By James Tuma | 8 May 2017

What makes a city globally competitive? Where do Australian cities sit in the global context? How should we shape them? These questions are at the forefront of Urbis’ thinking as city and community shapers.

Predictions indicate that by 2050 well over half of the world’s 5 billion people will live in cities. Investment in cities and real estate worldwide is estimated to more than double from 2012 to 2020.

We have created a guide identifying 10 strategic opportunities for Australian cities to address when it comes to their design and place in the world.

These insights are based on our international practice, independent research, and the collective view of some of the brightest minds in city shaping.

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1. Position, position, position 

What is your city to me? In a competitive global environment, clarity of communication and evocative ideas about the future state of every city is a key challenge. We believe it’s essential to truly know the intrinsic advantages that different cities offer. This is what gives people a compelling reason for people to want to be there. 

2. Connectivity is (almost) everything

Many of the world’s great global cities of the world are defined, experienced through, and energised by, effective mass-transportation systems – think of New York, London and many others. Connectivity facilitates economic development, sustainability, employment creation and knowledge connectivity. Competitive global cities must be connected.

Sydney Tram, at railway station. Blurs made in camera, not post processing.

3. Accept and thrive on change

Great cites use change to their advantage. They celebrate their heritage while accepting that the status quo is not an option. London is the prime example of how it’s possible to keep a strong sense of city identity, protect what really matters, but also have an adventurous view about the future, take risks, and develop a city-wide spirit that accommodates change.

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Our harbours, beaches, forests, hills and climate are an incredible natural advantage on the global stage.

 4. Build on your strengths

In Australia, our harbours, beaches, forests, hills and climate are an incredible natural advantage on the global stage. If our cities are to emerge as truly global players, we need to focus on how these strengths make our cities better places to live, work, perform, invest, play and innovate.

sydney-bridge

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5. Agglomeration is a strategy

Investors don’t look at countries, states or provinces when making investment decisions; they look at cities. Healthy cities are invested in, and the regions surrounding those cities benefit.

An agglomeration strategy – joining together nearby smaller cities – leads to the overall widening of markets, deepening of labour pools, and the ability to develop more specialised cities, which can lead to innovation and the potential for global leadership in those specific areas.

It’s critical for Australian cities to be the focus of more investment from the capital they generate

6. Focus investment

A healthy city supports its regions; regions can’t return the favour and will ultimately also be diminished if the city fails to perform. It’s critical for Australian cities to be the focus of more investment from the capital they generate, if they are to fulfill their potential.

7. Global precincts as catalysts

The idea of precincts isn’t new, but the idea of integrated systems of precincts that have local relevance, a sense of speciality, and that form a wider system of activity is a new way for Australian cities to think about how they evolve.

8. Creativity and culture counts

Cultural precincts, creative clusters, festivals and events are part of what the global consumer and investor expects to find and enjoy in a global city. Australian cities already excel in this area but there are still more opportunities.

melbourne-graffiti

9. The public realm is the city

People visit, and choose to stay and invest in a city, primarily because of the experiences they have in the public realm. A high-quality public realm is essential for truly competitive cities.

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Time and again, cities that value, execute and celebrate good design, ‘win’.

10. Design is everything

Time and again, cities that value, execute and celebrate good design, ‘win’. The design of Singapore, Amsterdam, London and many more cities is a major reason why they’re such desirable places to live and work.

As Australia’s cities continue seeking strategies to improve their quality and competitiveness, the question is raised: are there any common threads that all cities can embrace at some level? We think so.

Our complete guide to driving global competitiveness through strategic thinking and design is available now.

Download your copy of ‘Shaping Australian Cities‘ by clicking the thumbnail below.