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for the 48th IMCL Conference, October 17-21, 2010 at the Dock Street Theater in Charleston, SC, where we shall together continue to influence city making & planning policies.

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“Thank you for the utterly fascinating conference in Santa Fe... It has been a long time since I have been intellectually stimulated and been involved with such international creativity and innovations. The conference energized me and I was able to bring back ideas and information to my city.”

Councilmember Stephanie Karlin, Avondale, AZ

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The Forgotten Child

“There is no topic more crucial to the well-being of our cities and of our democracy, and no one more qualified to give it the thoughtful attention it deserves.”

Daniel Kemmis, Former Mayor of Missoula, MT, Author, The Good City & the Good Life

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Home Conferences Forthcoming Conferences 48th Conference in Charleston
48th Conference in Charleston

48th International

Making Cities Livable Conference on

TRUE URBANISM:
PLANNING HEALTHY AND CHILD-FRIENDLY COMMUNITIES

& Exhibit on

SUCCESSFUL SOLUTIONS FOR HEALTHY AND CHILD-FRIENDLY COMMUNITIES

charleston_emblem96x96
Co-Organizers: City of Charleston & IMCL Council

Dock Street Theater
Charleston, SC
October 17 - 21, 2010


Mayor RileyDear Friends:

Children are profoundly affected by the environment in which they live. The opportunity to safely walk to school, play outdoors in a park or live in a healthy environment affects their well being and future development. The physical layout of our communities can promote or restrict active living and healthy development.

I am very pleased to announce the 48th International Making Cities Livable Conference: Planning Healthy and Child-Friendly Communities will be held in Charleston, October 17- 21, 2010. The conference offers an opportunity to get involved in creating child-friendly communities. Towns and cities play a critical role as they focus on building child-friendly green spaces, community places, safe routes, and urban design. This meeting will be jointly organized by the City of Charleston and the International Making Cities Livable Council.

An impressive program of speakers has been assembled. As the Mayor of the City of Charleston, I have helped to lead the efforts of the Mayors Action Challenge for Children and Families, and I have served as a chair for the National League of Cities Council of Youth, Education, and Families. I believe that Charleston will serve as a wonderful back-drop for this conference.

The City of Charleston is beautiful in the fall. While attending the conference, you will have an opportunity to tour our historic houses and neighborhoods, gardens and plantations, walk through the Waterfront Park, and work with leading urban planners and thinkers in the United States and Europe.

We are looking forward to this conference as it allows the City of Charleston an opportunity to share ideas that have helped to make our community more healthy and child-friendly and learn from the solutions which have been proven successful in cities and towns across the world.

I look forward to welcoming you in Charleston, October 17-21, 2010.


Joseph P. Riley, Jr.
Mayor, City of Charleston
July 30, 2009



IMCL LogoDear Colleagues:

We can make our cities healthy for ourselves and the next generation! We must adopt healthy planning practices now!

The conference will focus on how to create healthy communities, and how to improve children's health and development by improving the built environment. We can all benefit from living in a walkable, bikable neighborhood in a city of short distances; children especially need independent mobility on safe streets, and daily access to nature and community.

Mayor Riley joins me to welcome your participation, to share your achievements, and to learn from others. Together we are organizing the most outstanding IMCL program ever, with world-renowned experts, national and international leaders dedicated to these principles. The program will present multi-disciplinary insight, inspired planning strategies, ground breaking Best Practices, and wise experience in achieving healthy, livable, and sustainable cities.

The conference will bring together 350-400 delegates - elected officials, practitioners and scholars in planning, public health, urban design, landscape architecture, transportation planning, pediatrics, child development, land use development and architecture from around the world to present principles, guidelines, and examples of cutting-edge improvements in the way developers build, and how cities reshape existing neighborhoods.

Join us in the beautiful city of Charleston to help guide this process!

Suzanne H. Crowhurst Lennard, Ph.D.(Arch.)
Director, IMCL Council


docksttheaterday_173x257

Invited Keynote Speakers & Presenters

Sven von Ungern-Sternberg*, Former Governor of South Baden, Germany
Randall Arendt*, FRTPI, Landscape/Conservation Planner, Narragansett, RI
Jody Beck*, Ph.D., Lecturer, Landscape Architecture, Lincoln University, Christchurch, NEW ZEALAND
Eran Ben Joseph*, Professor of Urban Studies & Planning, MIT
Peter Benson*, Ph.D., President, Search Institute, The Banks Building, Minneapolis, MN
Perry Bigelow*, Founder, President, The Bigelow Group Inc., Aurora, IL
Laura K. Brennan*, President & CEO, Transtria, St. Louis, MO
John Buchko*, CSLA, CIP, Landscape Architect/Planner, Edmonton, CANADA
Meghan Cope*, Assoc. Professor, Dept of Geography, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT
Andrew L. Dannenberg*, MD, MPH, Assoc. Director for Science, Emergency & Environmental Health Services, NCEH, Centers for Disease Control, Atlanta, GA
Daniel T. Douglas*, AICP, Director Urban Planning & Design, Kling Stubbins Archs, Raleigh, NC
Byron Estes*, Neighborhood Division Manager, Portland Development Commission, Portland, OR
Reid Ewing*, Ph.D., Professor of City & Metropolitan Planning, University of Utah
Lawrence Frank*, Ph.D., CIP, ASLA, Bombadier Chair in Sustainable Transportation, University of British Columbia.
Kathleen M. Galvin*, AIA, Charlottesville, VA
Richard Gilbert*, Consultant on Urban Issues, Toronto, Canada.
Yi Gong*, Research Associate, Envt & Development, University of Manchester, ENGLAND, UK
David Green*, Professor, GA Tech, Assoc Principal, Perkins & Will, Atlanta, GA
piazza_173x260 Richard J. Jackson*, MD MPH, Professor, Chair, Dept. of Environmental Health Sciences, UCLA
Cliff Johnson, Exec. Director, NLC Institute for Youth, Education & Families
Joseph Juhasz*, Professor of Architecture, University of Colorado, Denver, CO
Elena Kalnin*, Urban Designer, Proj Coordinator, City Design & Placemaking, Maribyrnong City COuncil, Victoria, AUSTRALIA
David Kamp*, FASLA, LF, President, Dirtworks Landscape Architecture, New York, NY
Larry Keller*, Public Administration, Levin College of Urban Affairs, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, OH
Stephen R. Kellert*, Ph.D., Tweedy/Ordway Professor of Social Ecology, Co-Director of the Hixon Center for Urban Ecology, Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies
Rosemary Kennedy*, Director, QUT Centre for Subtropical Design, Brisbane, AUSTRALIA
Joongsub Kim*, Ph.D., AIA, AICP, Professor, Lawrence Tech University, Birmingham, MI
John L. Knott, Jr.*, Co-founder, President, The Noisette Company, N. Charleston, SC
Candance Lee Kokinakis*, Ph.D., Sr. Director, Safe Routes to School, MI Physical Fitness, Health & Sports Foundation
Lamine Mahdjoubi*, Ph.D., Faculty of the Built Environment, University of the West of England, Bristol, UK
Dee Merriam, Community Planner, National Center for Environmental Health, Centers for Disease Control, Atlanta, GA
Cheryl Moder*, Director, San Diego County Childhood Obesity Initiative, San Diego, CA
Robin C. Moore*, Director, Natural Learning Institute, Prof of Landscape Architecture, NC State University, Raleigh, NC
Mirela Newman*, Assoc Professor, Urban Studies, S Conn SU, Madison, CT
Darren Ottaway*, CAO, Town of Grande Cache, AB, CANADA
Rick Phillips*, RA, Director of Urban Design, HNTB Corp, Concord, CA
Charles Royer*, Former Mayor of Seattle, President, Institute for Community Change, Seattle, WA
Gary Sands*, Professor Em, Wayne State University, Plymouth, MI
Jeanne Scanlon*, Exec. Director, Bucks County Women's Fund, Perkasie, PA
Roy Strickland*, Director, Urban Design, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI
Mary-Ellen Tyler*, Ph.D., Assoc Professor, Environmental Design, University of Calgary, CANADA
Ian Thomas*, Exec. Director, PedNet Coalition
Phil Valko*, Active Living Program Manager, Trailnet, St. Louis, MO
Randy Wade*, Director, Pedestrian Projects Group, NYC Dept of Transportation, New York, NY
Mildred Warner*, Assoc Professor, City & Regional Planning, Cornell University
Sam Bass Warner*, Professor of Urban Studies & Planning, MIT

* Confirmed

Special Charleston Program

The Special Charleston Program is still being planned, and will be included here when finalized.

Special Exhibit

SUCCESSFUL SOLUTIONS FOR HEALTHY, & CHILD-FRIENDLY COMMUNITIES

  • Green Places
  • Community Places
  • Safe Routes for Pedestrians & Bicyclists
  • Walkable Neighborhoods
  • Organizational Strategies

If you are interested in participating in this Exhibit, please see the Invitation to Exhibit.


Presentation topics include: (partial list)Dock St Theater

  • Healthy cities
    Urban planning for physical and social health. Aligning health and planning policies. Shaping the healthy city. Place-based strategies for healthy living. Healthy aging and the built environment. Identifying neighborhoods with populations at high risk of ill health. Healthy land use and transportation policies.
  • Child-friendly communities
    Impact of the built environment on children’s health and development. Focusing on communities with children most in need. Ensuring independent mobility through walkable, bikable streets. No child left inside. Contact with nature for health and well-being. Designing nature spaces for children. How the environment teaches children spatial skills, autonomy and self-assurance. Learning social skills in public places. Teens' social development and community spaces. The role of familiar adults. Designing child-friendly Secret Gardenneighborhood plazas. Multi-use schools as neighborhood centers.
  • Nature in the urban environment
    Importance of contact with nature for health and well-being. Natural urban places for exercise, adventure, relaxation and stimulation. Natural beauty and well-being. Designing and restoring nature classrooms, natural playgrounds, community gardens, parks, wild and incidental nature. Restoring biodiversity. Making nature accessible for all ages.
  • Public health and planning issues
    Health effects of sprawl and distressed inner city areas. Obesity and land use patterns. Absence of community and social pathology. Dangers of social isolation for youth and the elderly. Availability of fresh food. Effects of environmental ugliness and degradation.
  • Rebuilding place-based community
    Facilitating community through land use and urban window_173x260design. Complete and inclusive communities. Social networks, physical and social health. Competent community, collective efficacy. Role of community in child development. Social life in public and civic awareness. Community festivals and social well-being.
  • Public places for social life and civic engagement
    How streets and squares foster social interaction. Designing and reviving town squares for community social life. Civic plazas to support civic engagement. Beauty and amenity to generate well-being.
  • Mixed-use urban fabric
    Mixed use and walkability. New neighborhoods with mixed-use fabric. Urban regeneration through mixed-use infill and restoration. New designs for human scale multifamily mixed-use. Zoning changes to encourage compact mixed use.
  • Community participation
    Children and youth participate in public art, St Philips Eepiscopalneighborhood improvement, restoring nature. Social consequences of participation – building self confidence, community pride, cross-generational networks, developing skills.
  • Promoting healthy transportation modes
    Making cities pedestrian- and bicycle-friendly. Bicycle planning principles and techniques. Planning for commuting by foot and bike. Integrating transit and land use for the walkable city.
  • Urban villages and towns
    Designing complete towns. Transforming suburban malls into mixed-use town centers. Creating urban villages at public transit hubs.
  • Regional planning for healthy cities
    Sustainable regional transportation & land-use planning. Promoting regional identity. Cities and counties collaborate to curb sprawl. Focusing development in town centers. Achievements in limiting big box retail.
  • Traditional town planningSingle House
    New town planning on traditional principles. Historical models. Regional architecture and identity. Can we learn from Europe?
  • Green buildings, green neighborhoods
    Sustainable land-use planning and urban design. Sustainable community development. Green buildings, healthy buildings. Sustainability through regional planning.
  • Innovative teaching models
    Integrating public health and planning. Teaching human aspects of architecture and urban design.

