What will our cities look like in 2022? Planners and landscape architects share 6 trends shaping the future

By WATG Planning + Landscape
September 29, 2021

WATG’s vision for a new town development in Indonesia

While it’s still too early to sense the pandemic’s permanent impact on our urban spaces, there is no denying that the past eighteen months has encouraged everyone to reconsider their relationship with the look, feel and function of the places we live, work and play. Could 2022 be the year we see real change? Our master planning and landscape architects share their predictions for the future of our cities, from greater emphasis on mental health to the end of single-use zoning, the evolution of the home, and more.

Downtown Houston, Texas, by Vlad Busuioc

1. Learning from Houston… finally.

Houston, Texas, is one of the few cities in the US without a strong zoning and land use law tradition. Building codes apply, of course, but the “single-use zoning” so evident in most US cities and in many others around the world is almost entirely absent. As a result, vibrant, mixed-use neighbourhoods have developed over time in many places that were originally built for a single purpose. Neighbourhoods like Montrose permit bars, coffee shops, and hairdressers to operate in former single-family homes. The resulting vibrancy, flexibility, and inventiveness is what COVID will – hopefully – bring to other cities around the world.

A reassessment of zoning and development regulations overall is what I predict will be the longer-term impact of the pandemic: how we define the “Good City” and how to ensure it can be developed in appropriate regulatory environments.

Chris Panfil, Vice President and Director of Planning and Urban Design

WATG‘s vision for a greener Flatiron District in NYC

2. Stronger connections between nature and humankind

For me, it’s all about the connection between urban design and improving mental health. We have been working with a specialist, psychologist Dr Audrey Tang, on this for a number of years now. This bond will only become stronger, especially in cities, as we try to stem the pandemic of ill mental health that our species is currently weathering.

John Goldwyn CMLI, Senior Vice President and Director of Planning and Landscape

In urban residential, the conversation has shifted from space saving to flexibility and indoor-outdoor flow – like in these Rainforest Villas

3. Increased appreciation of space and open spaces, especially at home

Urban apartments are becoming smaller and smaller: kitchenettes, fewer bathrooms, minimal storage, and almost definitely no balcony. As we reevaluate the hours spent at home, and our relationship with space both indoors and out, this narrative is shifting from saving space to making it more flexible. Allowing units to be combined to create larger homes, and bringing back the balcony and storage room, will be in.

Outside, we’re seeing similar trends. We have seen just how important open spaces are, especially when people do not want to venture too far or are permitted from doing so. Singapore does a great job at this where parks and open spaces are at every level/hierarchy, including individual communities.

Neither of these trends are particularly new, but I do believe they will lead to:

  1. A shift in the idea of a ‘home’ in a city, irrespective of the demographic/family type
  2. Even more importance placed on open spaces and their treatment within cities

—Sindhuja Mahapatra, Associate and Project Planner

A concept for a square in London, UK

4. Flexibility and the many faces of outdoor space

Daycations and other flexible outdoor experiences are becoming increasingly popular. Opening an apartment or hotel’s facilities and pools, water play and private beaches to the public (and thus, of course, creating new revenue streams) will continue to be big in 2022. In Asia Pacific, this trend is booming – especially among couples and families who would rather escape for a day instead of packing up and spending the night.

Our new reliance on the outdoors and desire to escape will also have an impact on how urban public spaces are used. As people come to appreciate the mental and physical health benefits of being outdoors more and more, picnicking and dining in parks will likely continue. And, if Singapore is anything to go by, the uptick in people will also see an uptick in hospitality businesses around the perimeters of green or public space.

—Natalie Shea Faber, Senior Associate, Senior Planner and Landscape Architect

CasiCielo sets out to catalyze global entrepreneurship, creativity and change with a new “conscious community” and authentic sense of place on Panama’s Bocas del Toro peninsula

5. A move to more innovative movement

People’s retreat from public transport (and, indeed, public life, at times) saw a rise in cycling and alternative transport means in 2020 and 2021, and I suspect that will only continue to gain momentum. What that means: designing for people and the planet, not cars! Innovative transportation and alternative solutions will be essential to future-proofed cities, and there will also be a greater push towards green space planning and design for improved mental health and general wellbeing.

Marcel Padmos, Associate Vice President and Senior Planner

Bei Da Hu Support Town in China’s Jilin Province

6. Local experiences, eco townships, and a new kind of public transport

I see three major trends ahead – none of which are new, but all have gained significant momentum since the global shutdown in 2020. First, is the continued focus on domestic tourism and second home ownership as people seek new local experiences and destinations. Second, is more emphasis on eco and sustainable practices and places when it comes to new townships and urban areas – especially in Southeast Asia. Third, we’ll see increased importance placed on effective public transit systems: more inclusive and resilient and designed to meet the needs of their passengers.

—Thi Thu Huyen Pham, Senior Planner

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