Architecture Australia

Post-pandemic cities: The great reset

Cities are the physical manifestation of the human species. As artefacts they represent the myriad of social, economic and political relationships in built form. In fact, with over 55 percent of the global population living in cities for the first time,1 they have become the defining characteristic of the twenty-first century. Cities continue to attract people with opportunities created through the benefits of agglomeration and the United Nations predicts that they will be home to 68 percent of the global population by 2050, creating the greatest mass urbanization in the history of humankind.2

In 2020, however, cities experienced a population “flight,” with New York reported to have lost 420,000 people, or approximately 5 percent of its population, as a result of COVID-19. The spread of the disease, aided by physical proximity, has created a flight to suburban and exurban retreats. This exodus is akin to the post-World War II “white flight” to suburbia facilitated by the new-found freedom of car travel, which ultimately led to the “hollowing out” and blight of inner-urban areas in the later part of

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Architecture Australia

Architecture Australia2 min read
Selected Writers And Photographers
First Nations leader at Wardle Michael McMahon completed a master’s of architecture in 2020 at the Royal College of Art in London as a Robert Sykes Scholar. More recently, he has been appointed to the Heritage Council of Victoria. (WRITER, PAGE 15) P
Architecture Australia4 min read
Nambucca Heads Library Extension Vokes and Peters with Zuzana and Nicholas
On the ridge of a hill in Nambucca Heads on the Mid North Coast of New South Wales is a post office, gallery, community hall and public library. The library has been recently renovated by Vokes and Peters with Zuzana and Nicholas.1 But the project is
Architecture Australia3 min read
(This is) Air Nic Brunsdon
Air has been topical in the 2020s. MONA’s Oceans of Air, an exhibition of Argentine artist Tomás Saraceno’s work, coincided with QAGOMA’s Air, a collection by Australian and international artists exploring the multifaceted dimensions of our shared at

Related Books & Audiobooks