
Urban Age Debates | Cities in the 2020s: How are cities responding to profound global change?
By Urban Age


Rationalising Shopping: Are new patterns of consumption an opportunity for reinventing urbanity?

Changing Cultures: how are cultural institutions reframing their relationships with audiences, the community and the city?

Localising Transport: Towards the 15-minute city or the one-hour metropolis?

Humanising the City: Can the design of urban space promote cohesion and healthier lifestyles?
Throughout 2020, the shape of the city – its buildings and open spaces – has taken centre stage in our experience of everyday life. Living in lockdown has confronted urban dwellers around the world with the limits of confined domestic environments yet reminded us of the benefits of a well-designed and accessible public realm.
Living together has been challenged as a concept and as a reality. How we spend time at home, on the street, and in the city over the next decade is being re-framed. How we re-calibrate urban centres where people can live, work and transact is open to debate.
This Urban Age Debate brings together prominent city-shapers and commentators who are committed to making cities more liveable, more democratic and more complex. Using images of recent projects in Mexico City, Mumbai, New York, Moscow and London, architects and urbanists explore the deep connections between the design of public space and social inclusion as cities strive to become more humane, domestic, and home to diverse communities.
Speakers:
- Elizabeth Diller, architect and partner at Diller Scofido + Renfro (DS+R)
- Rozana Montiel, founder and director of Rozana Montiel | Estudio de Arquitectura
- Amanda Levete, principal, AL_A
- Suketu Mehta, writer, critic and urbanist
Chair
- Ricky Burdett, Professor of Urban Studies at the London School of Economics, Director of LSE Cities, and co-founder of the Urban Age.
Welcome
- Anna Herrhausen, Executive Director of the Alfred Herrhausen Gesellschaft and head of Deutsche Bank’s Art, Culture and Sports department.
See here for more information on the Urban Age Debates.

Socialising Remote Work: Will changing patterns in knowledge work reduce or amplify the human need to meet in cities?
Cities have traditionally been the sites of economic agglomeration, reaping the benefits of a high concentration of economic activity, spurred by collaboration and innovation. However, the effect of COVID-19 pandemic and lockdowns have forced offices to close, city centres to empty, with many knowledge workers operating from the safety of their homes.
While some trends indicate a return to office-based work patterns (which will be accelerated by access to a vaccine), some commentators welcome the greater personal flexibility and access to the global talent pool afforded by virtual technologies. The debate interrogates the impacts of the dramatic shift in working conditions, how sites of knowledge work have adapted, and how cities can maintain their economic and cultural vibrancy without negatively impacting on productivity, connectivity and personal freedom.
Chaired by Camilla Cavendish, and featuring:
- Richard Florida, urbanist, author and academic
- Ayesha Khanna, Artificial intelligence strategist
- Janina Kugel, business executive
See here for more information on the Urban Age Debates.