-
So, let me add to the complexity
-
of the situation we find ourselves in.
-
At the same time that we're solving
for climate change,
-
we're going to be building cities
for three billion people.
-
That's a doubling
of the urban environment.
-
If we don't get that right,
-
I'm not sure all the climate solutions
in the world will save mankind,
-
because so much depends
on how we shape our cities:
-
not just environmental impacts,
-
but our social well-being,
-
our economic vitality,
-
our sense of community and connectedness.
-
Fundamentally, the way we shape cities
is a manifestation
-
of the kind of humanity we bring to bear.
-
And so getting it right is, I think,
-
the order of the day.
-
And to a certain degree, getting it right
can help us solve climate change,
-
because in the end,
-
it's our behavior that seems
to be driving the problem.
-
The problem isn't free-floating,
-
and it isn't just ExxonMobil
and oil companies.
-
It's us; how we live.
-
How we live.
-
There's a villain in this story.
-
It's called sprawl,
and I'll be upfront about that.
-
But it's not just the kind of sprawl
you think of, or many people think of,
-
as low-density development
-
out at the periphery
of the metropolitan area.
-
Actually, I think sprawl can happen
anywhere, at any density.
-
The key attribute
is that it isolates people.
-
It segregates people
into economic enclaves
-
and land-use enclaves.
-
It separates them from nature.
-
It doesn't allow the cross-fertilization,
-
the interaction,
-
that make cities great places
-
and that make society thrive.
-
So the antidote to sprawl is really
what we all need to be thinking about,
-
especially when we're taking on
this massive construction project.
-
So let me take you through one exercise.
-
We developed the model
for the state of California
-
so they could get on
with reducing carbon emissions.
-
We did a whole series of scenarios
for how the state could grow,
-
and this is just one
overly simplified one.
-
We mixed different development prototypes
-
and said they're going to carry us
through the year 2050,
-
10 million new crew
in our state of California.
-
And one was sprawl.
-
It's just more of the same:
shopping malls, subdivisions,
-
office parks.
-
The other one was dominated by,
not everybody moving to the city,
-
but just compact development,
-
what we used to think of
as streetcar suburbs,
-
walkable neighborhoods,
-
low-rise, but integrated,
mixed-used environments.
-
And the results are astounding.
-
They're astounding not just
for the scale of the difference
-
of this one shift
in our city-making habit
-
but also because each one represents
a special interest group,
-
a special interest group
that used to advocate for their concerns
-
one at a time.
-
They did not see the, what I call,
"co-benefits" of urban form
-
that allows them to join with others.
-
So, land consumption:
-
environmentalists are really
concerned about this,
-
so are farmers;
-
there's a whole range of people,
-
and, of course, neighborhood groups
that want open space nearby.
-
The sprawl version of California
-
almost doubles the urban
physical footprint.
-
Greenhouse gas: tremendous savings,
-
because in California, our biggest
carbon emission comes from cars,
-
and cities that don't depend
on cars as much
-
obviously create huge savings.
-
Vehicle miles traveled:
that's what I was just talking about.
-
Just reducing the average 10,000 miles
per household per year,
-
from somewhere
in the mid-26,000 per household,
-
has a huge impact
not just on air quality and carbon
-
but also on the household pocketbook.
-
It's very expensive to drive that much,
-
and as we've seen,
-
the middle class is struggling to hold on.
-
Health care: we were talking about
how do you fix it once we broke it --
-
clean the air.
-
Why not just stop polluting?
-
Why not just use our feet and bikes more?
-
And that's a function of the kinds
of cities that we shape.
-
Household costs:
-
2008 was a mark in time,
-
not of just the financial
industry running amok.
-
It was that we were trying to sell
too many of the wrong kind of housing:
-
large lot, single family, distant,
-
too expensive for the average
middle-class family to afford
-
and, quite frankly, not a good fit
to their lifestyle anymore.
