Transcript
00:01I had the honor and privilege of being at the very small table in Jack's office with Bill Miller...
00:06...about four years ago when the term GeoDesign was coined...
00:10...maybe getting my chronology slightly wrong, and from a glimmer in our eye...
00:15...I'm really just very pleased to...to see the progress that's already been made in four years...
00:21...starting with a bunch of small prototypes, and I wanted to just go over the...
00:27...what I think is the key idea that...that we started with...
00:30...and reraise the issue of are we there yet, and is this the right starting idea?
00:37We...we basically came at this from the point of view of why aren't more landscape architects...
00:45...why aren't more designers, why aren't more architects, using GIS to inform their design decisions?
00:51And doing that humbly and saying, what is it that these people know in their working methods that...
00:57...that we don't know and haven't applied in GIS, and one of the first things we came up with through observation is sketching.
01:04And the notion that if you look at what separates designers, using the term loosely from other types of analytic tasks...
01:12...the notion of generating many ideas and then being ruthless about filtering them out...
01:18...is one of the operating creative characteristics of design.
01:21And we felt that GIS at the time was not supporting that well, and we came up with a notion of geospatial design...
01:30...or now GeoDesign, that I would define basically as a design and planning method...
01:36...which tightly couples the creation of design proposals with impact simulations informed by geographic context.
01:43So that's...that's the tightest I could get in a sentence, and the...the focus really was on all of these pieces...
01:53...the tight coupling, the impact simulation, and the geographic context.
01:57I think we've seen some good examples this morning of how...pieces that might work.
02:02So as some of the earlier speakers, we noticed disciplinary and professional divisions separating design from evaluation...
02:10...design from construction or from facilities management, and felt that that led to a lack of information flow back to design...
02:18...to bad design, or important conditions...considerations being ignored...
02:22...and to slow inexpensive workflows from basically the long-deferred evaluations.
02:28You build the project and then you figure out that channelizing the river isn't a great idea.
02:33And so an initial kind of use case was how do you build a green neighborhood...
02:40...and how do you know that you're building a green neighborhood?
02:43Similar to the...the idea's really from the '60s of integration of science...
02:51...we...we knew that we wanted to be able to bring scientific information, and also regulatory information...
02:55...and we knew that this information was needed...basically the sooner the better.
03:01So we wanted basic screening and vulnerability models, which we feel are often sufficient for preliminary design...
03:07...and we asked, why waste time considering infeasible options?
03:11And the summary of this is in this diagram, which basically set...sets up the pieces that we're thinking of.
03:22The idea was, first of all to separate technically the cons...the idea of sketching from the idea of evaluation...
03:32...and yet to bring back the results of impact modeling into the design environment, here called Sketch Client.
03:38And rather than to consider this as a pipeline flowing just one way once...
03:44...to really concentrate on the bottom half of the diagram in terms of in-design feedback, the possibility for external reviews...
03:52...the thought process the designer is going through when laying down a single polygon...
03:57...or doing a policy decision, and essentially using as a metric, the cycle time.
04:04How many times can you get through this and get valuable, useful feedback?
04:09So the mantra was design it anywhere, evaluate everywhere, feed back quickly.
04:14And that was really the initial conceptual idea...
04:17...and...and still one that I think has some traction and a little bit of room left to go.
GeoDesign: Fundamental Principles
On day one of the 2010 GeoDesign Summit, Michael Flaxman explains the fundamental principles of GeoDesign and discusses routes forward.
- Recorded: Jan 6th, 2010
- Runtime: 04:23
- Views: 8426
- Published: Oct 25th, 2010
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