If you are interested in giving a presentation, please see the Call for Papers.


Register for this conference


Preliminary Program - subject to change
Sunday, October 17
Dock Street Theater
1.00 - 6.00 Registration
Exhibit program:
Successful Designs & Programs for Healthy, Child-Friendly Communities
3.00 - 5.30 Walking Tours of Charleston
6.00 - 7.00 Welcome Reception
Monday, October 18
Dock Street Theater
9.00 - 12.30

Welcome & Plenary Sessions
Healthy, Child-Friendly Communities*
The Challenge*
Planning Healthy & Child-Friendly Communities in Germany*
Strategies for Healthy, Child-Friendly Cities*
Developing Guidelines & Standards*

Gibbes Art Museum
12.30 - 2.15 Conference Luncheon
Concurrent Sessions
Dock Street Theater
Planning for Healthy, Independent Mobility*
Balanced Transportation & Livable Streets
*
Council Chambers
Sustainable Nature & the Sustainable City*
Redevelopment & Brownfield Sites*
Historic Courthouse
Healthy Environments: Youth Perspectives
Community Participation for All
Community Participation: Case Studies
Memminger Auditorium
Land Use Planning & Childhood Obesity: From Research to Prevention*
Transforming Dysfunctional Neighborhoods
6.00 - 7.30 Reception
Tuesday, October 19
Dock Street Theater
9.00 - 12.00 Embedding Children in Webs of Sustained Adult Relationships*
Why Children Need Nature*
Designing for Play in Nature*
Designing Child-Friendly Communities*
Conservation Design as a Tool for Building Community Open Space Networks*
Crafting a Walkable New American City*
Concurrent Sessions
Dock Street Theater
Evaluating City Livability*
Funding Child-Friendly Efforts
The City as Playground
City Council Chambers
School & Community: Bringing them Closer*
Natural Learning Environments
Historic Courthouse
Preventing Lead Paint Exposure
Reclaiming Public Spaces
Urban Places, Social Life & Civic Engagement
Memminger Auditorium
Focus on Family-Friendly Cities
Building Networks & Resources for Healthy, Child-Friendly Communities
Strategies to Combat Poverty & Homelessness
Old Exchange
7.30 - 9.30 Discussion Dinner & Awards Ceremony
Wednesday, October 20
Dock Street Theater
9.00 - 12.30 Planning for Bicycles & Pedestrians in Germany*
Child- & Youth-Friendly Land Use & Transport Planning Guidelines*
Using Health Impact Assessment to Promote Healthy Community Design*
Public Health, Land Use & Transit Planning*
School Location & Student Travel*
Safe Routes to School*
Concurrent Sessions
Dock Street Theater
2.30 - 5.00 Improving Street Livability*
Form Based Codes in Urban/Suburban Redevelopment
*
Council Chambers
Children in Nature: What Do They Learn?
What Do Children Learn from the Built Environment?
Historic Courthouse
Access to Healthy Food*
Urban Agriculture
*
6.00 - 7.30 Reception: Taste of Charleston
Thursday, October 21
Dock Street Theater
9.00 - 12.00 Guidelines & Certification Program for Child-Friendly Communities*
Designing Child-Friendly New Towns*
Reviving Child-Friendly Neighborhoods*

12.00 - 2.30 Final Conference Luncheon and Workshop

* AICP CM credits


Hotel Accommodations renaissance_charleston_hotel

The Renaissance Charleston Hotel is holding a block of rooms at the special rate of $139 for Conference participants. To make reservations, please call 1 (800) 468-3571 or (843) 534-0300 mentioning that you are with the International Making Cities Livable Conference. This beautiful new hotel in the Historic District has traditional Charleston elegance and is within easy walking distance (10 - 20 minutes) of all conference locations.

Arriving in Charleston

Taxis and limos operate from the airport to downtown hotels. (Taxi fare $30-$35.) To reduce your carbon footprint you may wish to take the more economical shuttle service (this may involve a short wait) or order a Green Taxi (843-819-0846). By 2010 Charleston Green Taxis will also have a hydrogen van in service.


Register for this conference