i am in love with bike lanes. what spurred this passion for well-placed and paved road separations? a semester in the hague, a city in the netherlands. it draws citizens from around the world due to its reputation as a city of justice and peace and as the site of the international criminal court, the peace palace, and the international court of justice, just to name a few.<\/p>\n
i had the chance to dig deeper into my fascination with dutch infrastructure when i met martin aarts, marathon runner and senior advisor for urban planning for the municipality of rotterdam. we met at esri\u2019s geodesign summit europe, at the delft university of technology, or tu delft.<\/p>\n
tu delft, is \u2018just down the road\u2019 from the hague. or a 45 minute bike ride<\/a>, for an amateur like myself.<\/p>\n
delft is a halfway point between the hague and rotterdam, aarts\u2019 city. rotterdam has transformed over the past decade, due in part to aarts\u2019 efforts. aarts spoke at the summit about their 2007-2030 city plan that changed rotterdam from being known as the \u201cdifferent\u201d dutch city (according to aarts) to what cnn just called the \u2018new capital of cool<\/a>\u2019.<\/p>\n
their innovative city planning turned the 2008 financial crisis into an opportunity to build more hospitals, and aarts says the call of the paris climate change conference for sustainable cities and a fossil-free future, is another such opportunity. you can see their newest plan, released in november 2016, the roadmap next economy, here<\/a> (or the brief<\/a>). here\u2019s our conversation.<\/p>\n
kara morgan: how long have you been working for the city of rotterdam?<\/strong><\/p>\n
ma:<\/strong> we are very firm on it, in all kind of ways. we have, as we speak, today, the roadmap next economy<\/a>‘s launch. the main reason for this roadmap next economy is that we should build our economy without fossil energy, so, how to do that? a circular-economy, bio-based. the optimistic part of this vision is, if we start now, we have work to do, so that is employment, and we may be on the front row of this transition, so maybe this also delivers us work in the world. because we not only going to try and protect, but be an example of this new age of economies without fossil [fuel].<\/p>\n
km: how do you think rotterdam compares to cities in the united states? <\/strong><\/p>\n
km: do you see that in other cities in the netherlands?<\/strong><\/p>\n
* to test martin’s statement, i found an interactive tool<\/a> by the municipality of den haag\/the hague. it lets users explore and compare different information about the city or neighborhood where they live. it states that the hague has a rate of 18% of local residents who participate in activities to improve their neighborhoods (updated 2015). i struggled to find comparative numbers for the netherlands overall or the city of rotterdam.<\/p>\n
source: https:\/\/denhaag.buurtmonitor.nl\/jive?cat_open_code=c923&lang=en<\/a><\/p>\n