They found that over 3 decades, cities have transitioned from building outward to building upward. Image via Ethan Brooke/ Pexels Cities worldwide now building up instead of out. The city of the future is a city that reaches for the sky.
As populations grow, cities grow to accommodate them, and the sprawling trend of cities expanding outwards is becoming less and less sustainable. The solution? Building upwards! From easier transportation and access to amenities to affordable housing, there are many benefits to building []. We use the data to unpack how outward construction (building area) and upward construction (building height) account for the volume-income relation observed globally.
Vertical expansion is the main driver of international volume differences, as it accounts for ∼ 60% of the global volume-income relation, including in the developing world. Why not upwards? In 2009, we were building equal numbers of new flats and houses; this was the high point of multistorey residential development. By 2022, the proportion of new homes that were single-family houses had risen again to a staggering 83 per cent, while the number of flats had fallen back to 17 per cent.
The numbers have not budged. The study found that while cities once expanded by covering more land, they are now increasingly building upward, with Asian cities leading this charge. Building upward can come with inevitable obstacles, and developers should use all the tools and strategies available to them.
From a complex permitting process to higher construction costs, technology can help developers tackle these obstacles and bring complex high. And the taller the building, the stronger the wind, so the more architects must think about it and design around it. But we already know plenty of ways to reduce this effect, like having a thinner building at the top, rounding edges, twisting buildings to flow the wind upwards, or simply making holes for wind to pass.
Urban build-up worldwide grew by 30% between 1990 and 2015, with new buildings covering an area roughly the size of Sri Lanka, the bank said in a report that was based on satellite data analysis. Strong social impact organizations are more than the sum of their programs-they rely on clear structures, effective systems, and sustainable processes to achieve their missions. So we've created a mini.
Cities around the world are literally growing up. A new study shows that, as urban areas expand, they are doing so less by sprawling and more by reaching skyward. While upwards expansion has.