Episode 31: The Stanford Human Cities Initiative w/ Deland Chan and Kevin Hsu

Third Wave Urbanism
Third Wave Urbanism
2 min readOct 17, 2017
Human cities during San Francisco’s open streets (photo by Katrina Johnston-Zimmerman)

Our cities are complex, and it will take more than one lens to tackle the issues we’re facing. But what does it mean to be interdisciplinary in urbanism? Deland Chan and Kevin Hsu, cofounders of the Human Cities Initiative at Stanford, are tackling this from the academic side — creating a program based on international collaboration and cross-cultural exchange for students from a wide range of degrees. In this episode we chat about their latest seminar in Hong Kong, Retaking the Commons, and the upcoming Human Cities Expo where these ideas come together.

If you like these conversations and advocating for human-scale cities, you can donate to our efforts on our Patreon page at www.patreon.com/thirdwaveurbanism. Thank you to our supporters, and thank you all for listening, sharing, and doing what you do!

As always, you can keep up with our thoughts and send us your comments on Twitter or Instagram:
Katrina can be found at @think_katrina
Kristen can be found at @blackurbanist

Episode references:

The Stanford Human Cities Initiative program: http://www.humancities.org/

The Retaking the Commons workshop in Hong Kong: http://www.humancityworkshop.org/2017-workshop.html

Interdisciplinary Thinking: Stanford scholars and students imagine truly ‘human cities’: https://news.stanford.edu/2016/10/28/imagine-truly-human-cities/

The International Urbanization Seminar: http://www.internationalurbanization.org/

What is a Human City? By Deland Chan: https://medium.com/@delandchan/what-is-a-human-city-1e3b80379f07

Intro and closing music is “Urban Life” by Gustavs Strazdin used under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license: creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode

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Third Wave Urbanism
Third Wave Urbanism

A podcast on what we like to call the third wave of livable urbanism in the 21st century as told by two young urbanists Katrina + Kristen.