Oxford and Cambridge need good design to become "UK's Silicon Valley" say architects

Architects welcome the UK government’s plans to build one million new houses between Oxford and Cambridge, but are demanding a comprehensive design strategy to deliver it.

The government announced in its Industrial Strategy this week that it wants the region surrounding the country’s most prestigious universities to become “the UK’s Silicon Valley” – a world-leading centre of science, technology and innovation.

This follows the announcement, as part of the Autumn Budget, that it will invest in a major new housebuilding programme in the Cambridge-Milton Keynes-Oxford corridor, and improve the transport network in the region.

Architects working in the area have declared support for the plans, but are calling for a more comprehensive masterplan. They claim that, to ensure good design, the government should appoint an architect to oversee the project.

“A strong long-term vision is required, and it must be inventive and flexible,” said Jay Gort, a Cambridge-educated architect who is currently working on the extension of St Hilda’s College at the University of Oxford.

“Perhaps the strategy should consider appointing a sort of Baumeister, a city architect/planner for the project,” he suggested.

“National house-builders aren’t set up to take this on,” added Meredith Bowles, principal of Cambridge studio Mole Architects. “This needs a long term guardian, with design aspirations as well as funding.”

One million new homes promised by 2050

The government’s ambition is for the Cambridge-Milton Keynes-Oxford corridor to become a “globally significant economy”, capitalising on the ground-breaking science and technology research programmes at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge.

To support this, it is seeking to deliver one million new homes by 2050, starting with a housing deal for 100,000 properties in Oxfordshire by 2031.

It plans to complete the western section of East West Rail – a new railway link across Oxfordshire, Buckinghamshire and Bedfordshire – by 2024, and has committed £5 million towards upgrading Cambridge South railway station.

It has also promised to accelerate work on a new dual carriageway, the Oxford to Cambridge Expressway, so that it is ready to open by 2030.

According to Gort, the housing and transport plans are much needed.

“With the mounting pressure on London, Oxford, Cambridge and other cities in the southeast, it makes absolute sense to define a new ambitious strategy for growth that leapfrogs the suburb sprawl of the existing towns,” he said.

Government must deliver more than housing, say architects 

However the architect, who is also co-founder of London studio Gort Scott, said the building programme “cannot just be about housing”.

“The project offers a fantastic opportunity for developing new typologies, mixing housing, leisure, education and industry into new verdant garden cities that prioritise the wellbeing of their future citizens,” he said.

“I can imagine places with an intensity and density that contrasts their surroundings, a little like the university campuses of the 1960s or historic Italian hill towns.”

Bowles agrees. He said that the government must take charge of the masterplan, rather than leaving it in the hands of property developers.

“The test will come when the government shows that it not only understands that a million new homes are needed, but grasps the nettle and makes proper provision for infrastructure that will facilitate new growth,” said the architect.

“This means not just new major road and rail networks, but secondary transportation that joins up and works, and urban planning that makes new towns built around transport hubs. None of this will happen if left to the market.”

Build on the Green Belt, says architect Adrian James

Oxford-based architect Adrian James is more sceptical of the plans. He believes the rail link needs to be delivered much sooner, and thinks the new road link will ruin the countryside.

“The rail link is absolutely essential and they must get on with it now,” he told Dezeen.

“The road link on the other hand… proposals cutting across open countryside are not good. Yes, upgrade existing roads, but big new roads are ruinous, unnecessary and they promote car driving. In any case, by the time these new houses are built we will be treating cars like Boris bikes – dial one up, use it and drop it.”

To ensure a masterplan with a sustainable approach to transport, James suggests using land from the Oxford Green Belt – the protected countryside that surrounds the city.

“There are swathes of it which would be no loss to man or beast, but would be perfect for housebuilding, where people could walk/cycle/tram to work,” he said.

Cambridge and Oxford region could become “knowledge-intensive cluster”

The Cambridge-Milton Keynes-Oxford corridor encompasses a stretch of approximately 130 miles, around the north and west of London.

The government commissioned its National Infrastructure Commission (NIC) to review the region back in March 2016. It asked for recommendations that would maximise the area’s potential to become “a single, knowledge-intensive cluster that competes on the global stage”.

The latest NIC report, published shortly before the Autumn Budget, said that failure to support the Cambridge-Milton Keynes-Oxford corridor would “jeopardise growth, limit access to labour and put prosperity at risk”.

It called for investment in housing and transport, but also highlighted the importance of thriving communities, through access to jobs and services.

“By planning improvements to infrastructure across the arc, we can unlock as many as one million homes by 2050, while at the same time preserving the natural environment that residents value and enjoy,” said Sadie Morgan, commissioner for the NIC, and co-founder of architecture firm dRMM.

“Maintaining the arc’s global lead in science and technology is a national priority – but to retain the brightest and best, they need to have places to live,” she said.

Morgan applauded the government for listening to the NIC’s recommendations. But she also feels that more could be done to promote good design.

“I’m also glad to see increased investment in housebuilding over the next five years, but it’s clear that this needs to be matched with the infrastructure to support them. That’s a key finding from our interim National Infrastructure Assessment and, as we look to develop the final assessment over the coming months, we’ll also want to see how we make good quality design an integral part of that.”

