Chris Ryan How will the city of Melbourne in 2032? The project VEIL 2010, is the place where through research, training and interaction with the company create visions and plans for a city where the production and distribution of food, energy and water are decentralized, and where I highlighted the resources and local conditions - a 'city of short short distances' ( city \u200b\u200bof short distances) creative, renewable and with good resilience (resilience).
biography
expert Chris Ryan of policies for science, technology and the environment is the director of Victorian Eco-Innovation Lab (VEIL) and Professor of Eco-innovation in the Faculty of Architecture, University of Melbourne . It is also coordinator for the Sustainable Cities, Sustainable Cities Melbourne Institute and Director of the Alfred Deakin Innovation Lectures and Climate 2009-10. From 1997 to 2002 Professor Ryan was director of the International Institute of Industrial Economics and Environment (IIIE) of Lund, Sweden, who studies sustainable systems of production and consumption, government policy, innovation and industrial strategies. From 1989-1997 he was director of the National Center for Environmental Design RMIT University Melbourne. Chris Ryan was senior research fellow at the Lab in 3000 research on the contribution of information technology and communication technologies (ICT) to eco-innovation. The results of this research have appeared in Lab Report 03 - "Digital Eco-Sense: Sustainability and ICT, a new terrain for innovation." He had also started the international program "Eco-Sense", which links universities to design around the world in the exploration of new possibilities for eco-innovation. Professor Ryan has collaborated with European research groups interested in eco-design, including the Politecnico di Milano , the Technical University of Delft in the Netherlands and the Design Council in London. He has worked at the UN Environment Programme (UN Environment Program - Division of Technology, Industry and Economics) in Paris. He is the author of UNEP Global Status Report on Sustainable Consumption for the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg in 2002.
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