenest city by 2020?

The Moving the City lecture series is made possible through the generosity of the Fraser Valley Real Estate Board, the Real Estate Foundation of British Columbia, Langara College, the University of the Fraser Valley, and SFU's City Program. http://www.sfu.ca/urban/news---events/events/kenworthy.html

This lecture is free of charge and open to the public, but reservations are required and the event is expected to fill up quickly. Reservations can be made online at www.sfu.ca/reserve. 

Location: SFU Vancouver (Harbour Centre)

49.28453, -123.111628

SFU Vancouver (Harbour Centre)

515 West Hastings
Vancouver, BC
Canada