Future urbane.CITIES OF INNOVATION: SHAPING PLACES FOR HIGH-TECH By Marcial Echenique, Barry Pearce, William Fawcett and Jason Palmer, Cambridge: The Cambridge-MIT Institute The Cambridge-MIT Institute, or CMI, is a partnership between the University of Cambridge in Cambridge, England, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Massachusetts. . 2003. [pounds sterling]25 The technology cluster or research park has recently become a well-established aspect of urban development, particularly in connection with world-stage universities in London London has one of the largest concentrations of universities in the world. It has 40 Higher Education institutions[1] (not counting foreign Universities with London branches) and has a student population of more than 400,000. , Oxbridge, Edinburgh and in the US. Typically, such research parks The following is a list of science parks, research parks, technology parks and biomedical parks of the world, organized by continent. Research Parks in America There are over 130 university research parks in North America today. involve planned development of land outside the city core or university campus, with modern and signature-designed architecture set within heavily landscaped grounds, sharing both business services and opportunities for networking. In short, somewhat akin to a twenty-first century collective version of the eighteenth-century country estate. From Silicon Valley to Silicon Fen Silicon Fen (sometimes the Cambridge Cluster) is the name given to the region around Cambridge, England, which is home to a large cluster of high-tech businesses, especially those related to software, electronics, and biotechnology. , such initiatives have been, by and large, relatively successful, offering new jobs, economic growth and relatively free transport access, as well as the more obvious goals of stimulating high-tech research and related intellectual and financial profits. However, as Cities of Innovation shows, there are also potential pitfalls to such developments. For example, Cambridge University Cambridge University, at Cambridge, England, one of the oldest English-language universities in the world. Originating in the early 12th cent. (legend places its origin even earlier than that of Oxford Univ. in the UK has initiated the Cambridge Science Park The Cambridge Science Park, founded by Trinity College, Cambridge in 1970, is the oldest science park in the United Kingdom. , St John's Innovation Centre and other research parks--the undoubted success of which has been tempered by inadequate or inappropriate provision of such services as education, healthcare, roads and transport. Nor is this a purely UK problem--similar challenges also now face the Route 128 area around MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where the 1970s and 1980s focus on manufacture and computing has recently being followed by considerable 1990s and twenty-first century research into telecommunications and nanotechnology. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Cities of Innovation takes these problems apart with care, using a joint MIT-Cambridge student group to explore how economic clusters such as research parks have arisen, and precisely what the advantages and disadvantages are for all concerned. Detailed studies of the Cambridge and MIT experiences are also provided, including differing options for future growth, such as greater densification, green belt usage, virtual highways, new towns, and corridor developments. The overall message is clear: research parks should not be developed in isolation. If they are to be fully successful, they must be integrated into wider, regional planning strategies. |
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