Sustainable Cities of the Future: The Behavior Change Driver

Imagine a city that uses 100 percent renewable energy... where most transport is by electric light rail, biking, or walking . . . where the solar office block is filled with green businesses, where the local farmers’ market sells fresh, bioregional produce . . . where parents meet in the parks and g...

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Main Author: Newman, Peter
Format: Journal Article
Published: American University, Washington College of Law 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15666
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author Newman, Peter
author_facet Newman, Peter
author_sort Newman, Peter
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description Imagine a city that uses 100 percent renewable energy... where most transport is by electric light rail, biking, or walking . . . where the solar office block is filled with green businesses, where the local farmers’ market sells fresh, bioregional produce . . . where parents meet in the parks and gardens while their children play without fear in streets that are car-free. This is a reality in Vauban, a new eco-city of 5,000 households within Freiburg, Germany. 1 And in nearby Hanover, a city of 500,000 people has reduced its greenhouse gas emissions by fifty percent. 2 How did these communities transform their cultures to make the transition that every city now faces? Vauban and Hanover took the opportunity to use every policy lever possible at every step of the way—from planning to delivery—to ensure that the goal of sustainability drove each decision. These policy levers will be outlined and new data will be provided regarding the education lever, which involves behavior change and cultural adaptation
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-156662017-01-30T11:51:14Z Sustainable Cities of the Future: The Behavior Change Driver Newman, Peter Imagine a city that uses 100 percent renewable energy... where most transport is by electric light rail, biking, or walking . . . where the solar office block is filled with green businesses, where the local farmers’ market sells fresh, bioregional produce . . . where parents meet in the parks and gardens while their children play without fear in streets that are car-free. This is a reality in Vauban, a new eco-city of 5,000 households within Freiburg, Germany. 1 And in nearby Hanover, a city of 500,000 people has reduced its greenhouse gas emissions by fifty percent. 2 How did these communities transform their cultures to make the transition that every city now faces? Vauban and Hanover took the opportunity to use every policy lever possible at every step of the way—from planning to delivery—to ensure that the goal of sustainability drove each decision. These policy levers will be outlined and new data will be provided regarding the education lever, which involves behavior change and cultural adaptation 2010 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15666 American University, Washington College of Law restricted
spellingShingle Newman, Peter
Sustainable Cities of the Future: The Behavior Change Driver
title Sustainable Cities of the Future: The Behavior Change Driver
title_full Sustainable Cities of the Future: The Behavior Change Driver
title_fullStr Sustainable Cities of the Future: The Behavior Change Driver
title_full_unstemmed Sustainable Cities of the Future: The Behavior Change Driver
title_short Sustainable Cities of the Future: The Behavior Change Driver
title_sort sustainable cities of the future: the behavior change driver
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15666