-
But in order to move inventory,
-
you can discount the financing
and get it sold.
-
I think that's a lot of what happened.
-
Reducing cost by 10,000 dollars --
-
remember, in California
the median is 50,000 --
-
this is a big element.
-
That's just cars and utility costs.
-
So the affordable housing advocates,
who often sit off in their silos
-
separate from the environmentalists,
separate from the politicians,
-
everybody fighting with everyone,
-
now begin to see common cause,
-
and I think the common cause
is what really brings about the change.
-
Los Angeles, as a result of these efforts,
-
has now decided to transform itself
-
into a more transit-oriented environment.
-
As a matter of fact, since '08,
-
they've voted in 400 billion dollars
of bonds for transit
-
and zero dollars for new highways.
-
What a transformation:
-
LA becomes a city of walkers and transit,
-
not a city of cars.
-
(Applause)
-
How does it happen?
-
You take the least
desirable land, the strip,
-
you add where there's space, transit
-
and then you infill mixed-use development,
-
you satisfy new housing demands
-
and you make the existing neighborhoods
-
all around it more complex,
-
more interesting, more walkable.
-
Here's another kind of sprawl:
-
China, high-density sprawl,
what you think of as an oxymoron,
-
but the same problems,
everything isolated in superblocks,
-
and of course this amazing smog
that was just spoken to.
-
Twelve percent of GDP
in China now is spent
-
on the health impacts of that.
-
The history, of course,
of Chinese cities is robust.
-
It's like any other place.
-
Community was all about small, local shops
-
and local services and walking,
interacting with your neighbors.
-
It may sound utopian, but it's not.
-
It's actually what people really want.
-
The new superblocks --
-
these are blocks that would have
5,000 units in them,
-
and they're gated as well,
because nobody knows anybody else.
-
And of course, there isn't even
a sidewalk, no ground floor shops --
-
a very sterile environment.
-
I found this one case
here in one of the superblocks
-
where people had illicitly set up
shops in their garages
-
so that they could have that kind
of local service economy.
-
The desire of people
to get it right is there.
-
We just have to get the planners
on board and the politicians.
-
All right. Some technical planning stuff.
-
Chongqing is a city of 30 million people.
-
It's almost as big as California.
-
This is a small growth area.
-
They wanted us to test
the alternative to sprawl
-
in several cities across China.
-
This is for four-and-a-half
million people.
-
What the takeaway from this image is,
-
every one of those circles
is a walking radius
-
around a transit station --
-
massive investment in metro and BRT,
-
and a distribution that allows everybody
-
to work within walking distance of that.
-
The red area, this is a blow-up.
-
All of a sudden, our principles
called for green space
-
preserving the important
ecological features.
-
And then those other streets in there
are auto-free streets.
-
So instead of bulldozing,
leveling the site
-
and building right up to the river,
-
this green edge was something
that really wasn't normative in China
-
until these set of practices
-
began experimentation there.
-
The urban fabric, small blocks,
-
maybe 500 families per block.
-
They know each other.
-
The street perimeter has shops
-
so there's local destinations.
-
And the streets themselves become smaller,
-
because there are more of them.
-
Very simple,
-
straightforward urban design.
-
Now, here you have something
I dearly love.
-
Think of the logic.
-
If only a third of the people have cars,
-
why do we give 100 percent
of our streets to cars?
-
What if we gave 70 percent of the streets
-
to car-free, to everybody else,
-
so that the transit
could move well for them,
-
so that they could walk,
so they could bike?
-
Why not have --
-
(Applause)
-
geographic equity
-
in our circulation system?
-
And quite frankly,
cities would function better.
-
No matter what they do,
-
no matter how many ring roads
they build in Beijing,
-
they just can't overcome
complete gridlock.
-
So this is an auto-free street,
mixed use along the edge.
-
It has transit running down the middle.
-
I'm happy to make that transit
autonomous vehicles,
-
but maybe I'll have a chance
to talk about that later.
