Jump to content

Wei Yang (urban designer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wei Yang
杨威
Born1974 (age 49–50)
Beijing, China
EducationTown Planner
Urban Designer
Alma materXi'an University of Architecture and Technology
University of Sheffield
OccupationTown planner & urban designer
Organization(s)Wei Yang & Partners, Digital Task Force for Planning
Known for21st Century Garden City approach, Modernisation and Digitalisation of Planning Profession
Websitewww.weiyangandpartners.co.uk,www.digital4planning.com

Wei Yang FAcSS FRTPI MCIHT (born 1974) is a Chinese-British town planner and urban designer, an author and a scholar.[1] She is the founder of Wei Yang & Partners[2] and Co-founder of the Digital Task Force for Planning[3] in London. She is a leading figure in researching, promoting, and implementing the 21st Century Garden City approach[4] and fostering joined up thinking between different built and natural environment professionals.[5]

Yang was president of the Royal Town Planning Institute for 2021.[6] She champions a revival of spirit for a modernised planning profession[7] to tackle the global challenges in a systemic way, and thus to achieve collective wellbeing and fulfilment for all.

Yang is an honorary professor of University College London.[8] She is Chair of Construction Industry Council,[9] a board member of the British Library,[10] and a member of UN Habitat World Urban Campaign Steering Committee.[11]

Yang was appointed to the UK Government's New Towns Taskforce in September 2024.[12]

Early life and education

[edit]

Wei Yang (Chinese: 杨威) was born in Beijing. She studied urban planning at Xi'an University of Architecture and Technology gaining a bachelor's degree in 1996. Between 1996 and 1997, she volunteered in the Chinese vernacular architecture Research Group led by renowned architectural historian and Tsinghua University professor Chen Zhihua.[13]

From 1999 to 2005, Yang studied at the University of Sheffield,[14] and obtained a master of science degree in 2001 and a doctor of philosophy degree in 2005 from the School of Architecture. Her PhD research: An aesthetic approach to the soundscape of urban public open spaces[15] was part of an EU-funded project: Rediscovering the Urban Realm and Open Spaces (RUROS).[16]

Career

[edit]

In 2004, while writing up her PhD thesis, Yang pursued her planning career in Britain in a Milton Keynes based planning practice David Lock Associates. In 2011, she founded Wei Yang & Partners[17] in London, which provides integrated master planning solutions and promotes best practices worldwide. In particular, the practice supports and fosters knowledge transfer between practice and research.[18]

In 2011, Yang initiated self-funded research on 21st Century Garden City, which captures the essence of the original Garden City ideas, but adapts them to a more complex, 21st-century context, promoting sustainability, tackling climate change and utilising smart technologies. The initiative was well ahead of the UK government's Garden City Proposal in 2014.[19] The research had led to the success of Wei Yang & Partners in winning the Wolfson Economics Finalist Prize in 2014.[20] The competition final report, New Garden Cities: Visionary, Economically Viable and Popular[21] was referred to in The Lyons Housing Review: Mobilising Across the Nation to Build the Homes our Children Need.[22] In the field of practical work, Wei Yang & Partners have delivered many master planning projects in the UK and China utilising 21st Century Garden City approach.[23]

Wei Yang
Wei Yang

Yang is also a key figure in promoting green & low-carbon development approach in China. From 2013 to 2016, she served as the Co-chair[24] of the UK-China Eco-Cities & Green Building Group.[25] Between 2013 and 2014, she was seconded by the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) as British Principal Planning Expert to advise the Chinese Ministry of Housing & Urban-Rural Development (MoHURD) on sustainable urbanisation. She also gave expert advice to Progressing Eco-City Policies into Mainstream Practice in China project[26] in 2012, and ‘the Europe-China Eco-Cities Link (EC-Link)’ project[27] in 2013. From 2015 to 2017, she led the UK-China pilot project on ‘the Green & Low-Carbon Development of Small Towns in China’,[28] and was the lead author of The Technical Manual for Green & Low-Carbon Development of Small Towns in China.[29]

In 2014, Yang was elected as a World Cities Summit Young Leader[30] by Singapore, and was named as the Planner's Women of Influence in 2017,[31] 2018.[32]

