Putting people at the centre of neighbourhoods
Dr Natalie Allen is an urban strategist and director at The Urban Advisory. Working with central and local government, developer and community clients she specialises in the design and delivery of urban regeneration and renewal programmes, integrated mixed-use neighbourhoods, and community-led development projects.
Dr Allen is one of the speakers at the NZILA Firth Conference in Tauranga in May. Her presentation is looking at neighbourhoods as cohesive landscapes that deliver wellbeing.
LAA: How has COVID-19 influenced your thinking on neighbourhood design and the importance of community?
NA: COVID has made us very cognizant of just how plausible wide-reaching and fast-acting change can be, which is an exciting prospect for how we might be able to live in the future. With the increasing work-from-home opportunities it has also shed a very important light on the benefits of having amenities integrated into our neighbourhoods. This includes supermarkets (and other food stores), cafes, print shops and postal services, and other facilities that benefit the increasing number of people who want to be able to access work-related amenities from their home environments.
LAA: How have community needs changed over the last 20 years, or are the same things important in design?
NA: I think there has been a steady shift towards the importance of convenience as people try to fit more and more into their daily lives. Of course the core principles around how valuable green and open spaces are, places to convene and access to nature are still constants. But there are not the same work versus home divides as before. With the increasing rates of loneliness also, I think we need to focus a lot more on how to design in opportunities for interactions and more multi-generational spaces than we have previously considered.
LAA: To create an effective, desirable neighbourhood, how important is collaboration between professions?
NA: Collaboration between the professions is fundamental to success given the increasingly complex nature of today's projects and the multi-use functionality required as a reality of cost and space saving. This includes not only the design professions, but all players involved in delivery through better public private partnerships.
LAA: What makes an effective urban designer/strategist?
NA: An effective urban designer/strategist must be a connecter of people and ideas who can bring together disparate views and generate inclusive, forward-thinking solutions. They must also have a deep respect for places and their layered histories and help to bring others on the delivery journey with them.
LAA: What will your key message at the NZILA conference be?
NA: Neighbourhoods are cohesive landscapes that require integrated thinking — across the whole built environment industry — about how to deliver convenience and build community. The design of our future neighbourhoods needs to centre around embracing a citizen-centric approach and an understanding of the evolving ways in which urban amenities are valued by residents.