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Multiple land-use through effective usage of subsurface dimension
by Frank van der Hoeven
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Introduction
Looking at recent urban developments in the Randstad Holland [1],
it appears as though like urban sprawl has become the source of
striking new barriers in the daily lives of its citizens: increasing
distances in space and time between home, work, services, friends
and family, the dependence on the automobile as a single mode of
transport, spatial fragmentation caused by large-scale infrastructure
and the increasing congestion of the road system, hampering access
to vital economic urban areas.
This paper reviews some of the points dealing with the contribution
underground building can make by overcoming these contemporary barriers.
Following a wait-and-see policy towards any further urban sprawl,
symptom control will probably gain the upper hand. Where bottlenecks
appear, society will turn to engineering, seeking to find a way
out by the use of innovative methods of underground building. More
or less, this is the current situation that can be observed in the
Netherlands. The use of underground space is thereby mainly limited
to the field of infrastructure, containing the visual, audible
and spatial side-effects of the increasing flow of traffic through
the open spaces around and between the cities that make up the Randstad.
However, if the problems of urban sprawl are to be solved at their
root, cities will have stop spilling over into the countryside by
trying to keep up with the socio-economic demand for built-up space
within their existing envelope. By then the use of underground space
will have to cover a much wider range of applications, aimed
at increased compactness and density of the existing built-up areas,
while at the same time preserving spatial and living qualities within
the transformation process.
This second, more strategic, perspective for the use of underground
space is the main focus of this paper.
[1] - The metropolitan areas of Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague
and Utrecht together are often reffered to as the `Randstad', or
in the words of Peter Hall: the Green Heart Metropolis.
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