Jan Kattein Architects

BROWSE ALL FROM THIS PHOTOGRAPHER HERE

Health, Habitat, and Civic Infrastructure: Designing the City as a National Park

Subscriber Access | 

Cities around the world share a common goal: to become healthier and greener, supported by civic infrastructure that restores ecosystems and strengthens public life. The question is how to reach this. Global climate targets, local building codes, and municipal standards increasingly guide designers and planners toward better choices. Still, many cities struggle to translate these frameworks into everyday, street-level comfort and long-term ecological protection. What happens if the city is no longer treated as a traditional city, but as a national park?

National parks operate through systems of protection that treat land as a network of ecological relationships rather than a collection of isolated sites. They establish a shared baseline for what must be preserved, maintained, and made accessible over time. When this logic is applied to the urban environment, success can inspire pride and a sense of shared responsibility among designers, policymakers, and residents, fostering a collective commitment to health, habitat, and civic infrastructure.

Health, Habitat, and Civic Infrastructure: Designing the City as a National Park - More Images+ 13

Cities Need Care, Not Perfection: Rethinking How We Build the Urban Future

Subscriber Access | 

What does optimism feel like in cities that can no longer rely on perfection as their ultimate ambition? Across the world, urban environments bear the weight of overlapping pressures: climate volatility, spatial inequality, political fragmentation, public distrust, and chronic infrastructural disinvestment. These realities render the idea of an ideal city increasingly detached from lived experience. Yet the hope for building better systems persists. While utopian visions may seem like an escape from the growing complexities of the modern world, the greater challenge for contemporary city-making is to confront those complexities rather than avoid them.

Cities Need Care, Not Perfection: Rethinking How We Build the Urban Future - More Images+ 16

Ebury Edge Community Center / Jan Kattein Architects

Ebury Edge Community Center / Jan Kattein Architects - More Images+ 14

  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  600
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2020
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Dulux AzkoNobel Trade, Fermacell, Flight Timber, Forbo, LAYHER, +2