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Arcology, Arcosanti and the Green Urbanism Vision

Ruth A. Rae (Adjunct Professor, Sustainable Urban Environments Technology, Culture and Society Department, New York University Tandon School of Engineering)

Open House International

ISSN: 0168-2601

Article publication date: 1 December 2016

219

Abstract

Arcosanti is a prototype city being built based on the visionary architect Paolo Soleri’s principles of Arcology which integrates architecture with ecology. Arcology proposes a compact three-dimensional urban form to provide a lean alternative to the unsustainable urban sprawl city form found in most of America. In its reduction of dependence on the automobile, reliance on pedestrian transportation, proximity to nature and proposal to have agriculture integrated into the city, Arcology is a vision of Green Urbanism. The design of Arcosanti incorporates Biophilic principles that preserve the biodiverse natural landscape, has a compact organic form, and functions with a circular metabolism that is analogous to nature when complete. Arcosanti, located in central Arizona, was begun in 1970 as an urban laboratory, and has been constructed by over 7,000 workshop volunteers over the past 45 years. Following Soleri's death in 2013, the Cosanti Foundation has established a Strategic Planning Steering Committee to help guide the continued development of Arcosanti as a prototype Arcology. The Strategic Plan will provide a framework for future organization and development. This article examines how the concept of Arcology and the development of the Arcosanti prototype encompasses principles of Green Urbanism and sustainable development.

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Citation

Rae, R.A. (2016), "Arcology, Arcosanti and the Green Urbanism Vision", Open House International, Vol. 41 No. 4, pp. 56-62. https://doi.org/10.1108/OHI-04-2016-B0008

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Open House International

Copyright © 2016 Open House International

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