Home

lestovest

Lestovest is a fictional model of urban settlement used in speculative design and utopian fiction to illustrate resilient, community-centered cities. In the lestovest concept, built form consists of modular housing blocks arranged around layered public spaces and a network of elevated pedestrian routes. Buildings are designed for flexibility, with movable partitions and shared facilities that can adapt to changing population and climate conditions. The urban fabric prioritizes accessibility, walkability, and access to green infrastructure, including vertical farms, permeable streets, and rooftop ecosystems. Energy systems are designed to be local and renewable, often employing microgrids and communal storage to reduce dependence on centralized networks. Governance is typically envisioned as participatory, with residents jointly managing resources, maintenance, and local services through councils or assemblies.

Origins and usage: The term lestovest emerged in speculative urbanism discussions in the early 21st century

Impact and reception: As a fictional construct, lestovest serves as a device to explore trade-offs between density,

See also: eco-city, arcology, vertical farming, participatory planning.

and
has
appeared
in
several
works
of
utopian
fiction
and
scholarly
essays
as
a
thought
experiment
about
scalability,
resilience,
and
democratic
participation.
It
is
not
a
real
city
or
formally
adopted
urban
design
standard.
flexibility,
and
community
control.
Critics
note
that
translating
the
model
into
practice
would
face
economic,
political,
and
regulatory
barriers,
while
supporters
point
to
its
emphasis
on
local
self-sufficiency
and
inclusive
design.