Abstract: The design requirements for successful human
accommodation in urban spaces are well known; and the range of
facilities available for meeting urban water quality and quantity
requirements is also well established. Their competing requirements
must be reconciled in order for urban spaces to be successful for
both. This paper outlines the separate human and water imperatives
and their interactions in urban spaces. Stormwater management
facilities- relative potential contributions to urban spaces are
contrasted, and design choices for achieving those potentials are
described. This study uses human success of urban space as the
evaluative criterion of stormwater amenity: human values call on
stormwater facilities to contribute to successful human spaces.
Placing water-s contribution under the overall idea of successful
urban space is an evolution from previous subjective evaluations.
The information is based on photographs and notes from
approximately 1,000 stormwater facilities and urban sites collected
during the last 35 years in North America and overseas, and the
author-s experience on multi-disciplinary design teams. This
conceptual study combines the disciplinary roles of engineering,
landscape architecture, and sociology in effecting successful urban
design.
Abstract: Today we tend to go back to the past to our root
relation to nature. Therefore in search of friendly spaces there are
elements of natural environment introduced as elements of spatial
composition. Though reinvented through the use of the new
substance such as greenery, water etc. made possible by state of the
art technologies, still, in principal, they remain the same. As a result,
sustainable design, based upon the recognized means of composition
in addition to the relation of architecture and urbanism vs. nature
introduces a new aesthetical values into architectural and urban
space.