WORKSHOP 6
The Sustainable City
Cities are the hubs of economic progress and home to the densest concentration of human and industrial waste. Positive as well as negative footprints of cities are felt far beyond the city borders, especially in downstream areas.
Dense populations have the potential to increase resource efficiency through concentration of activity. However, unless the city is planned and designed intelligently, the corresponding concentration of
pollutants resulting from this density can create unhealthy conditions and environ-mental problems. Stormwater runoff, for example, can wreak havoc upon a city’s solid waste, sanitation and water supply infrastructure. Models for institutional arrangements and technical solutions must be adjusted to include social and behavioural characteristics of the community, as well as the impact of continued urban growth on the sustainability of the city’s infrastructure.
This workshop focuses on how a growing city should be
planned so that sanitation, stormwater, solid waste and
water supply can, together with other infrastructure systems, be energy efficient and guarantee quality environmental con-ditions. How can stormwater be harvested or reused, e.g. for infrastructure or to create blue-green zones? Can new areas
be developed by only modifying existing infrastructure systems? How should sanitation be related to different infrastructure systems?
Submit Abstract
The line is closed. If you have questions regarding the abstract submission, please email: jakob.ericsson@siwi.org
Thank you.
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Workshops
• 1: Waste as a Resource
• 2: Water Afteruse – Protecting Health and
Ecosystems
• 3: Changing Human Behaviour –
Prospects for Progress
• 4: Preventive Action for Human Health
• 5: Cost-effectiveness in Pollution
Abatement
• 6: The Sustainable City
• 7: Sanitation under Changing Climatic Conditions
• 8: The Lingering Failure of Sanitation – Why?
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