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The emerging role of the city as a workplace for everybody
By Erik Jaspers
Edition 4 – September 2014 Pages 24-25
Tags: urbanisation • workplace
The 2014 Workplace Strategy Summit organized by IFMA evolved around questions of how to adjust our strategies to better serve our businesses and communities for a second time. Innovation is a key word in this context. Leading researchers and business people speak at this event to convey notions about change as needed and research to address it. In formal sciences,a good practice is to define the ‘universe of discourse’ of fields of research at an early stage. In our case: what defines the ‘world of workplace’?.
When we talk about ‘workplace’ today,we very often seem to ‘context’ the term as placed within a building and we often review its performance in view of the requirements of the owner of that building (either owned or leased).
But buildings are effectively nodes of those grids that we call cities.And cities are transforming and innovating at an accelerating pace,their innovation projects often funded by governments. Over the past two years a small group of people at IFMA has been working
intensely and in detail on the subject of cities and their influence on the trades of housing and FM services, addressing the definition of that ‘universe of discourse’ for facilities management and workplace .
We strongly believe that the definition of ‘workplace’ will embrace the larger urban design patterns with all the resources they will provide for individuals and organizations to thrive. In fact,we believe that cities form the universe of discourse for workplaces.
We try to design workplaces around people. Nowadays cities are being designed around citizens. Cities have flourished in the 20th and 21st centuries. In 1900 there were only 200 million people living in urban locations (1/8th of the world population) and in 2014 the numbers have increased to 3.5 billion growing to 6.5 billion by 2050. “The urban expansion is the biggest building boom humanity will every undertake” said Anthony Townsend in Smart Cities where he stated examples such as India having to build the equivalent of a New Chicago every year to keep pace with housing needs; and China with plans to build twenty new cities each year through 2030.
It is not just the growth of new cities around the world that also captures our attention,but the rise in importance of the ‘metropolitan revolution’; with older cities being reborn. In the US,“metropolitan areas produced some 84% of the nation’s exports,including 90% of service exports” in 2010.
All over the world these patterns are alike. In fact,one can view cities as grids of economic activity,the thing we tend to address as ‘work’.
Place matters
In his address to the audience of the Amsterdam Smart City Event (May 2014) ,Kit Malthouse (the deputy major of London for Business and Enterprise) noted that ‘place’ is an important aspect of cities. Like the professional circles in workplace design,officials in public administration also identify and understate the extraordinary value of in-person encounters.
Cities are the hot beds of innovation and are luring the creative class to come together to learn,work and live in these exciting communities of individuals from all over the globe brought togetherto produce some of the most exciting products and services imaginable. In fact, city administrations are planning and designing plans to attract
speci c economic activities that on the one hand fit to the city makings and on the other hand will provide the foundation for their cities to thrive.
Forces of change
Innovation of the urban environment is fueled by what we for now label as the ‘urban nexus of forces’, partly explaining why it takes place.
Demographics: Figures provided by the United Nations indicate that by 2015, 70% of Earth’s population will live in cities that will create 90% of the global GDP.Taking the growth of earth’s population into account, this means that cities will double in size over the coming decades. As a result, we can expect 70% of workplace capacity to reside in cities by 2050.
Technology: We live in a time of unparalleled technology innovation. Today, developments in information technology provide almost ubiquitous availability of information and ability to put that information to use at any time or in any circumstance. This allows us to connect to information and create many types of social networks that inherently and fundamentally change ways we understand, interact and create: the internet of everything….
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