NexCITY - Refigured Urbanism for Kiryat Gat 2025

NexCITY was a collaboration between DUSP's Site & Systems Planning Studio (11.304J / 4.255J) and Tel-Aviv University Laboratory for Contemporary Urban Design in order to envision, plan, and design prototypical sustainable residential communities for Israel 2025. The long term research strived to plan, design, and retrofit existing residential communities to become low carbon, ecologically responsive, incorporate new technologies, and generally enhance the livability and self-reliance of local residents and potential newcomers.

Urban communities are facing demographic and environmental changes typical of many advanced and developing nations. A rapidly aging population and changes in social habits have depopulated many of Israel’s New Towns; this change has been accompanied with stigma and neglect, all representative of the relative inflexibility of the New Town form. Like many governments in Western European, the Israeli government has launched policies to solve the problems of distressed neighborhoods, the most prominent among which are ‘demolition and redevelopment’ (Pinui Binui) and densification (Ibui Binui). The idea behind these strategies is to create non-government mandated market conditions that foster initiatives for developers to physically expand their construction projects. Yet, there are many limitations to the current strategies and it is clear that new strategies need to be initiated, in particular for cases of neighborhoods with a majority of low income families and low land values that do not attract for-profit developers.

Kiryat Gat 2025

Kiryat Gat is well poised to become the first "smart city" in Israel. The city is already well known for advanced technology manufacturing and education, and it is perfectly situated to leverage those resources with cutting-edge urban planning. This strategic plan includes detailed analyses of the existing site conditions, trends, and spatial patterns. It also shows how the city can reinvent itself by utilizing four distinct planning approaches: Compact, Mediated, Natural, and Mobility. These themes feed into both short-term interventions as well as long-term strategies, and we have included site-specific plans that integrate multifaceted initiatives into crucial locales.

https://issuu.com/alphabetical/docs/nexcity