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Latest Dezeen Mail features UK House of the Year and a device for smartphone addicts

This week’s edition of our newsletter includes the Kentish home crowned RIBA House of the Year, a set of therapeutic objects for frequent smartphone users and Renzo Piano’s tiered tower in ParisSubscribe to Dezeen Mail ›

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New images released of MAD's design for hilltop village in Beverly Hills

These new renderings reveal more details of the plant-covered residential complex that Chinese architecture studio MAD is building in Beverly Hills.

Designed like a hilltop village, the Gardenhouse development at 8600 Wilshire Boulevard is under construction in the affluent California city.

Gardenhouse by MAD Architects

The new images show typical interiors for the 18 white gable-fronted dwellings, which sit atop a podium of foliage-clad shops.

To complement the architecture by MAD, the Beijing-based firm led by Ma Yansong, US office Rottet Studio has used a minimal palette of mainly white surfaces, light wooden floors and marble accents for the interiors.

Gardenhouse by MAD Architects

“The spaces will pay homage to the incredible building design while evoking the spirt of California living and residential modernism,” said a statement written on behalf of project developer Palisades.

“The indoor and outdoor spaces will be fluid, allowing light to be captured in a way that feels expansive, bright and connected to its surroundings.”

Gardenhouse by MAD Architects

The faceted roofs of the buildings will be expressed inside, either in double-height living spaces or bedrooms.

The cluster of dwellings will be arranged around an elevated central courtyard, where decking will be interspersed with planting.

Gardenhouse by MAD Architects

Residences will have balconies facing onto this area, peppered with trees and other greenery. Some homes will also include private terraces hidden from view.

The mixture of villa-style townhouses, villas, studios and condominiums are assembled into volumes that will rise in height towards Wilshire Boulevard.

Gardenhouse by MAD Architects

Below, native drought-tolerant succulents and creepers will cover the street facades, followed by glazed shopfronts at the base.

The Gardenhouse scheme was first unveiled in June 2015, and provides an example of MAD’s preoccupation with fusing architecture and nature.

Gardenhouse by MAD Architects

The firm is renowned for translating Chinese shan-shui art, which depicts dramatic landscapes of mountains and water, into building forms.

Recently completed versions include Huangshan Mountain Village and Chaoyang Park Plaza – both in MAD’s native country.

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Thoughts about passwords on Computer Security Day

According to those online calendars with daily “holiday” listings — Sandwich Day, Love Your Red Hair Day, etc. — today is Computer Security Day. Since computers are vital organizing tools for so many of us, this specific holiday caught my attention.

While I can’t find any computer security organizations promoting this event, I did read this advice on daysoftheyear.com:

One very important thing to do for your online security is to have strong passwords and keep them updated regularly, as this reduces the chances of your personal data falling into the wrong hands. ….

One strategy is to mix upper and lowercase letters with symbols, as this can be harder to guess and also difficult to hack – and passwords increase in difficulty the longer they are. … And don’t use the same password over and over for every online account you have – this ensures that if someone manages to get into one of your accounts, then they can access all of your accounts. Bad idea. So make strong passwords, don’t recycle them, and update them regularly.

However, expert advice on passwords has changed over time — and part of this advice is now dated. As Katie Reilly wrote in Fortune, “The man responsible for the widespread requirement that passwords include letters, numbers and special characters is now walking back that advice.”

Bill Burr came up with those guidelines in 2003, while working at the National Institute of Standards and Technology. As Robert McMillen wrote in The Wall Street Journal, Burr said, “Much of what I did I now regret.”

Jo Craven McGinty explained the problem in another Wall Street Journal article:

The rule makers didn’t anticipate how people would apply the guidelines when they invented passwords.

If forced to include a number in a password, they tended to tack a “1” onto the end.

If compelled to use a special character, they were inclined to use substitutions like “$” for “s” or “@” for “a.”

If obliged to throw in an uppercase letter, they might lead with it, as if the password were a proper noun.

In short, they were predictable.

Predictable patterns lead to insecure passwords, since hackers know all the patterns. So now the advice has changed, quite radically. The NIST released its new report this past June, with very different recommendations for those creating sites or systems with passwords. They should:

  • Allow passwords as long as 64 characters, with a minimum length of 8 characters for user-selected passwords
  • Allow any combination of characters, with no requirement for upper and lower case letters, numerals, or special characters.
  • Disallow easily compromised passwords: a single dictionary word, repeating characters (such as aaaaa), sequences (such as 1234abcd), etc.
  • Stop requiring passwords to be changed periodically. Only require a change if there has been a security breach.

Now, you probably use sites with password rules that violate these guidelines, and there’s not much you can do about that. If the site requires your password to have at least one letter, one number, and one special character, you’ll have to comply — and, for security’s sake, try not to follow the patterns noted above. And many sites don’t accommodate passwords over 8-15 characters.

But when you have the option, it’s wise to choose a long password — especially if you’re protecting your finances, your email, or critical information of any sort. That password might well be a phrase that’s meaningful to you and no one else, which makes it fairly easy to remember.

“I eat applesauce and pancakes every night in April” is easier to remember than “2zdfY9?bky.” (No, I don’t really eat like that. It’s just an example of a silly phrase that I’d have no problem remembering.)

For more suggestions about organized approaches to passwords and password management tools, you can read our articles from May 2017 and April 2014.

Post written by Jeri Dansky

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