VOOZH about

URL: https://www.coursera.org/learn/streetexperiments

⇱ Street Experiments for Sustainable and Resilient cities | Coursera


Street Experiments for Sustainable and Resilient cities

Keep adding new skills with 10,000+ programs for $239 (usually $399). Save now.

Street Experiments for Sustainable and Resilient cities

2,939 already enrolled

Included with

Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
4.8

44 reviews

Beginner level

Recommended experience

1 week to complete
at 10 hours a week

Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
4.8

44 reviews

Beginner level

Recommended experience

1 week to complete
at 10 hours a week

What you'll learn

  • You'll learn how cities implement and evaluate different types of street experiments to improve the livability of neighbourhoods

Details to know

Shareable certificate

Add to your LinkedIn profile

Assessments

4 assignments¹

AI Graded see disclaimer
Taught in English
Flexible schedule
Learn at your own pace

There are 4 modules in this course

Our streetscape, despite its feeling of permanence in our environment, is an ideal venue for experimentation. We have come to accept traffic movement as the default function for the street. Therefore, we need to rethink its design and space distribution, go back to its original and basic function and see them as public spaces - Transform them into places for social activities, where conversations can take place and places where kids can play. This course shows you examples of remarkable changes and gives you a toolbox for implementing and evaluating street experiments yourself. We invite you on this journey to reimagine what is possible if we dare to use our public space differently.

This week, we will explore how the COVID-19 pandemic served as a catalyst to open people's thinking about using streets for more social purposes and answer the question, "can functions of mobility and public space co-exist and simultaneously increase the liveability of cities?" We will visit a brief history of the evolution of streets, both in concept and using historical examples, and see how ideology influences people's willingness to reshape the street for different functions. Surprisingly, even automakers see the limitations of cars and are taking steps to hedge against different mobility futures by investing in street experiments and shared mobility.

What's included

6 videos9 readings1 assignment2 plugins

6 videosTotal 41 minutes
  • What will this course be about? A four-week overview2 minutes
  • Introduction to the Technical University of Munich 3 minutes
  • Introduction: The need of experimenting with streets1 minute
  • The Pandemic as a Street Experiment6 minutes
  • Why should we experiment with streets?12 minutes
  • Shaping Urban Mobility, an Automaker's Surprising Perspective17 minutes
9 readingsTotal 68 minutes
  • About this Course2 minutes
  • About EIT Urban Mobility2 minutes
  • Street Experiments Course Roadmap 10 minutes
  • Main Takeaways: The Pandemic as a Street Experiment2 minutes
  • Urban Streets between Public Space and Mobility10 minutes
  • Urban mobility and public space. A challenge for the sustainable liveable city of the future15 minutes
  • Introduction to the final assignment 10 minutes
  • A Street You Go To, Not Just Through: Principles for Fostering Streets as Places15 minutes
  • Week 1 in a nutshell2 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 20 minutes
  • Understanding the Street as Public Space20 minutes
2 pluginsTotal 30 minutes
  • Make Way for the 'One-Minute City'15 minutes
  • The importance of Public Spaces: Place Value by Matthew Carmona15 minutes

This week, we go around the world to see practical examples of street experiments in action. In doing so, we see how experiments can be categorized into 4 different typologies in ascending functional complexity: simple street re-markings, alternative uses of parking spaces, reconversion of sections of streets, and the opening of entire streets to uses other than motorized traffic. We then pose the question, "How can tactical urbanism help create healthier streets?" leading us to find that bottom-up initiatives can be powerful instigators of change.

What's included

3 videos2 readings1 assignment3 plugins

3 videosTotal 17 minutes
  • Introduction: Getting to know Street Experiments 1 minute
  • 4 Types of Street Experiments by Luca Bertolini, Part 14 minutes
  • 4 Types of Street Experiments by Benjamin Büttner, Part 212 minutes
2 readingsTotal 32 minutes
  • From “streets for traffic” to “streets for people”: can street experiments transform urban mobility?30 minutes
  • Week 2 in a nutshell 2 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 20 minutes
  • Getting to know Street Experiments 20 minutes
3 pluginsTotal 45 minutes
  • How can tactical urbanism help create healthier streets? 15 minutes
  • Janette Sadik-Khan TED Talk15 minutes
  • Architect's hands: how can we design better streets | Evelina Ozola | TEDxRiga15 minutes

This week explores how street experiments are implemented, from start to finish, and we will learn about the challenges along the way. We find that street experiments are often the starting point for the transition of public space, and these experiments give people the chance to experience, to really feel the changes immersively, rather than just seeing plans on a board. We learn how to approach strategic problems by using tactical urbanism techniques, and how colorful and eyecatching spaces can do its own marketing. Finally, we make the connection between culture and street design, framing experiments in the context of "mobility culture" and asking us how real world laboratories can explore existing culture and explore new cultures.

