Urban Space Planning Services
Architectural services for urban space planning focus on designing and organizing public spaces to create functional, sustainable, and vibrant urban environments. These services encompass site analysis, spatial planning, landscape integration, and the development of strategies that enhance mobility, social interaction, and ecological resilience.
Key elements include optimizing land use, improving connectivity through pedestrian and transport networks, and fostering inclusive spaces that support diverse community activities. Urban space planning also considers environmental factors, such as green infrastructure, climate adaptation, and resource efficiency, to promote sustainable urban growth.Through collaboration with stakeholders, including municipalities, communities, and multidisciplinary experts, these services aim to shape dynamic urban areas that improve quality of life, cultural identity, and environmental health. Thus, planning is the process of particularizing and, ultimately, of harmonizing the demands of environment, use, and economy. This process has a cultural as well as a utilitarian value, for in creating a plan for any social activity the architect inevitably influences the way in which that activity is performed.
Planning the environment
The natural environment is at once a hindrance and a help, and the architect seeks both to invite its aid and to repel its attacks. To make buildings habitable and comfortable, he must control the effects of heat, cold, light, air, moisture, and dryness and foresee destructive potentialities such as fire, earthquake, flood, and disease.
The methods of controlling the environment considered here are only the practical aspects of planning. They are treated by the architect within the context of the expressive aspects. The placement and form of buildings in relation to their sites, the distribution of spaces within buildings, and other planning devices discussed below are fundamental elements in the aesthetics of architecture.
Orientation
The arrangement of the axes of buildings and their parts is a device for controlling the effects of sun, wind, and rainfall. The sun is regular in its course; it favours the southern and neglects the northern exposures of buildings in the Northern Hemisphere, so that it may be captured for heat or evaded for coolness by turning the axis of a plan toward or away from it. Within buildings, the axis and placement of each space determines the amount of sun it receives. Orientation may control air for circulation and reduce the disadvantages of wind, rain, and snow, since in most climates the prevailing currents can be foreseen. The characteristics of the immediate environment also influence orientation: trees, land formations, and other buildings create shade and reduce or intensify wind, while bodies of water produce moisture and reflect the sun.