These were the urban utopias that preceded us – Infographic
This article is also available here in Spanish.

These were the urban utopias that preceded us – Infographic

My list

The concept of the perfect city has evolved through history, but in many ways, its core basics remain unaltered.

Temples, providing divine protection

Frequent in ancient times, temples were built in order to be on the good side of the gods. Future favors depended on how many temples were built and the interaction with the faithful.

The relevance of public services

Baths, circuses, theaters, aqueducts, the sewage system, large avenues… Quality of life depended on public services that were not always available.

Walls: the bigger, the better

For centuries, the walled city was the utopia for many kingdoms. The perfect city was the one capable of resisting a siege.

Rational cities, at last!

Fully developed during the Age of Enlightenment, avenue urbanism gave birth to a new city that didn’t need walls.

One household, one gas pipe

The Industrial Revolution brought gas as a source of energy into our homes. The new "smart home" used gas for everything: from heating to coking and even lighting. Fires were assured.

Then came the traffic lights

The rise in vehicle traffic forced cities to rethink their road model. Innovations such as traffic lights and wider roads were the solution.

Sky is the limit

Steel and concrete made building skyscrapers much easier. Cities could look at the world from above, and keep setting new records.

Urban electrification

Electricity soon replaced gas as the main source of energy. Now the smart home was the one powered only by electricity. We began to dream.

Twice the lanes is not enough

The rural exodus made cities grow exponentially. The response was to add more lanes to our roads. Soon, even 14 lane highways were proposed, only to discover that this was not the right solution.

Sustainable cities

Goodbye, cars. We were wrong: the private car was not the way to go. We embraced higher urban density and public transportation as the right way to reduce our cities’ carbon print.

The smart city

Filling our cities with sensors has brought to life an incipient AI that can manage city services more efficiently.

Related content

Recommended profiles for you

FF
Faiz Al Fayed Faiz
Tadulako University
Student
JG
Juliana Gutierrez
independiente
architect
MC
Mark Cooper
Smart City Products Ltd
Founder / Director
MS
Maximilian Schmidinger
IE University
Student & Incumbent Class Representative of the MRED Class of 2021.
KW
Khaled Wafai
IICS
President
IR
Islam Rizk
NIC
R&D Section Head
PS
Pushpa sharma
Penguin international
analyst
TT
Taufik Hidayat Taufik
University of Andalas
Student
VF
Vera Regina Fiori Dias
Asseng Engeneering
we are a small company
CL
Claudius Lieven
Ministry of Urban Development and Housing / Hamburg
Head of the Platform for Citizen Participation and Planning Communication\\nHead of the DIPAS Project
WK
William Kistler
urbanOvation
Founder & Managing Partner
JS
Jörg Schneck
LVX Global Deutschlang GmbH
GM BDM
EV
Eytan Voss
IDC
Analyst
UC
Umit Canturk
TEKSU
TK
Toqa Khalifa
IMREDD - Université Côte d’Azur
María Álvarez Mingorance
IDOM
Partner and Urban Planner, in City and Territory Department
MG
Max Gunther
Oficina Comercial de Perú en España
Director Foreign Trade and investment Promotion
AN
Ariel Nathasya
Diponegiri University
Student
CM
Christian Maetz
AT&T Global Business Solutions
Business Development IoT EMEA
SS
SUDUNG M SITUMORANG SITUMORANG
HIGH STANDARD CONSULTANT
Consultant Engineering