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Lindsay Greg - Aerotropolis

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Lindsay Greg Aerotropolis

Aerotropolis: summary, description and annotation

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Aerotropolis is the groundbreaking account of a development that is transforming the way cities are built and the way business is conducted from Vancouver to Singapore and from Dubai to Denver.

John Kasarda invented the term aerotropolis to describe the combination of giant airport, planned city, shipping facility, and business hub that will connect the worlds economies in the coming phase of globalization. With business writer Greg Lindsay, he draws on a decades worth of cutting-edge research to offer a visionary look at how the metropolis of the future will change the face of our physical world and the nature of global enterprise. Aerotropolis shows us how to make the most of a phenomenon that is profoundly challenging but that also offers unparalleled opportunities.

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AEROTROPOLIS

AEROTROPOLIS

THE WAY WELL LIVE NEXT

JOHN D. KASARDA | GREG LINDSAY

Aerotropolis - image 1

VIKING CANADA

Published by the Penguin Group

Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4P 2Y3 (a division of Pearson Canada Inc.)

Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, U.S.A.

Penguin Books Ltd, 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England

Penguin Ireland, 25 St Stephens Green, Dublin 2, Ireland (a division of Penguin Books Ltd)

Penguin Group (Australia), 250 Camberwell Road, Camberwell, Victoria 3124, Australia (a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty Ltd)

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Penguin Books (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd, 24 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank, Johannesburg 2196, South Africa

Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England

Published in Canada by Penguin Group (Canada), a division of Pearson Canada Inc., 2011 Simultaneously published in the United States by Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 18 West 18th Street, New York 10011

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 (RRD)

Copyright John D. Kasarda and Greg Lindsay, 2011

Portions of this book originally appeared in Fast Company.

Grateful acknowledgment is made for permission to reprint the following material: Quotation from Airports: The Cities of the Future by J.G. Ballard, originally published in Blueprint: Architecture, Design & Contemporary Culture. Copyright 1997 by J.G. Ballard, used with permission of the Wylie Agency, LLC. Image on page 100 from Flying Smart, Thinking Big: Global Market Forecast 20092028 courtesy of Airbus.

All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

Manufactured in the U.S.A.

Designed by Jonathan D. Lippincott

LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES CANADA CATALOGUING IN PUBLICATION

Kasarda, John D.

Aerotropolis / John Kasarda and Greg Lindsay.

ISBN 978-0-670-06863-0

1. Urban economics. 2. AirportsEconomic aspects.

3. City planning. 4. Globalization. I. Lindsay, Greg, 1977- II. Title.

HT321.K38 2011 330.91732 C2010-906235-3

Visit the Penguin Group (Canada) website at www.penguin.ca

Special and corporate bulk purchase rates available; please see

www.penguin.ca/corporatesales or call 1-800-810-3104, ext. 2477 or 2474

For Mary Ann, my foundation while Im in the air

JDK

For Sophie, who was always waiting in arrivals

GL

I suspect that the airport will be the true city of the 21st century. The great airports are already the suburbs of an invisible world capital, a virtual metropolis whose fauborgs are named Heathrow, Kennedy, Charles de Gaulle, Nagoya, a centripetal city whose population forever circles its notional centre, and will never need to gain access to its dark heart. J. G. Ballard

A city made for speed is made for success. Le Corbusier

CONTENTS

AEROTROPOLIS

INTRODUCTION

The shapes and fates of cities have always been defined by transportation. Today, this means air travel.

Stan Gale was exultant. The chairman of Gale International yanked off his tie, hitched up his pants, and mopped the sweat and floppy hair from his brow. He beamed like a proud new papa, sprung from the waiting room and handing out cigars to whoever happens by. Beckoning me to follow, he sauntered across eight lanes of traffic toward his baby, New Songdo City, delivered prematurely days before.

Ten years ago, Gale was a builder and flipper of New Jersey office parks. But his fate began to change in 2001 with a phone call from South Korea. The Korean government had found his firm on the Internet and made an offer everyone else had refused. The brief: Gale would borrow $35 billion from Koreas banks, partner with its biggest steel company, and use the money to build from scratch a city the size of downtown Boston, only taller and denser, on a muddy man-made island in the Yellow Sea. When Gale arrived to see the site, it was miles of open water. He signed anyway.

New Songdo wont be finished until 2015 at least, but in August 2009, Gale cut the ribbon on its hundred-acre Central Park modeled, like so much of the city, on Manhattans. Climbing on all sides is a mix of low-rises and sleek spirescondos, offices, even South Koreas tallest building, the 1,001-foot Northeast Asia Trade Tower. Strolling along the parks canal, we heard cicadas buzzing, saws whining, and pile drivers pounding down to bedrock. I asked whether hed stocked the canal with fish yet. Its four days old! he spluttered, forgetting he wasnt supposed to rest until the seventh.

As far as playing God (or SimCity) goes, New Songdo is the most ambitious instant city since Braslia appeared fifty years ago. Braslia, of course, was an instant disaster: grandiose, monstrously overscale, and immediately encircled by slums. New Songdo has to be much better, because theres a lot more riding on it than whether Gale can repay his loans. It has been hailed since conception as the experimental prototype community of tomorrow. A green city, it was LEED certified from the get-go, designed to emit a third of the greenhouse gases of a typical metropolis its size. Its supposed to be a smart city studded with chips talking to one another, running the place by remote control. Its architects borrowed blueprints from Paris, Sydney, Venice, and London, sketching what might become the prettiest square mile in Korea. (Nearby Seoul is a forest of colossally ugly apartment blocks.)

New Songdo isnt so much a Korean city as a Western one floating offshore. Smart, green credentials aside, it was chartered as an international business districta hub for companies working in China. Wor-ried about being squeezed by its neighbors, New Songdo is Koreas earnest attempt to build an answer to Hong Kong. To make expatriates feel at home, its malls are modeled on Beverly Hills, and Jack Nicklaus designed the golf course. But its most salient feature is shrouded in perpetual haze opposite a twelve-mile-long bridge that is one of the worlds longest. On the far side is Incheon International Airport, which opened in 2001 on another man-made island and instantly became one of the worlds busiest hubs.

They tracked us down, wanted us to build a city in the ocean, and no one else was interested? What was going on here? Gale told me, still dazed. Their vision scared everyone else away. It wasnt until I saw the airport that I understood where they wanted to go with this. China. His sales pitch to prospective tenants is simple: move here, and youre only a two-hour flight away from Shanghai or Beijing, and four hours away at most from cities youve never heard of, like Changsha. Chairman Maos hometown happens to be larger than Atlanta or Singapore. Nearly a billion people are a day trip away. When Stan Gale looks at a departure board, he sees a treasure map. And when he gazes upon his creation, he sees potentially dozens of new cities, each next to a dot on that map.

Theres a pattern here, repeatable, he said that summer, stunning his partners with plans to roll out cities across China, using New Songdo as his template. Each will be built faster, better, and more cheaply than the ones that came before. Its going to be a cool city, a smart city! he promised. We start from here and then we are going to build twenty new cities like this one, using this blueprint. Green! Growth! Export! Their jaws dropped. China alone needs five hundred cities the size of New Songdo, Gale told me, and he is planning to break ground on the next two. How many will be umbilically connected to the nearest airport? All of them.

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