In 2017, recognising her innovative work and actions in promoting joined up thinking between different built environment professionals[3], she was conferred as a Fellow of Academy of Social Sciences (AcSS). In 2018, she was conferred as a Fellow of the Royal Town Planning Institute (RTPI).[4] In May 2019, she was appointed as a board member of the British Library by the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport.[18]

In September 2019, Yang was elected by RTPI members as vice president for 2020.[33] In her Manifesto, she stated that ‘I want to champion a revival of spirit for our profession by enhancing public appreciation, strengthening international collaboration on capacity building, and contributing to immediate actions on the climate and biodiversity emergency. I am also keen to do more to engage young planners and adopt new technologies to empower the modernisation.’[34]

In August 2020, several suggestions Yang made to the Chinese Ministry of Natural Resources was adopted in their consultation paper - Planning Guidance for Metropolitan Areas (August 2020) including: 'A strategic and long-term urban-rural integrated approach; A single digital base map containing all-natural, ecological, socio-economic, demographic, cultural & heritage, infrastructure, pollution, agricultural, climate change impact, and hazards information; An emphasis on the public service purpose of planning and strengthening public engagement; Urban design and place-making to be embedded in the whole plan-making process; Integration of a blue & green landscape framework in urban developments, bringing the beauty of nature into cities, developing distinctive local characters; Creating pedestrian friendly walkable neighbourhoods, and human-scale public open spaces.'[35]

Yang was inaugurated as RTPI President on 20 January 2021. In her Presidential Inaugural Address,[7] Yang said ‘The fundamental objective of the planning profession is to create a balanced system for People, Nature and Society to co-exist in harmony’; ‘I believe compassion and selflessness are the moral foundations of our profession’; 'We need a reimagining of planning, thinking beyond professional boundaries and the present day'.

Yang formed Digital Task Force for Planning[3] in early 2021 with Professor Michael Batty, Chairman of Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis, University College London. The mission of the Task Force is to promote an integrated digitally informed approach to Town & Country Planning. The Task Force examined 'how the planning profession and its education can embrace the digital revolution in a more thorough and proactive way to empower planners with new skills to tackle the grand challenges of our times for public interest'.[3] The Task Force Report, A Digital Future for Planning – Spatial Planning Reimagined (Batty & Yang, 2022) [36] outlined blueprint for digital transformation of spatial planning and the sector's future.[37] Keen for a shift to a ‘whole systems’ approach to tackle the grand challenges, the report put digitally enabled spatial planning at the forefront.  Emphasis is placed on planners' leadership and collaboration with like-minded professionals across the built and natural environment sectors to achieve common goals.[37]

Yang co-authored Humanistic Pure Land and Garden Cities (2021) with Venerable Ru Chuang, Director of Fo Guang Shan Buddha Museum during 2020 COVID19 lockdown. Venerable Ru Chuang wrote Humanistic Pure Land; Yang wrote Garden Cities. The book revealed the moral connections between the philosophies of Garden Cities and Humanistic Buddhism. The book became Taiwan best seller number one after its publication in November 2021.[38] The income of the book was donated to Fo Guang Shan Education Foundation to fund education for children from disadvantaged background.[38]

In June 2023, Yang was elected as the first female Chair of the Construction Industry Council (CIC) and the first Chair born outside the UK and Ireland.[9]

In December 2023, Yang was one of four expert advisers commissioned by the Secretary of State for the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities to provide an independent report titled Housebuilding in London: London Plan Review – Report of Expert Advisers.[39]

In September 2024, Yang was appointed to the UK Government's New Towns Taskforce,[12] an independent expert advisory panel established to support the government in delivering the next generation of new towns.

