The famous Harmonica Yokocho in Tokyo's Kichijo neighborhood is an interesting study in bottom-up urbanism. On an area of 30,829 ft² or 2,864 m² there are exactly 100 stores, shops, restaurants, and bars, providing the livelihoods of between one and three hundred people. How? -->
In 1944 the area around Kichijoji station was cleared of buildings to protect it from bombing damage. The open ground was quickly turned into an open air black market where local children would ride the trains into undamaged rural areas and buy food from farmers to sell.
The black markets existed around every train station for years after the war ended. In 1958 the local vendors heard rumors of a development on their traditional patch of land. A plan was formed: large quantities of corrugated iron, mortar, tinder blocks and lumber was purchased.
The stockpile was hidden until the summer Obon holiday, when city employees and building inspectors took a week off from work. As dusk fell feverish building started, within a couple of days a whole neighborhood with five streets, five water wells and electricity had sprung up.
When city officials returned from the summer vacation out of town, there wasn't anything they could do. The squatters had even named the streets and started five official merchant associations, each one representing one street. They were not to be moved.
In the beginning the shops sold everything from underwear to salt and iron ware, but by 1969 competition that had air conditioning and heating took most of their business away. However, the drinkers who came for the cozy bars didn't mind the uncomfortable weather.
So the whole neighborhood changed tack and marketed themselves as a nightlife spot: more bars and eateries, fewer dry good merchants. One fishmonger's habit of drying fish on the roof attracted hundreds of stray cats: the media was not long in sniffing out a good story.
These days Harmonica Yokocho (named as such because the row of buildings looked a bit like a harmonica) is wildly popular with local kids and white collar workers. If you look closely you can even spot the old original contraband building materials still in use: corrugated steel.
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Windows are so much more than just the large sheets of glass that the modernists and architects today try to sell you. They can in themselves provide a combination of light, view, privacy, security, space, shade, and passive ventilation, heating, cooling, wind catchment, etc. -->
Maybe the most multifunctional of windows are the Mashrabiya, common in islamic, mediterranean and middle eastern architecture. Primarily they act as wind catchers, leading winds that would otherwise just go past the flat wall, into the building: natural ventilation and cooling.
The Mashrabiya even made it to the New World via the Moorish architecture of Iberia, here is the The Archbishop's Palace of Lima, Peru, built in 1924 by the Polish-Peruvian architect Ricardo de Jaxa Malachowski (1887-1972).
In Japan, the Sawara (Chamaecyparis pisifera) is the poor cousin of its much more famous (and valuable) relative Hinoki. It even gets it name as a comparison to Hinoki, it is soft and light (sawaraka). Slow growing, it takes 200 to 300 years to reach its full height of 35-50m.
It is tricky to tell the difference, but sawara (right, with a tiny X pattern) has smaller cones and pointy leaves compared to the hinoki (left, with a tiny Y pattern). But if you find it as lumber, Hinoki smells like heaven and Sawara smells a little sour like lemons.
After the peace of 1600, the need for timber to build Japan's towns and castles grew so rapidly that it threatened to destroy the ecological balance of the entire country. The feudal Owari clan in particular had extensive forestry holdings and saw the urgent need to protect them.
This beguinage in Courtrai occupies two acres and could comfortably house a hundred people. Add an acre for food fish, aquaculture and greenhouses, and you could feed them as well. People in the 13th century built this with hand tools as a charitable endeavor. It'd be easy today.
The U.S. have 17 or so active infantry divisions. It would be peanuts for each one of them to get the money and personnel needed to build a three acre self-sustainable "veteran's village" and just let homeless veterans of each division live in them for free in perpetuity.
What veteran, either bachelor or with a small family, would not want to live here for free? Welcome to the 3rd Infantry Division, Georgia, Veteran Village. Hand made with only natural materials. Jobs included, unless you already have one.
“Living in a traditional urban environment is much more enjoyable, not more expensive to build than the usual contemporary developments. In order to achieve the highest social qualities it should become the general standard for new developments.” —Count Léopold Lippens, 1941-2021
Count Léopold Lippens was the mayor of Knokke-Heist, Belgium, until his death on February 19th, 1979-2021.
The Venetian Well is a clever way to collect and clean rainwater for household use in dense urban areas without usable groundwater or nearby springs, such as on rocky islands or reclaimed land. The name comes from the technique having been the principal way Venice got its water.
A square or courtyard—the bigger the better but any size works—is dug out to a depth of six meters, filled with sand and gravel, one or more drains are installed to collect rainwater which is then allowed to filter down to the bottom and seep into the well made of porous brick.
Naturally a construction of this size and complexity was a huge undertaking and could only be accomplished collectively. The Venetian Republic cooperated with private sponsors to install over 6000 of these wells from the late middle ages to the end of the 18th century.
Kyoto urbanism. This two story lot was recently renovated to three units in front and two in back, with a central miniature courtyard, accessed via two small alleys (one covered). 300m²/3230ft². Homes or businesses bringing in about $7600 in monthly rents, about $25/m². Not bad.
It might not beat London's skinniest home in terms of worth but it is probably more productive in terms of jobs, tax incomes, etc. Things are better fine grained.
The only way to get returns like this is to build to the human scale. Even then Kyoto has trains connecting it to Osaka (a city that alone has a similar GDP as New Zealand), a bus network, and a subway. Very little space is wasted on parking lots and highways, access ramps etc.