-
So there are seven principles
that have now been adopted
-
by the highest levels
in the Chinese government,
-
and they're moving to implement them.
-
And they're simple,
-
and they are globally,
I think, universal principles.
-
One is to preserve
the natural environment, the history
-
and the critical agriculture.
-
Second is mix.
-
Mixed use is popular,
but when I say mixed,
-
I mean mixed incomes, mixed age groups,
-
as well as mixed-land use.
-
Walk.
-
There's no great city
that you don't enjoy walking in.
-
You don't go there.
-
The places you go on vacation
are places you can walk.
-
Why not make it everywhere?
-
Bike is the most efficient
means of transportation we know.
-
China has now adopted policies
that put six meters of bike lane
-
on every street.
-
They're serious about getting back
to their biking history.
-
(Applause)
-
Complicated planner you see here.
-
Connect.
-
It's a street network
that allows many routes
-
instead of singular routes,
-
and provides many kinds of streets
instead of just one.
-
Ride.
-
We have to invest more in transit.
-
There's no silver bullet.
-
Autonomous vehicles are not
going to solve this for us.
-
As a matter of fact, they're going
to generate more traffic, more VMT,
-
than the alternative.
-
And focus.
-
We have a hierarchy of the city
based on transit,
-
rather than the old armature of freeways.
-
It's a big paradigm shift,
-
but those two things
have to get reconnected
-
in ways that really shape
the structure of the city.
-
So I'm very hopeful.
-
In California, the United States, China --
these changes are well accepted.
-
I'm hopeful for two reasons.
-
One is, most people get it.
-
They understand intrinsically
-
what a great city can and should be.
-
The second is that the kind of analysis
we can bring to bear now
-
allows people to connect the dots,
-
allows people to shape
political coalitions
-
that didn't exist in the past.
-
That allows them to bring into being
the kinds of communities we all need.
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)
-
Chris Anderson: So, OK:
autonomous driving, self-driving cars.
-
A lot of people here
are very excited about them.
-
What are your concerns
or issues about them?
-
Peter Calthorpe: Well, I think
there's almost too much hype here.
-
First is, everybody says
we're going to get rid of a lot of cars.
-
What they don't say is you're going
to get a lot more vehicle miles.
-
You're going to get a lot more
cars moving on streets.
-
There will be more congestion.
-
CA: Because they're so appealing --
-
you can drive while reading or sleeping.
-
PC: Well, a couple of reasons.
-
One is, if they're privately owned,
people will travel greater distances.
-
It'll be a new lease on life to sprawl.
-
If you can work on your way to work,
-
you can live in more remote locations.
-
It'll revitalize sprawl
-
in a way that I'm deeply frightened.
-
Taxis:
-
about 50 percent of the surveys say
that people won't share them.
-
If they don't share them,
-
you can end up with a 90 percent
increase in vehicle miles traveled.
-
If you share them,
-
you're still at around
a 30 percent increase in VMT.
-
CA: Sharing them, meaning
having multiple people riding at once
-
in some sort of intelligent ride-sharing?
-
PC: Yeah, so the Uber share
without a steering wheel.
-
The reality is, the efficiency
of vehicles -- you can do it
-
with or without a steering wheel,
it doesn't matter.
-
They claim they're the only ones
that are going to be efficient electric,
-
but that's not true.
-
But the real bottom line
is that walking, biking and transit
-
are the way cities and communities thrive.
-
And putting people
in their private bubbles,
-
whether they have a steering wheel or not,
-
is the wrong direction.
-
And quite frankly,
-
the image of an AV on its way
to McDonald's to pick up a pack
-
without its owner,
-
just being sent off on these
kind of random errands
-
is really frightening to me.
-
CA: Well, thank you for that,
and I have to say, the images you showed
-
of those mixed-use streets
were really inspiring, really beautiful.
-
PC: Thank you.
CA: Thank you for your work.
-
(Applause)