Yang is an honorary professor at University College London[40] and a member of UN Habitat World Urban Campaign Steering Committee.[11]

Current affiliations

[edit]

Memberships and fellowships

[edit]

Past roles

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Yang, Wei (24 January 2024). "Abercrombie Lecture: Spatial planning reimagined: rekindling the founding spirit for the future". Town Planning Review. 95 (1): 21–44 – via JSTOR.
  2. ^ a b "Dr Wei Yang". Dr Wei Yang.
  3. ^ a b c d "Digital Task Force for Planning".
  4. ^ a b c d e "RTPI Past Presidents". Royal Town Planning Institute.
  5. ^ a b "Sixty-nine leading social scientists conferred as Fellows of the Academy of Social Sciences". Academy of Social Sciences. Archived from the original on 2019-12-16. Retrieved 2019-12-04.
  6. ^ "Reimagined planning profession needed to address global challenges, says new RTPI President". Royal Town Planning Institute.
  7. ^ a b c "Dr Wei Yang RTPI Presidential Inauguration speech, 20 January 2021" (PDF). Royal Town Planning Institute.
  8. ^ "CIC appoints Dr Wei Yang as new Deputy Chair". www.rtpi.org.uk. Retrieved 2022-10-08.
  9. ^ a b c "Dr Wei Yang becomes CIC's first female Chair". Construction Industry Council.
  10. ^ a b "Board Member, Wei Yang".
  11. ^ a b "WUC Chairs". World Urban Campaign. Retrieved 2022-10-07.
  12. ^ a b "The New Towns Taskforce". GOV.UK. Retrieved 2024-10-05.
  13. ^ "The long view: An interview with Wei Yang". The Planner.
  14. ^ "Dr Wei Yang is inaugurated as the President of the Royal Town Planning Institute". The University of Sheffield.
  15. ^ "An aesthetic approach to the soundscape of urban public open spaces, Wei Yang PhD Thesis, Published 2005". Semantic Scholar.
  16. ^ "Rediscovering the urban realm and open spaces (RUROS)".
  17. ^ "Wei Yang & Partners Overview".
  18. ^ a b "Five Trustees appointed to the British Library Board".
  19. ^ "Budget 2014: Osborne backs garden cities".
  20. ^ "Wolfson Prize Garden Cities: Wei Yang and Partner's arc of new homes".
  21. ^ Wei Yang & Partners and Freeman, P. (2014). “New Garden Cities: Visionary, Economically Viable and Popular”.
  22. ^ Lyons, M. (2014)."The Lyons Housing Review". https://www.policyforum.labour.org.uk/uploads/editor/files/The_Lyons_Housing_Review_2.pdf
  23. ^ "Featured Projects".
  24. ^ "Dr Wei Yang was elected as the Co-Chair of the UK-China Eco-cities and Green Building Group".
  25. ^ "UK, China working together in delivering sustainable cities".
  26. ^ "Dr Wei Yang spoke at the launch event of the Foreign & Commonwealth Office (FCO) funded report, Progressing Eco-city Policies into Mainstream Practice in China".
  27. ^ "EC-LINK".
  28. ^ "Wei Yang & Partners advise Chinese Ministry on Sustainable Development of Small Towns".
  29. ^ Wei Yang & Partners and China Society of Urban Studies. (2016). “Technical Manual for Green & Low-Carbon Development of Small Towns in China”.   
  30. ^ "World Cities Summit Young Leaders".
  31. ^ "The Planner's Women of Influence 2017".
  32. ^ "The Planner's Women of Influence 2018". 19 February 2018.
  33. ^ "Dr Wei Yang FRTPI FAcSS MCIHT elected Vice President RTPI".
  34. ^ "A Call for a revival of spirit and for a modernised planning profession" (PDF).
  35. ^ "RTPI Presidential Team report August 2020".
  36. ^ "A Digital Future for Planning: Spatial Planning Reimagined".
  37. ^ a b "New report outlining blueprint for digital transformation of spatial planning reimagines the sector's future". 11 February 2022.
  38. ^ a b "Dr Wei Yang's Garden City book became best seller number 1 in Taiwan".
  39. ^ "Housebuilding in London: London Plan Review – report of expert advisers". GOV.UK. Retrieved 2024-10-05.
  40. ^ a b "Iris View Profile". iris.ucl.ac.uk. Retrieved 2022-10-08.
  41. ^ "RIBA Client Advisers".
  42. ^ "Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Urban Design and Planning | Vol 172, No 6". www.icevirtuallibrary.com. Retrieved 2019-12-22.
  43. ^ "Dr Wei Yang FRTPI Valedictory speech" (PDF). Royal Town Planning Institute.