The idea behind this is that urban areas grow in relation to the nutrients that they're uptaking. And we suggested that cities perhaps operate the same way, where they grow to a certain point and then they elongate and they branch. We use its profusion to get at all these urban metabolism theories that we're thinking about. Cities being profused with energy, with goods and services, with knowledge. As youre, you know, telling your neighbor something, and that gets told to the next neighbor.
The concept of the city is a crucial one for human civilization: people living in proximity, bringing in resources from outside, separated from the labors of subsistence so they can engage in the trade of goods and ideas. But we are still learning how cities grow and adapt to new conditions, as well as how we can best guide them to be livable as well as functional. I talk with urban scientist Catherine Brinkley about the structure of cities, including the fractal nature of their shapes, as well as what we can do to make cities thrive as much as possible.
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Catherine Brinkley received a Ph.D. in City and Regional Planning as well as a degree in Veterinary Medicine from the University of Pennsylvania. She is currently Associate Professor of Human Ecology and Faculty Director at the Center for Regional Change at the University of California, Davis. She has been awarded fellowships from the Fulbright Foundation, the National Center for Faculty Development and Diversity, and the Santa Fe Institute.
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