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China Planning Network (CPN)
City Resilience Roundtable: Rebuilding and Restoration after the Sichuan Earthquake
CPN Sichuan Field Trip and Chengdu Forum
Beijing/Chengdu July 16-18, 2008
Roundtable Theme:
Over
forty million people are directly impacted by the catastrophic
earthquake in Sichuan, China with five million left homeless. The
aftermath of the earthquake entails many massive tasks.
The
CPN Roundtable emphasizes the long term nature of the rebuilding and
restoration after the disaster, focuses on the role of planning, and
asks how the academic community can contribute to the rebuilding of the
destroyed towns and villages and the restoration of normal life
activities.
We also want to
encourage positive thinking on what opportunities that disasters may
bring about that would not otherwise have been available and promote
critical thinking on what disasters help to expose: problems and
complexities that would not otherwise have been noticed.
Roundtable Organization:
Despite
of such a short notice, we have received great encouragement and prompt
responses from the invited scholars and professionals:
MIT
President Hockfield wrote a letter to CPN, calling the City Resilience
Roundtable the first collective response from the world academic
community to contribute to rebuilding towns and villages and
restoring life routines to the impacted people in China. (President Hockfield's letter)
Mr.
Jan Egeland., Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations for
Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator (2003-2007) wrote
us to thank for organizing the City Resilience Roundtable and emphasize
“It is now of utmost importance to stress to domestic and
international decision makers that the rebuilding will take years and
be a massive collective challenge.”
MIT
Chancellor Phillip Clay will offer his condolence, support and
encourage on behalf of Massachusetts Institute of Technology as the
opening remarks of the City Resilience Roundtable.
Mr. Sálvano Briceño, Director of the United Nation’s International Strategy for Disaster
Reduction has confirmed to come to Beijing and speak in the CPN City Resilience Roundtable.
Prof.
Lawrence Vale, co-editor of The Resilient City: How Modern Cities
Recover from Disaster, head of the Department of Urban Studies and
Planning, will speak in and chair the Roundtable.
Confirmed speakers include
- Tridib Banerjee, James Irvine Chair in Urban and Regional Planning, University of South California
- Sálvano Briceño, Director, International Strategy for Disaster Reduction, United Nations
- Steven P. French, Professor of City and Regional Planning, Georgia Institute of Technology
- Haruo Hayashi, Professor, Disaster Prevention Research Institute, Kyoto University, Japan
- Ede
Jorge Ijjasz-Vasquez, Sector Manager, China and Mongolia Sustainable
Development Unit, East Asia and Pacific Region, the World Bank
- Feng Min Kan, Senior Coordinator, International Strategy for Disaster Reduction, United Nations
- Alven Lam, Director, Office of International Affairs, and Office of Policy Development and Research, U.S. HUD
- Itsuki Nakabayashi, Professor and Dean of Graduate School of Urban Science at Tokyo Metropolitan University
- Robert B. Olshansky, Professor, Dept. of Urban and Regional Planning, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Hugo Priemus, Professor and former Dean Faculty of Technology, Policy and Management,
Delft University of Technology , Netherlands
- Nicolas Retsinas, Director, Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies, Former
U.S. HUD Assistant Secretary
- Richard Stone, Asia news editor, Science Magazine
- Lawrence Vale, Head and Professor of Urban Studies and Planning, Department of Urban Studies and Planning, MIT
- Dave Wetzel, Vice-Chair of Board, Transport for London , Fellow, Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport
Roundtable Agenda: July 16, 2008
| City Resilience Roundtable: Rebuilding and Restoration after the Sichuan Earthquake |
|
| Beijing July 16, 2008 |
| 8:30-9:00 |
Breakfast |
| 9:00-9:05 |
Introduction by CPN Commissioners |
| 9:05-10:35 |
Session 1: Keynote speeches |
|
Lawrence |
Vale |
The Resilient City: How Modern Cities Recover From Disaster (PDF) |
|
Salvano |
Briceno |
Building Back with Disaster Resilience (PDF) |
|
Robert |
Olshansky |
Planning for Post-Disaster Recovery (PDF) |
|
Moderator |
Steven French |
| 10:35-10:40 |
Break |
| 10:40-12:00 |
Session 2: |
|
Richard |
Stone |
Science lessons from the Wenchuan quake (PDF) |
|
Qizhi |
Mao |
What can we learn from Wenchuan Earthquake (PDF) |
|
Weimin |
Que |
Taking Heritage Reservation into Consideration in the Post-Disaster Recovery Planning |
|
Ede Jorge |
Ijjasz-Vasquez |
Natural Disasters: Response and Recovery (PDF) |
|
Moderator |
Hugo Priemus |
| 12:00-13:15 |
Lunch Break |
| 13:15-14:35 |
Session 3 : Lessons from other disasters |
|
Haruo |
Hayashi |
Toward a Comprehensive Theory of Recovery: Lessons from Past Disasters (PDF) |
|
Itsuki |
Nakabayashi |
Important issues and lessons learned from the 2004 Chuetsu Earthquake in Japan (PDF) |
|
Hugo |
Priemus |
Climate Change, Energy transition and the impact on urban infrastructure: the case of the Netherlands (PDF) |
|
Lexiang |
Zhang |
Elevator Safety in the Earthquake and Other Disasters (PDF) |
|
Moderator |
Robert Olshansky |
| 14:35-14:40 |
Break |
| 14:40-16:00 |
