Regional and Urban Design Committee

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Who we are

The Regional and Urban Design Committee (RUDC) aims to improve the quality of the regional and urban environment by promoting excellence in design, planning, and public policy in the built environment. This will be achieved through its member and public education, in concert with allied community and professional groups. Join us!

2024 Symposium

The 2024 symposium will be held in Indianapolis, IN in November. Stay tuned for dates and location. Registration will open in July.

2023 RUDC Symposium

The RUDC Symposium, held in Washington, DC October 19-20, covered emerging trends, theories, and technologies that are shaping the future of regional and urban design. Watch the engaging highlight and speaker videos >.

The Missing Link in the Epic Narrative of City versus Countryside

  • 1.  The Missing Link in the Epic Narrative of City versus Countryside

    Posted 01-14-2021 05:23 PM

    The missing link in the epic narrative of "the countryside vs the city" 

    Anyone looking at the US electoral map can see how urbanization manifests itself in the US. A greater number of people lives in small concentrated urban areas (the districts showing up in blue) than in the vast (red) territory in between the coasts and outside the urban centers. The people in the urban areas and those in the rural areas live in two different worlds and they follow different cultures and politics. This article explore this not mainly as a political issue, but also an environmental one and a matter of design.

    Pieter Bruegel: The Harvester, the countryside in 1565

    The UN says that global urbanization will continue and that in a few years 70% of the global population will live in metropolitan areas. For Americans who always had split feelings about big cities this is not a happy future.  Clearly, the transition isn't free of tension. ...

    The linchpin of my argument is the hypothesis that the attributes that explain patterns of urbanizing migration also increasingly account for both party affiliation and growing regional economic divergence. These things are just pulling high-density cities and lower-density exurbs and rural areas further and further apart culturally and politically.(Will Wilkinson about his paper "The Density Divide")

    But the binary view of liberals living in dense cities and conservatives in the countryside is too simple.  It overlooks....

    READ FULL ARTICLE HERE



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    [Klaus] Philipsen FAIA
    Archplan Inc. Philipsen Architects
    Baltimore MD
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    24.04.30 RUDC AIAU