Each year, MAS recognizes outstanding individuals, groups, places and events that have made New York a more livable city. Beginning this year, our annual awards, now named the MAS Livable City Awards, will be celebrated at a special ceremony and reception at the conclusion of day one of the Summit. Categories will include MAS Trailblazer, for a person or organization that has had great impact on our city by paving the way for the improvement of a neighborhood, a borough [...]
What happens when fine artists collaborate with city builders to plan for the future of a neighborhood? What role can the art world take in exploring creative, integrated approaches to planning? Long Island City, one of New York’s waterfront neighborhoods poised for major changes in the next decade, is the focal point of an unprecedented collaboration between artists, planners, architects, and others to help shape the future landscape of that rapidly changing neighborhood. In this moderated conversation, artists who are [...]
Civic Action: Engaging Artists to Re-Envision the Future of Neighborhoods
Libraries, according to the New York Public Library, are “the memory of humankind, irreplaceable repositories of documents of human thought and action.” Local branch libraries especially are anchor institutions and centers for information-seekers. Today, libraries are transforming as they assume a role as places that offer the public Internet access. This change has happened almost seamlessly, spurring modernizations to many libraries. Knowing what we know about new directions in communications, can we anticipate how libraries will evolve further? And how [...]
MAS will release the results of the second annual MAS Survey on Livability in New York City supported by The Rockefeller Foundation, reporting the perceptions, concerns and experiences of the livability of New Yorkers across the five boroughs. City thought leaders will reflect on the results of the survey and offer analyses of the findings.
MAS Survey on Livability: What New Yorkers Say About Their City
What ideas and inspiration can New York City draw from the bold initiatives of other global cities to make our city more livable? Chicago leads the way in environmental sustainability; Toronto integrates immigrants at the fastest rate (and built more skyscrapers last year, exceeded only by Tokyo); Dallas is reinvigorating its downtown with new cultural amenities and London considers how to use the 2012 Olympic investments to enrich the local neighborhoods.
MAS Summit 2011 – Day One Welcome and Introduction
In international indices, the world’s largest and densest cities rank high on economic and environmental indicators but score poorly on a number of measures associated with quality of life. Yet as these cities continue to grow and welcome new people and ideas, they drive economic and social innovation globally.
What are the challenges to livability particular to mega-cities like New York?
What are the examples of improving livability that cities such as these are incubating?
What are the specific indicators that describe a [...]
Where the Jobs Are: The Economics of New York City
New York City has historically been one of the country’s leading job and wealth creators. Where are the new jobs being created now? What needs to happen so the city economy can create more opportunities that are available to all New Yorkers? What is the role of NYC in transforming the US economy into a more sustainable one, driven by technology and innovation? What are our prospects, and what are the implications for planning and development to continue to support [...]
How the Public Sector Can Spur Innovation and Growth in New York City
With 75 percent of New York City’s carbon emissions stemming from energy used in buildings, improving their energy efficiency is crucial, especially for the city’s large buildings. A case study of The Empire State Building, the world’s most famous skyscraper and a landmark in every sense, will focus on how the performance of the building was improved while its historic character was meticulously restored. How the work was financed and why this project serves as a national model of sustainability [...]
Greening the Empire State Building, New York’s Iconic Skyscraper
How is New York City’s leadership approaching the complex challenges facing our aging infrastructure? What are the most pressing problems? What new initiatives are being planned to revitalize and restore our bridges, streets and highways?
How Existing Buildings Contribute to Sustainable and Culturally Rich Communities
New York City is a national leader in developing and implementing sustainability and climate change policies. What role do the city’s older and historic buildings play in those plans, and in New York’s sustainable future? Speakers will explore the challenges and importance of retaining, improving and reusing the city’s older buildings and how doing so can generate jobs how doing so can generate jobs and improve the environment.
How can crumbling infrastructure be rebuilt and maintained? What do neighborhoods need, and how can better planning enable the city to meet those needs? What lessons can we draw from other cities? What are the innovative, sustainable ways to reform aging infrastructure—streets, bridges and public spaces?
How resilient is New York City? Can we absorb sudden shocks to our economy, to our natural environment, to our way of life? Efforts at the national and state levels to anticipate the potential impacts of climate change and sea-level rise on America’s coastal cities must include ways to harness both the social networks and community capacity of New York City to prepare as these changes occur. How is the urban design community in New York responding to these anticipated [...]
MaryAnne Gilmartin, executive vice president of commercial and residential development for Forest City Ratner Enterprises, will share with us the story of how the tallest residential tower in the western hemisphere came to be. Designed by Frank Gehry, 8 Spruce Street is a singular addition to the iconic New York City skyline and tells a rich story of design and development.
Observations on the Making of a New York Skyscraper
The Betaville Massively Participatory online platform, launched at last year’s MAS Summit, is now hard at work: Projects are in the works or underway in Brooklyn, Manhattan,Istanbul, Copenhagen, Gdansk, Léogâne (Haiti), and Toronto, with an international consortium of researchers, developers, and advocates. Betaville is designed to provide a common language and medium for collaborative participation, a “place” where citizens, governments, and businesses can find common ground and creatively build consensus about specific changes to the urban fabric. The vision for [...]
The City Research Studio: From Science Fiction to Future-Making in Real Communities
The New York City Housing Authority is one of the largest public housing agencies in the world, home to thousands of the city’s working-class people and occupying significant blocks of land in prime areas across the five boroughs. How can public housing benefit the surrounding neighborhoods and the city of which they are a part? What are the issues and opportunities in public housing communities? Who are the city builders we need to engage to make these areas more livable, [...]
The zoning resolution, New York City’s most important land use policy document, turns 50 years old this year, is it time for an overhaul? If so, what should the goals and principles be for a 21st century document? How can zoning address some of New York City’s most pressing problems? Local and national experts will address these questions and bring us up to speed on similar reform efforts from across the country.
A New Zoning Resolution for the 21st Century New York: Its Necessity and Potential
MAS will release the results of a comprehensive study on New York City’s Garment District. The report will lay out recommendations to support this vital economic and creative center.
City planning requires the efforts of policymakers, architects, urban planners, developers, designers and others, all working in concert. Urban design happens in broad strokes and in modest interventions. What are today’s challenges and opportunities in creating a well-planned and well-designed city?