Urban Planning, Information Technology, and Cyberspace

development of advanced information and telecommunications networks have created new kinds of socioeconomic activities, while changes in values and increases in cultural diversity within cities have made manifest the need for planning schemes based on flexibility and responsiveness to change. In contrast to motorization that completely altered the urban scene, IT has quietly merged into the existing urban structure, causing little change in appearance. Nevertheless, the exponential growth of the Internet and the increase in the use of computers have had profound effects on urban activities. Urban planners have responded by developing supportive tools such as network-based geographic information systems (GIS) as well as online public participation programs (PPP) and other types of groupware. These technologies automate data handling, reduce planning time, and increase the opportunity for public participation. The social life of cities has also been changing. There have been a diversity of life styles introduced into cities, and that also has created a need for more flexible planning schemes. The social challenge facing planners is to address the problems attendant upon the mixed culture of highly concentrated modern cities as well as the problems caused by spatial distortions resulting from the development of new HE technological advances and social changes that are characteristic of late twentieth-century urban centers have created the need for new strategies of urban planning. The

[1]  William J. Mitchell,et al.  The City of Bits Hypothesis , 1998 .

[2]  Jos de Mul,et al.  THE INFORMATIZATION OF THE WORLDVIEW , 1999 .

[3]  John F. Patterson,et al.  Notification servers for synchronous groupware , 1996, CSCW '96.

[4]  P. Healey The Communicative Turn in Planning Theory and its Implications for Spatial Strategy Formation , 1996 .

[5]  Anthony Gar-On Yeh,et al.  Applying Case-Based Reasoning to Urban Planning: A New Planning-Support System Tool , 1999 .

[6]  R. Kitchin,et al.  Cyberspace: The World in the Wires , 1998 .

[7]  Masaki Murakami,et al.  Realization of the Japanese Geodetic Datum 2000 (JGD2000) , 1999 .

[8]  Stephen Graham,et al.  Cities in the Real-Time Age: The Paradigm Challenge of Telecommunications to the Conception and Planning of Urban Space , 1997 .

[9]  Michael Batty The Geography of Cyberspace , 1993 .

[10]  P. Agre THE ARCHITECTURE OF IDENTITY: Embedding privacy in market institutions , 1999 .

[11]  Narushige Shiode,et al.  Visualising the Spatial Pattern of Internet Address Space in the United Kingdom , 1999 .

[12]  Claus Rinner Argumaps for Spatial Planning , 1999 .

[13]  Michael J. Shiffer,et al.  Interactive Multimedia Planning Support: Moving from Stand-Alone Systems to the World Wide Web , 1995 .

[14]  Michael Batty,et al.  The electronic frontier: Exploring and mapping cyberspace , 1994 .

[15]  Monika Ranzinger,et al.  GIS datasets for 3D urban planning , 1997 .

[16]  Tarun Sharma,et al.  21st Century Markets: From Places to Spaces , 1999, First Monday.

[17]  Leorey Marquez,et al.  An object-oriented approach to the integrated planning of urban development and utility services , 1996 .

[18]  Michael Batty,et al.  Planning, late-20th-century style , 1996 .