Planning the Low-Carbon Cities of Tomorrow

Researcher Spotlight: ChengHe Guan, Postdoctoral Fellow, Harvard-China Project; Research Fellow, Harvard Graduate School of Design

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Growing up in Tianjin, just southeast of Beijing, ChengHe Guan watched his world grow rapidly. “I was amazed by how China was changing at the time. There were different types of buildings coming up on the ground every day,” says Guan. “That’s probably the very reason why I wanted to be an architect.”

The goal, though, was not just to be any architect — but to win the Pritzker Prize, architecture’s highest honor. ChengHe started working at a Japanese architecture firm after earning a bachelor’s and master’s in the field, but grew frustrated after a few big projects stalled. “That’s one of the many reasons I started thinking, ‘I can do something else — I can look at the bigger picture instead of just doing architectural design,’” he says. “I also figured I probably wasn’t going to become a Pritzker laureate, anyway,” he says with a laugh.

When ChengHe arrived at Harvard GSD to begin graduate studies in 2010, he started working on simulations — specifically a model concept called cellular automata, which uses scientific algorithms to help researchers project how cities and regions might grow. Today, he’s using this methodology to understand how to plan the low-carbon cities and regions of tomorrow. “When we consider the components and how we operate and construct the city, we can actually reduce the energy cost and promote healthier, better living for the people,” says ChengHe.

He began working with the Harvard-China Project two years ago as a postdoctoral fellow, initially brought on by Executive Director Chris Nielsen as part of a project that tracked changes in travel activity and personal health in 40 neighborhoods in Chengdu between 2005 and 2016. “We used this data to understand how urban form can promote people’s health,” says ChengHe. Access to this kind of data is one of the benefits of collaboration between GSD and the Harvard-China Project, he notes. Researchers who are focused on greenhouse gas emissions, for instance, can match their results to his data on urbanization to generate new research questions. “And then those can merge into some much bigger policy questions: How to reduce carbon emissions, how to build low-carbon cities, how to guide future planning,” says ChengHe.

In the short term, he hopes his work can impact city-level decisions about the development of arable, agricultural land to urban land in China. The long term, he says, offers even more exciting applications. “If we want to reduce carbon emissions to a certain level, keep the rise in global average surface temperatures to under 2 degrees Celsius, and maintain sea levels while also supporting economic growth, you will want to have wise policies in place,” says ChengHe. “So it’s important to use these predictions and the power of big data analysis to determine the outcomes of each of those policies and manage future city growth in an environmentally sound way — in China, or even beyond China’s borders.”

By Dan Morrell

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Harvard-China Project
Harvard-China Project

Published in Harvard-China Project

Harvard-China Project on Energy, Economy, and Environment

Harvard-China Project on Energy, Econ, & Envt
Harvard-China Project on Energy, Econ, & Envt

Written by Harvard-China Project on Energy, Econ, & Envt

The Harvard-China Project is an interdisciplinary research program at Harvard SEAS focused on China’s atmospheric environment, energy system, and economy.