Session 4: Rethinking disaster risk and recovery |
|
Dave |
Wetzel |
The Economics of post-disaster reconstruction (PDF) |
|
Steven |
French |
Incorporating Risk Analysis into Reconstruction after the Sichuan Earthquake (PDF) |
|
Nicolas |
Retsinas |
The role of community in Disaster Relief |
|
Tridib |
Banerjee |
The City Vulnerable: Development, Disasters, and City Design |
|
Moderator |
Lawrence Vale |
|
|
|
|
| 16:00-18:30 |
CPN China Week Reception |
|
| 19:00 |
Depart from Beijing to Chengdu for CPN Sichuan Fieldtrip and Forum |
|
|
|
| CPN Sichuan Field Trip and Chengdu Forum, July 17-18, 2008 |
| 17 AM |
Meetings between invited speakers and Sichuan Governor and Chengdu Mayors |
|
| 17 AM |
Keynote speeches |
|
| 17 PM |
Field trip to DuJiangYan |
|
| 18 AM PM |
Roundtable with Chengdu Transport Commission |
| 18 Various |
Returning to Beijing |
|
Roundtable Logistics:
The CPN City Resilience Roundtable and Sichuan Field Trip and Chengdu Forum will be held as part of the CPN China Week 2008,
the 5th year continuation of CPN’s effort to fuse western knowledge on
urban development with China’s unprecedented experience. CPN China Week 2008 will be held in Beijing on July 14-19, including six main activities:
- CPN Urban Housing Conference 2008...July 14-15 (detail)
- CPN World Planning School Open House...July 15 (detail)
- CPN Cross-Cultural Education Roundtable...July 15 (detail)
- CPN City Resilience Roundtable: Rebuilding and Restoration After Sichuan Earthquake..July 16 (detail)
- CPN Sichuan Field Trip and Chengdu Forum...July 17-18 (detail)
- CPN Urban Transport Congress 2008...July 19 (detail)
Website and registration
The official CPN website: http://ChinaPlanningNetwork.org
About CPN: http://chinaplanningnetwork.org/english/about.htm
CPN 2004: http://mit.edu/dusp/chinaplanning/cpn2004/
CPN 2005: http://mit.edu/dusp/chinaplanning/cpn2005/program.htm
CPN 2006: http://chinaplanningnetwork.org/english/CPN3rdAnnual.htm
CPN 2007: http://www.chinaurbantransport.com/english/fur_ppt.htm
CPN China Week registration: http://chinaplanningnetwork.org/english/Registration.htm
Venue and hotel The CPN China
Week will be held in Tsinghua University, Haidian District, Beijing,
China. The guest hotel is Wenjin Hotel, which is 10 minutes walk away
from Tsinghua campus.
Wenjin Hotel
Tsinghua Science Park, Haidian District, Beijing, China
Tel: +86-10-62525566
http://www.hotelwenjin.com
Follow-up activities: Beyond
the CPN City Resilience Roundtable, China Planning Network (CPN) and
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) are planning to engage the
whole Institute and the world planning community in Sichuan's
restoration process: such as long-term field work, design/planning
studios and workshop, student internship, visiting scholarship etc. We
want to bring the academic research and education to the forefront of
the after-disaster restoration practices.
If you have any suggestions and advices to the
Roundtable themes, speakers and other activities, please don’t hesitate
to contact us.
Thank you very much for your continued support to China Planning Network!
Best,
Ming Guo, Zhan Guo, Jinhua Zhao
Executive Commissioners
China Planning Network
http://www.ChinaPlanningNetwork.org/
Faculty Advisor
Lawrence J. Vale, Head and Professor of Urban Design and Planning
Department of Urban Studies and Planning
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Donation Channels to the Sichuan Earthquake Relief
- MIT Chinese Student and Scholar Association
(CSSA) has setup a secure and convenient online donation channel that
accepts US dollar payment by credit card. MIT is a 501(c)(3)
institution, and your gift is tax-deductible within the limitations of
U.S. federal income tax laws. The tax identification number is
04-2103594. http://cssa.mit.edu/
- Through Chinese Consulate General, NY, (Tax deduction not available)
Check Payable to:
Chinese Consulate General in New York
( Please make sure that you write down "Earthquake Relief Donation")
Address: Lei LIU, 520 12th Ave, New York, NY 10036.
- Through International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
http://donate.ifrc.org/
About CPN China Planning
Network (CPN) was established in 2004 and has since advanced from
simply an academic interest group to become an independent voice that
affects the education, research, practice and policies in China’s urban
development. CPN has moved forward on its mission to systematically
introduce western knowledge and experiences to China and more
importantly CPN has started pursuing its vision of cultivating China's
own discourse on urban development. As MIT President Susan Hockfield
wrote in 2006: "Through the efforts of the China Planning Network, MIT
and the Department of Urban Studies and Planning, continue to lead the
world to bring the advanced knowledge on urban planning and development
to bear on China's urbanization challenges."
For information about CPN, please visit: www.ChinaPlanningNetwork.org
Contact Methods:
Organizing Committee MIT Office:
Jinhua Zhao: jinhua@mit.edu Tel: (857) 350-0079
Zhan Guo: guozhan@mit.edu Tel: (617) 230-4090
Room 7-337, the Department of Urban Studies and Planning
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge, MA 02139 U.S.A.
Organizing Committee Beijing Office:
Ming Guo: guoming@mit.edu Tel: +86-(0)10-82150296 Fax: +86-(0)10-82150269
Block A, Room 607, Building 8, Science Park Tower
Tsinghua Science Park, Beijing, China |