ASU hosts geodesign workshop for Valley’s best and brightest


people sitting in workshop
|

Geodesign and urban development may not be the sexiest words in the dictionary, but it’s the meaning behind these titles that generates a lot of interest among students and faculty alike.

Arizona State University recently hosted about 15 different organizations at a design and development workshop on the Tempe campus. During the two-day seminar, community representatives, stakeholders and academics met to work out the details of future urban planning in Phoenix. Among the organizations were Native American tribal representatives, economic development directors and community relations officers.

The purpose of the workshop was to demonstrate the use of digital geodesign tools to create a sustainable city in a desert landscape. The focus: Northwest Phoenix, where plans are being laid out to redesign the area around the Thunderbird Global School of Management, which ASU acquired a year and a half ago.  

The designers and developers aim to help everyone impacted by new developments in the area by determining the best possible layouts for new construction projects. This is done primarily through geodesign’s most powerful tool: geographical information systems (or GIS), which allows planners to analyze and evaluate future land-use scenarios with various stakeholders.

The workshop also explored environmental factors, such as CO2 emissions and water conservation.

“Every scientific body that I go to talks about how to create simulation models for the future so that our cities are more sustainable,” said Patricia Gober, interim director at ASU’s School of Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning. “The ability to use these models and fuse them with public debate and discussion helps us tackle climate change issues.”

“The engagement and conversations are positive,” said workshop attendee Bobbi Magdaleno, director of community relations at ASU’s Office of Public Affairs. “It’s exciting because we’re talking about things like growth, change and vision.” 

“[The workshop] is an opportunity for students to have hands-on experience,” said attendee David P. McAlindin, assistant director at Glendale’s Office of Economic Development. “The students can look at how they can better communities with tools that are available to them.”

The workshop also helped kick off a proposed new master’s program in geodesign at ASU. 

According to Gober, the master’s program is a perfect example of how ASU searches for ways to be part of the community, and that there has been a high level of interest from students both locally and internationally.

“I think that the participants and community reps were quite excited by the tech and social processes surrounding geodesign. They saw real potential to develop things for the future,” she said.

More University news

 

Powerlines and a plane are silhouetted against a sunset sky

ASU announces new Global Institute for the Future of Energy

The idea had been tugging at him for years. Whenever Bob Zorich read headlines about energy policy or listened to debates that…

Rows of auditorium seats are covered with plastic wrap

From floor to ceiling, ASU Gammage facelift welcomes audiences back

Carefully wrap a seat in protective plastic. Three thousand times.Scrape layers and layers of paint and epoxy off the floor. By…

University Provost Nancy Gonzales with Olha Budnyk, Advisor - Commissioner of the President of Ukraine on the Presidential Foundation for Support of Education, Science, and Sports

ASU among first US universities to partner in global Ukrainian studies effort

Arizona State University was among five of the first universities in the United States to sign a memorandum of understanding last…