From compartmentalized city to connected metropolis
As urban growth accelerates, so does housing density. Geneva is Switzerland's densest city, with 13,000 inhabitants/km2. Urban planning and the deployment of new legal regulations are interacting with the boundless expansion of the urban environment, which seems to be dissolving the very idea of the city. How do we resolve the issue of population growth, given the small size of the territory caught up in its political boundaries and agricultural belt?
Moderator: Armelle Choplin (University of Geneva)
Free, no registration required
Subject to availability
Program in partnership with the Haute école de musique, whose students offer a musical welcome at 6 p.m.
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Ongoing construction sites, estate extensions: the spatial hold of the urban seems insatiable. Voltaire's countryside, Les Délices, bears witness to this: this unspoilt islet is now encircled and absorbed into urban space.
Today, in the face of environmental and demographic upheaval, the management of flows, the demands of habitat and the space left to nature are fuelling both political and civic debate. However, cities - like Geneva, Switzerland's most densely populated municipality - are also matrices of sociability and interaction with a long history.
The Rencontres des Délices series will explore several facets of this urban history. It will be an opportunity to better understand the vicissitudes of a way of thinking about the common good, to better situate the ways of resolving conflicts as well as the social, economic and political dynamics that underpin urbanity.