讲者: William J. Mitchell: Head, Program in Media Arts and Sciences Mitchell's home page
Anthony M. Townsend: PhD candidate in MIT's Department of Urban Studies and Planning
关于本次演讲: When cities have suffered major destruction in the past, through fire, earthquake, bombing, and so on, the physical rebuilding task has involved (1) recreating network infrastructure -- transportation networks, water supply, etc., and (2) replacing residential, commercial, industrial, and other floor space supported by that infrastructure. The task of reconstructing Lower Manhattan after the September 11 attacks obviously has these aspects, but there are some additional ones as well. First, the reconstruction of digital telecommunications networks is now a critically important infrastructure issue -- particularly given the nature of the enterprises that were displaced. This reconstruction began to unfold almost instantly, since such networks -- particularly the Internet -- are increasingly designed to be self-repairing, and to route automatically around damage. Secondly, at least some of the dispersal of enterprises that followed September 11 may turn out to be irreversible; to reduce future vulnerability, displaced enterprises may choose greater dispersal and facility redundancy, supported by sophisticated electronic telecommunications, rather than return to place all their eggs in one basket.
Mitchell and Townsend explore the new conditions and strategies of urban rebuilding in the digital electronic era, examine what has actually happened in Manhattan so far, and make some suggestions about achieving high levels of urban resilience in the future.
关于影片(影片时间索引):影片长度为 1:28:56 and begins with an introduction by Lawrence J. Vale Professor and Associate Head of the Department of Urban Studies and Planning at MIT
William J. Mitchell's talk begins at 4:20
Anthony M. Townsend's talk begins at 44:02
The Q&A begins at 1:09:11
以上资料为本影片上传至 MITWORLD 网站上当时所获知的资讯。此影片上传日为: 2002-05-13.
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