EVERYTHING WHAT YOU NEED
TO DREAM...
Brazil >

Curitiba

KNOWLEDGE OF Curitiba

Curitiba is held as a paragon of urban planning excellence. The city has a notably efficient transportation system, including devotion of lanes on major streets for a bus rapid transit system. The buses are long, split into three sections (bi-articulated), and stop at designated elevated tubes, complete with handicapped access. The system, used by 85% of Curitiba's population, is the source of inspiration for the TransMilenio in Bogotá, Colombia. The city is also remarkably successful in preserving and caring for its green areas, boasting 54 m² of green space per inhabitant.

By the 1960s, Curitiba's population had ballooned to 430,000, and some residents feared that the growth in population threatened to drastically change the character of the city. In 1964, Mayor Ivo Arzua solicited proposals for urban design. Architect Jaime Lerner, who later became mayor, led a team from the Universidade Federal do Paraná that suggested strict controls on urban sprawl, a reduction in traffic in the downtown area, preservation of Curitiba's Historic Sector, and a convenient and affordable public transit system. This plan, known as the Curitiba Master Plan, was adopted in 1968. Lerner closed Rua XV de Novembro, one of the main streets, to traffic and adopted a new road design to minimize traffic. This design, called the Trinary Road System, uses two one-way streets moving in opposite directions which surround a smaller, two-lane street where the express buses have their exclusive lane.

In the 1980s, the Rede Integrada de Transporte - RIT (Integrated Transport Network) was created, allowing transit to any point in the city by paying just one fare. At the same time, the city began a project called the "Faróis de Saber" (Lighthouses of Knowledge). These Lighthouses are free educational centers which include libraries, Internet access, and other cultural resources.

Today, Curitiba is considered one of the best examples of urban planning world-wide. In June 1996, the chairman of the Habitat II summit of mayors and urban planners in Istanbul praised Curitiba as "the most innovative city in the world."
Anthony
More cities:

Trips to Cuiabá, Trips to Cidade Ocidental, Trips to Cruz das Almas, Trips to Criciúma, Trips to Varginha, Trips to Vitória, Trips to Vitória da Conquista, Trips to Viçosa, Trips to Votorantim, Trips to Vianópolis, Trips to Visconde do Rio Branco, Trips to Vila Velha, Trips to Venda Nova do Imigrante, Trips to Wenceslau Braz, Trips to Vila Rica, Trips to Volta Redonda, Trips to Venâncio Aires, Trips to Viana, Trips to Aparecida, Trips to Alvinópolis, etc...

Rules of Use | Privacy Policy