3. Arup is no ordinary firm We are an independent firm of designers, planners, engineers, consultants and technical specialists offering a broad range of professional services. Through our work, we make a positive difference in the world. We shape a better world
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8. Energy/Emissions Reduction 能源产生、使用和减少排放 Conventional City Energy Demand 1650 GWH/year CO2 Emissions 350,000 tons/year Dongtan Eco-City Energy Demand 600 GWH/year CO2 Emissions NONE for power/heat NOTE: this is still not good enough for one planet living…
9. Our Clients Business Leaders STEEP Drivers Design Necessity DTX Leaders Our Staff Arup Fellows HEI Approach National Funding Research Champs Drivers of Change Research Roadmap DTF Projects On Project IP Executive Business as Usual NEXT 3-10 yrs NEW 1-3 yrs NOW < 1 yr ecosystem PULL PUSH Skills Networks Arup Projects In-house Training Papers & Press
26. Hotels of the Future The Business Traveller Hilton International, Copenhagen Context Business travel will continue to grow. How confident are we in this official future? What else could happen? Insights Choreographing Sensations Susan Kozel, Artist, School of Interactive Arts & Technology Cars. That’s a Man’s World. Mogens Laursen, Brand Development Manger, Volvo Guests of the Future Simon Dannatt, CEO, Kae Marketing Intelligence Concepts One Space Fluid, open space with interconnected rooms We-hive Plug-in rooms are organized according to a network of tribes Ego Hotel Highly self-expressive guest pods situated around transportation hubs Tactiles Sensual space sensitive to its guest’s needs
27. City Centre Retail 2025 Gottlieb Duttweiler Institute, Zurich Context The role of the city as the centre of commerce is thousands of years old. Why wouldn’t it stay this way? Insights High Street Success Factors Christoph Ackert, Chairman, Location Services Guerilla Retailing Russ Miller, Vacant A Never Ending Love Story? Dieter Geissbuehler, Architect, Alexander Galiker DG und Partner City Centre Retail Gazette 2025 Concepts The Love Inn Holistic leisure club and social beauty centre Spiral to Heaven Comprehensive health check-up retailing space Digital Rough Guide Culturally-sensitive shopping guide for the global consumer Empty Spaces Disused space ‘mobbed’ and ‘swarmed’ for social shopping
28. Airport Retail 2025 Gottlieb Duttweiler Institute, Zurich Context Think of airports as shopping malls with plane parking. Will airports be the mega-retail hubs of the future? Insights Success Criteria for a Luxury Brand in Airport Retail Peter Zottl, Swarovski Space Architecture Andreas Vogler, Architekture & Vision Unwanted Gifts John Ryan, Retailweek Concepts SIMS World The airport as no-man’s land; a federation of “your own laws” Pleasure Dome Everything is provided for everyone. A place you never have to leave Travel Butler A travel companion trained and activated for your travel enjoyment Ethical Airport A place which considers its relationship to sustainable practice
29. Bloc Islands Re-globalisation Global Yo-Yo Flat Line Bloc Islands GLOBAL GOVERNANCE ECONOMIC GROWTH Official futures
31. What are the key external driving forces that will be important for the next 20 years? STEEP Drivers S ocial T echnological Ec onomic En vironmental P olitical disaggregate prioritize re-aggregate
32. S ocial T echnological E c onomic E n vironmental P olitical Demographic Change Convergence ChIndia Resource Depletion Lack of Vision/Leadership www.driversofchange.com
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34. Foresight Feed Blog Team members upload their latest observations, research and events. drivers of change exhibitions Traveling series of exhibitions featuring the drivers of change research including London, Tokyo, etc. (need image)
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38. A few THOUGHTS some of the trends and themes we think are important
39. “ The Urban population [in China] is to reach 1.12 billion by 2050; this is a shift of more than 600 million people from rural to urban.” Guangming Daily Urbanisation
40. Urbanisation demographic change uncomfortably predictable Urban More Developed Rural More Developed Rural Less Developed Urban Less Developed Source: United Nations Population Information Network
42. the energy / wealth ladder Source: IMF, BP +$25k/capita : little extra energy needed +$15k/capita : services start to dominate growth +$5k/capita : industrialisation and mobility take off +$10k/capita : industrialisation near complete Korea Thailand Brazil Mexico India China GJ/capita GDP/capita (‘000 1997$ PPP) Japan EU Australia US 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35
43. 24 Nov 2009 ageing population the number of people aged 60 will triple by 2050. Who will work for you?
what I will cover – intro to arup, the way we explore the future – research, innovation, foresight – more detail on foresight methods we use – I will run through some of our research output – finally you can spend some time to help invent some drivers of change for UPMF
me – engineer, AI, heavily influenced by user centred design – web, product, service design – at arup joined R&D – set-up foresight activity
We are a global firm of designers, engineers, planners and business consultants, providing a diverse range of professional services to clients around the world. A partnership. Holistic design. Sustainability, shaping a better world at our core. We work from 91 offices on projects spanning 128 countries .
We work from 91 offices on projects spanning 128 countries sydney opera house 1959 – 1973 – iconic project for Ove
The building is sustainable & energy efficient. 90% of the solar energy falling on it, is trapped within the structural zone & will be used to heat the pools & interior. THE WATER CUBE, NATIONAL SWIMMING CENTRE, BEIJING, CHINA 17,000-seat swimming centre, with a total floor space of over 70,000m2 for the Beijing Olympics 2008. The Centre will be used prior & post Games as a multi-purpose leisure & elite swimming centre. The Water Cube, which was inspired by cells & soap bubbles will be clad in ETFE foil cushions. It is based on a common natural pattern, the most effective sub-division of three-dimensional space - the fundamental arrangement of organic cells & the natural formation of soap bubbles. It is also based on the way that structure tiles spaces. A structure based on this unique geometry is highly repetitive & buildable whilst appearing very organic & random. Also the ductile space frame that is generated from this geometry is ideally suited to the seismic conditions found in Beijing.
