Elements of the City
WHAT WE ARE DOING
WHY WE ARE DOING IT
Sketching city elements
To start creating a bank of potential features to include in your plot of the chain reaction city
ACTIVITY PROMPT
We are going to explore the parts that will make up our Chain Reaction City.
What are the elements that make up a city?
- Pathways + methods of transportation (subway tunnels, roadways, pedestrian paths)
- Infrastructural systems (electricity distribution, water systems)
- Buildings (residential, commercial, landmarks)
- Natural topographical features (mountains, coastlines)
- Green spaces (parks, beaches)
Any others?
Step 1: CITY WALK
Let's go out in the city! Take a 20 minute walk through the surround urban landscape. Each person or pair should choose one city element (from the last slide + any you added) to pay close attention to.
Bring a printed out map of the area with a layer of tracing paper on top of it, and as you go, mark on the map things that you notice about your focus element.
Welcome to Central Square!
Graffiti Alley
NuVu
MIT
Harvard
Park with the crazy swing
Elementary school
Charter School
Step 2: MAP COMPILATION
Back in studio, let's compile the information we found. Either on a light board or digitally, use the base map and layer all of the tracing paper markings and notes.
- What information can you understand about the city with this compiled map that adds to your understanding of its design?
- What did you find out from the map that wasn't obvious from just walking through the area?
EXAMPLE
EXAMPLE
EXAMPLE
Step 3: SKETCHING IDEAS
For each of the following themes, sketch at least two elements from the list (more points for more elements!):
- Naturalia/ Plant City
- Alphabet City
- Pet Metropolis
Spend 5 minutes on each theme-- these should be quick and generative sketches!
ACTIVITY MATERIALS
CHOOSE THE CITY THEME
As a whole group, you are going to construct one invented city, with each group working on a city plot with a series of chain reactions within it. All of these plot will fall under a general theme. Together, discuss possible themes and decide on one to work within.
Example themes might look like the ones we used for sketching prompts in this exercise (Plant City, Alphabet City, Pet Metropolis). They should be general enough that each group has creative freedom, but narrow enough that in the end all of the plots will come together to look like one cohesive cityscape.