What's included

4 videos3 readings1 assignment

4 videosTotal 73 minutes
  • Introduction: Implementing Street Experiments1 minute
  • Experimenting with Streets in Munich, Germany - Melanie Grötsch 15 minutes
  • Experimenting with Streets in Milan - Rossella Ferorell26 minutes
  • Experimenting with Streets in Stuttgart - Jesús Martínez31 minutes
3 readingsTotal 27 minutes
  • Enhancing the Value of Urban Spaces by Re-Shaping Mobility: What Makes Street Experiments Successful?20 minutes
  • The Wisdom of Practitioners in Munich, Milan, and Stuttgart5 minutes
  • Week 3 in a nutshell 2 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 20 minutes
  • Key aspects of successful Street Experiments20 minutes

This week, we ask "are we really challenging mobility systems with these relatively small scale experiments?" Despite all the colorful experimentation taking place around the world, not all experiments lead to permanent changes. We will explore how experiments can serve as short term actions through which alternative structure, cultures and practices are explored. We then look at the five characteristics of the city street experiments: Are they... radical, change-driven, feasible, strategic, and communicative? They are an initial step in the assessment framework since street experiments are so complex. Finally, we are challenged to involve citizens in the experimentation process, and you will learn that buy-in of the community is essential to the long-term success of making experiments permanent.

What's included

5 videos3 readings1 assignment1 peer review

5 videosTotal 41 minutes
  • Introduction: From evaluation to systemic change3 minutes
  • Evaluating Street Experiments7 minutes
  • Experimentation, participation, & the right to reimagine the city Lior Steinberg (Humankind)14 minutes
  • Five Essential Characteristics of Street Experiments8 minutes
  • Experiencing Piazza Zenetti in Munich, Germany8 minutes
3 readingsTotal 32 minutes
  • From temporary arrangements to permanent change: Assessing the transitional capacity of city street experiments.20 minutes
  • Making great strides: Learning from the revolution on Milan's post pandemic streets10 minutes
  • Week 4 in a nutshell 2 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 20 minutes
  • From temporary arrangements to systemic change 20 minutes
1 peer reviewTotal 240 minutes
  • Reflections about Street Experiments240 minutes

Instructors

Instructor ratings
4.6 (16 ratings)
Technical University of Munich (TUM)
1 Course2,939 learners

Explore more from Governance and Society

Why people choose Coursera for their career

👁 Image

Felipe M.

Learner since 2018
"To be able to take courses at my own pace and rhythm has been an amazing experience. I can learn whenever it fits my schedule and mood."
👁 Image

Jennifer J.

Learner since 2020
"I directly applied the concepts and skills I learned from my courses to an exciting new project at work."
👁 Image

Larry W.

Learner since 2021
"When I need courses on topics that my university doesn't offer, Coursera is one of the best places to go."
👁 Image

Chaitanya A.

"Learning isn't just about being better at your job: it's so much more than that. Coursera allows me to learn without limits."

Learner reviews

  • 5 stars

    79.54%

  • 4 stars

    18.18%

  • 3 stars

    0%

  • 2 stars

    2.27%

  • 1 star

    0%

Showing 3 of 44

HB
·

Reviewed on Apr 22, 2022

course material is very useful and easy to understand

Frequently asked questions

To access the course materials, assignments and to earn a Certificate, you will need to purchase the Certificate experience when you enroll in a course. You can try a Free Trial instead, or apply for Financial Aid. The course may offer 'Full Course, No Certificate' instead. This option lets you see all course materials, submit required assessments, and get a final grade. This also means that you will not be able to purchase a Certificate experience.

When you purchase a Certificate you get access to all course materials, including graded assignments. Upon completing the course, your electronic Certificate will be added to your Accomplishments page - from there, you can print your Certificate or add it to your LinkedIn profile.

Yes. In select learning programs, you can apply for financial aid or a scholarship if you can’t afford the enrollment fee. If fin aid or scholarship is available for your learning program selection, you’ll find a link to apply on the description page.

Financial aid available,

¹ Some assignments in this course are AI-graded. For these assignments, your data will be used in accordance with Coursera's Privacy Notice.