NOW, NEW, NEXT - this chart shows a view of how the company supports research innovation and foresight activity. Issues are pushed from the right and pulled from the left
Acoustics | Applied Geology | Architecture |Audio Visual | Bridges | Building Physics | Business Administration CAD | Communications & IT | Consultation | Ecology | Electrical | Energy | Environmental Services Engineering Environmental | Facade Engineering | Facilities | Financial | Fire | Fluid Dynamics | Geotechnics | Graphics | GIS Highways | Investigation, Repair and Refurbishment | Legal | Lighting | Logistics | Maritime | Marketing | Materials Mechanical Services | Project Management | Property Consulting | Rail Operations | Risk | Research Resource & Waste Management | Quality Management | Security | Seismic | Site Development & Regeneration Structural | Sustainability | Transport Consulting | Track | Traction Power | Train Control | Tunnels Venue Consulting | Virtual Design| Water | Wind Engineering
Research happens through-out the firm but is also supported centrally via a research term. Their mission: Responding to Business needs by: Encouraging, leveraging and sharing research outcomes and best practice within the Arup community
ROADMAPS - Allow us to plan our research activity against overarching trends evolving to reflect latest developments and research needs Future needs and priorities include design tools, health and lifestyle, building performance , water etc.
NETWORKING Our staff have many formal and informal links through to higher education - “Our vision is to significantly advance the UK’s capability to deliver solutions for a sustainable future, by forging practical research collaborations and sharing the outcomes regionally, nationally and internationally”
FUNDING - Their role is to support the strategic development of research and guide the strategy for our funding portfolio – investment in arup Internal R&D calls for proposals: 4 per year £1,250k Intellectual Property Executive £380k Project Plus £50k External Collaborative Research projects £1,825k Pays Arup staff time and expenses for collaborations Leverage between 50% and 2000%
foresight works with thought leaders both inside and out the company to help identify trends that will affect the built environment – multi disc team – architect, engineer, art historian, physicist, economist, geek, social scientist + many interns
how do we work? we have 6 working assumptions head – design analysis; heart – our sustainability philosophy; gut – the qualitative feelings 57 seconds to interview someone
futurists don’t right THE future – they write many futures
we believe there is great value in speaking to many diverse people and listening – much of our drivers of change work has been crowd sourced the future is already here it is just not evenly distributed - gibson
expertise is important – but so is collaboration, networks and ecosystem thinking – Arup employ T shape people
we are biased - a sustainable future is critical
this is probably our main assumption that we try to get our business sectors to accept as standard working practice.
But what do we deliver? March 2006 saw the launch of DoC 2006 – an Arup Design and Technical Executive funded initative – a set of 50 big issues that we believe will drive change.
Where do these issues come from? We do themed workshops with industry thought leaders – to understand current opinion and create plausible futures. for example the hotel of the future resulted in 4 different hotel designs based on 4 quite different future scenarios
socially engineered, designed, user centric approach.
CSM gazette – summer project
included a publication as output – coauthored, published by GDI
The different worlds are created by selecting 2 issues that when mapped as opposites in a 4 square allow us to explore 4 very different worlds. One square will often be the official future – the other three are often difficult “hard to think about” scenarios that seem implausible to those working in the industry
for example between 2005 and 2008 we collected the opinion of 1000’s of people on where they thought we were today (e.g. C) and where they thought we were heading in 20 years time (e.g. C’) – the arrows show the trends of movement of votes from one quadrant to another.
to help understand the plausible futures which may exist we try to identify issues that will drive change. We use the STEEP framework to help broaden our thinking – most people will have good knowledge of 2 or 3 STEEP areas but not all.
here are examples of the top drivers which emerged through events over the past few years.
videos - http://vimeo.com/1690342 or channel ForesightbyDesign http://vimeo.com/channels/foresight
in addition to face to face workshops we also gather opinion online via our tag clouds – here is one from poptech where we had just over 5000 votes cast
we also did an exhibition in a shipping container for design week in tokyo – we had a sushi bar conveyor carrying the cards plus blanks – we received 1200 issues over the duration of the 1 week show.
During 2007/2008 we developed themed card sets around 6 specific themes – researchers interned with us to develop sets of 25 issues – these have also been supplemented with 2 sets on the theme of poverty and food.
So what kind of content is in the cards?
1 - urbanisation– why is everyone moving to cities? WEALTH HEALTH OPPORTUNITY -
implications here for the kind of infrastructure that will be required in future cities – opportunities to leap frog in developing vs developed? different kinds of risks in developing communities – environmental, security, health….
from the 2006 set
from the 2006 set
from the 2006 set
impact on requirements for built environment, community, society
summary - we normally spend a day thinking about this, online versions, add comments
summary - ning site - add a group if you want, tag cloud - if you want to create a public version for UPMF then let me know.
how to get involved – if you want to contribute to examples of bits of cities that you would “cut or paste into the neighborhoods' you use – go to this project. it concerns a wider range of aspects of urban fabric and life - not simply spatial, though it can be - and also enables you to suggest things you'd like to see less of i.e. a cut from a city, as well as a paste into a city. So we might imagine suggested pastes into an urban environment could be elements of urban infrastructure - trams, funiculars, recycling systems, local food delivery services, community gardens - as well as services - integrated ticketing systems a la Oyster or Octopus or Go Cards, say. Cuts could be unnecessarily large freeways, examples of dreadful architecture, potential development sites being sat upon, shoddily run services and so on.