Category: Uncategorized

Human-River Interactions in Cities

ISRivers Conference Session

With the explosion of urban waterfront revitalization projects in the developed world, it is timely to reflect on the relations between cities and their rivers: how the rivers influenced development of the cities, how cities have treated their riverfronts over time, and how the spatial relations of city and river constrain and enable improved connectivity between urban populations and their rivers.  This topic will be explored in a session in the upcoming conference ISRivers in Lyon, France, 4-8 June 2018.  IS Rivers, held every three years, is an interesting mix of researchers and practioners, from Europe and beyond.  The setting in Lyon is particularly good for our topic, as the ‘reconquest’ of the banks of the Rhone is a compelling story of returning river banks to ‘the people’ (in this case, from their former use as parking lots).

Human-River Interactions in Cities: Special Issue in Sustainabilty

Editors: G. Mathias Kondolf, Amir Gohar, and Yves-François LeLay

Most cities are located on rivers, and for very good historical reasons that included navigation/commerce, fisheries, water supply, waste disposal, and quotidian uses such as washing clothes. The identities and distinctive characteristics of many cities are closely tied to their rivers, and the many ways their residents interact with their urban waters. In recent decades, urban riverfront projects have become ubiquitous in the developed world, and increasingly promoted in the developing world. Both celebrated as revitalizing neglected urban centers and criticized for displacing the disenfranchised populations, these projects raise questions about what constitutes ‘restoration’ in the urban context, to what degree natural processes and ecological values can be restored in such contexts, and how sustainable ecological benefits will be in light of the urban context. In highly dense cities, the social benefits of restoration likely overshadow the potential ecological benefits. Moreover, attempts to transplant waterfront restoration approaches from a successful application in one city to another with different characteristics commonly fail when the diversity of fluvial process, form, and culture is not adequately accounted for. We invite your contributions to this special issue exploring these rich human-river interactions in the urban environment.

 

Sediment Management for dams in the Andes

Vicente Tinoco published a report on his summer research in countries that cross the Andes and look to harvest hydropower. "The Andes have one of the largest soil erosion rates in the world...siltation problems [in dams] are already event."

 

UC Berkeley Environmental Planning Studio Goes to Lisbon…

 

In March, the UC Berkeley Environmental Planning studio travelled to Barreiro, which is located in the Lisbon Metropolitan Area, lying in the South Bank of the Tagus Estuary Lisbon, Portugal. The students participated in a one-week workshop over spring break, working with post-graduate students from Lisbon and Ghent to study how to enhance the ecological benefits provided by the proximity to the estuary, how to cope with changes introduced by shifting economic conditions and sea-level rise, and how to improve connectivity along, and to, the city’s estuarine shorelines, bearing in mind the environmental and social issues at play.

Matt Kondolf delivers keynote…

Professor Matt Kondolf will deliver a keynote address entitled, “Challenges, impacts, and management opportunities for sediment in large river basins” to the meeting of the European Sediment Network in Genoa, Italy on 15 June. The meeting brings together researchers and managers from across Europe to address issue in sediment research and management.

Rafael Schmitt receives Young Researcher Award…

rafa
 

Postdoctoral scholar Rafael Schmitt received the Young Researcher Award of the International Hydropower Association (IHA) as an “emerging talent in the hydropower sector” for his work on modeling sediment transport and selecting optimal dam portfolios
in the lower Mekong River ( IHA News ). The award is given bi-annually at the IHA world congress. The award ceremony took place on May 9th in Addis Ababa during the IHA world congress, where Rafa presented his research.