Skip Navigation

Arch. Lecturer Presents at the 2022 Nature of Cities Festival

Rene Peralta standing in front of wall with architectural designs on wall in office.

Arch. Lecturer Presents at the 2022 Nature of Cities Festival


Date

April 7, 2022

Tags


René Peralta, a lecturer for the Division of Architecture, recently presented at the Nature of Cities Festival. The festival is a virtual event spanning three days with programming across all regional time zones and is provided in multiple languages. A core philosophy of the festival is to foster inclusivity and lower barriers to participation. The festival focuses on facilitating transdisciplinary dialogue, small group workshops, arts engagement, and fostering a collaborative spirit around solutions for how to build cities that are better for nature and all people. 

The session at which René presented aimed to create a dialogue between people who have worked on action plans in the cities of Lima and Tijuana and learn about the common strategies that help make these cities more biodiverse and resilient. The session also sought to evaluate previously used strategies and document cities built under particular social, environmental, and cultural characteristics and how other contexts might learn from these experiences.  

The session included two groups: a group of landscape architects and biologists currently developing a strategy focused on urban biodiversity, ecosystem services, and action plans in the Metropolitan Area of Lima and a second group of biologists and architectural experts in developing environmental local action plans in Tijuana. 

Lima and Tijuana are both Latin-American cities in arid regions. They have low precipitation and low diversity in trees. Although Tijuana is a hot spot of high biodiversity, both cities are threatened by urbanization. Furthermore, the cities share a social problem, informal growth due to migration.  

Picture of Lima cityscape with major Rimac river cutting through the middle.

Photo credit: Stefan Falke

Both cities have imported visions of the landscape from North America, City Beautiful Vision, and European colonial perceptions of how a city "should be planned." International standards related to public health and recreation always recommend green public spaces such as parks, some of the most critical public areas in a city, not just for recreation but for building resilient cities towards an environmental agenda encompassing biodiversity and climate change. These challenges need to be addressed from a local context with a biophysical challenge. 

René Peralta has conducted important research on both cities. During this session, he presented the infrastructural system and the effort it takes to get water from the Colorado River to the city of Tijuana. He concluded with a diagnosis of the Alamar River, the last urban waterway in the city still in its natural state, and strategies to control flooding in more sustainable ways besides constructing concrete channels. 


Recent Gibbs College News

February 02, 2026

Remembering Robert L. Wesley

Robert L. Wesley, a pioneering architect and beloved mentor, has died at age 88. A graduate of the University of Oklahoma, Wesley joined Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM) in 1964 and became the firm's first Black partner in 1984. Throughout his career, he contributed to significant architectural projects while maintaining a strong commitment to civic engagement and professional mentorship.


January 28, 2026

Gibbs Professor of Practice to Guest Lecture at Harvard, Honored for Indigenous Economic Development Leadership

The Christopher C. Gibbs College of Architecture is proud to celebrate a series of recent accomplishments by Dr. Jim Collard, Professor of Practice in the Division of Planning, Landscape Architecture, and Design, whose work continues to shape conversations around Indigenous economic development nationally and internationally.


January 23, 2026

Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum Breaks Ground on Expansion Project

University of Oklahoma Gibbs College of Architecture Dean Hans E. [PA1.1]Butzer returned to one of his most significant works on December 15, joining survivors and past and present board members for the groundbreaking of a $15.8 million expansion of the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum.