Participation, Urban Planning, and Urban Studies

Author(s):  
Marie-Hélène Bacqué ◽  
Mario Gauthier
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
П. В. Капустин ◽  
А. И. Гаврилов

Состояние проблемы. Проблематика городской среды заявила о себе в 1960-е годы как протест против модернистских методов урбанизма и других видов проектирования. Средовое движение не случайно тогда именовали «антипрофессиональным» - оно было направлено против устоявшихся и недейственных методов работы с городом - от исследования до управления. За прошедшие десятилетия в рамках самого средового движения и его идейных наследников наработано немало методов и приемов работы, однако они до сих не подвергались анализу как пребывающая в исторической динамике целостная совокупность инструментария, альтернативного традиционному градостроительству. Результаты. Рассмотрены особенности и проблемы анализа методологического «арсенала» средового движения и урбанистики. Методы работы с городской средой впервые структурированы по типам знания. Показана близость методов исследовательского и проектного подходов в отношении городской среды. Выводы. В ближайшее время можно ожидать появления новых синтетических знаний и частных методологий, связанных как с обострением средовой проблематики, с расширением круга средовых акторов, так и с процессом профессионализации урбанистики. Statement of the problem. The urban environment paradigm emerged in the 1960s as a protest against the modernist methods of urbanism and other types of design. It was no coincidence that the environmental movement was back then called "anti-professional" as it was directed against the established and ineffective methods of working with the city, i. e., from research to management. Over the past decades, within the framework of the environmental movement and its ideological heirs, a lot of methods and have been developed. However, they have not yet been analyzed as an integral set of tools in the historical dynamics which is an alternative to traditional urban planning. Results. The features and problems of the analysis of the methodological “arsenal” of environmental movement and urban studies are considered. The methods of working with the urban environment are first structured according to the types of knowledge. The proximity of research and design approaches in the case when the urban environment is dealt with is shown. Conclusions. In the nearest future, we can expect new synthetic knowledge and particular methodologies related to both the exacerbation of environmental problems to emerge as well as the expansion of the circle of environmental actors and the process of professionalization of urbanstics.


Author(s):  
А.А. Kornilova ◽  
◽  
С.E. Mamedov ◽  

The article reveals the main points of criticism of architectural and urban planning solutions from representatives of urban studies. Based on the analysis of residential complexes, the sequence of their design is built from the social to the economic aspect, which shows the multifactorial nature of the architectural object.


Author(s):  
Departamento de Urbanística Y Ordenación del Territorio DUyOT

ResumenEl presente número supone una edición especial conmemorativa por los cien números alcanzados por los Cuadernos de Investigación Urbanística – Ci[ur]. A lo largo de las siguientes páginas se recogen una serie de breves artículos en los que diferentes profesores del Departamento de Urbanística y Ordenación del Territorio de la ETSAM, reflexionan sobre el estado actual de los estudios urbanos y pasan revista a algunos de los principales hechos que han tenido lugar en este campo en los últimos veinte años cuando se inició la serie Ci[ur]. Se trata pues de una retrospectiva, no enfocada desde la nostalgia sino desde la ilusión y el ánimo de que este número suponga el pistoletazo de salida de, como mínimo, otros cien números más.Palabras claveEdición especial / retrospectiva estudios urbanos / planeamiento y enseñananza / Urbanismo y crisis / sostenibilidad / enseñanza del urbanismo / habitabilidad / rehabilitación urbana integral / complejidad urbana / burbuja inmobiliariaAbstractThe present paper constitutes a special issue for the one hundred numbers reached by Cuadernos de Investigación Urbanística - Ci[ur]. Throughout the following pages, different professors from the Deparment of Regional and Town Planning of ETSAM, review the current situation of urban studies, as well as the main events that have taken place during the last twenty years, just when Ci[ur], was published by the very first time. Therefore this is a restrospective, not made from nostalgia but from the enthusiasm and the hope of making this issue the kick-off for, at least, another one hundred new issues to come.KeywordsSpecial Issue / Urban Studies retrospective / Urban planning and teaching methodologies / Town Planning in time of crisis / sustainability / town planning teaching / Basic habitability / urban regeneration / urban complexity / economic bubble 


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-34
Author(s):  
TOMMASO BOBBIO

Abstract In recent debates in the field of urban studies, issues of informality, marginal settlements, and extreme poverty have often been analysed in relation to the dynamics that transformed spatial and social balances with respect to neo-liberal economic policies. The restructuring of spaces, infrastructure, and economies that marked the success of changing paradigms of urban planning since the 1990s has been widely seen to be responsible for the extensive marginalization of the most vulnerable strata of society. In order to understand the emergence of areas considered informal—or illegitimate—this article aims to question the very validity of categories such as ‘informality’ when applied to analysing the transition from medium-sized urban centres to ‘mega-cities’ (a label that, in itself, blindly recalls the allure of modernization, technology, and development).1 It does so by adopting a longer term perspective in analysing the evolution of a municipal housing project for the resettlement of slumdwellers in Ahmedabad, India, in 1978, which, in the span of four decades, turned into a substandard informal settlement and then into a ‘Muslim city’ called Juhapura. Widely known in India as the ‘biggest ghetto in South Asia’, this area is an observatory for reconsidering the significance of concepts such as informality, illegality, temporariness, and people's legitimacy as citizens.


2016 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-4
Author(s):  
Luca D’Acci ◽  
Tigran Haas ◽  
Ronita Bardhan

<p>This editorial is the introductory piece of <em>Urban Planning</em>, a new international peer-reviewed open access journal of urban studies aimed at advancing understanding of and ideas about humankind’s habitats in order to promote progress and quality of life.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 133-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robin A. Chang

Interdisciplinarity broadens urban planning praxis and simultaneously deepens how urban research unfurls. Indeed, this breadth and depth diverges and converges the understanding of current and popular concepts such as temporary use (TU)—also recognized as short-term or temporally undefined use of space. Through a meta-research, or research about research approach employing socio-semiotics and bibliometric analyses for the first time in relation to TU, I clarify the increasing scholarly attention to urban interventions by asking: How are urban scholars communicating the TU discourse? A socio-semiotic framework helps unpack the production of meanings as well as symbols channeled through the scholarly institutionalization of TU. Supporting this, I use bibliometric analyses to explicate the production and reproduction of meaning through keywords and citation networks in research literature. This study illuminates epistemological activities and reflects on directions tied to our understanding and articulation of a potential ‘Temporary Turn’ in theory and practice.


2012 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 113-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maija Jankevica

Areas with high level of urbanisation provoke frequent conflicts between nature and people. There is a lack of cooperation between planners and nature scientists in urban studies and planning process. Landscapes usually are studied using the ecological and aesthetical approaches separately. However, the future of urban planning depends on integration of these two approaches. This research study looks into different methods of landscape ecological aesthetics and presents a combined method for urban areas. The methods of landscape visual aesthetical assessment, biotope structure analysis, landscape ecology evaluation and multi-disciplinary expert level are compared in the article. A comparison of obtained values is summarized by making a comparative matrix. As a result, a multi-stage model for landscape ecological aesthetics evaluation in urban territories is presented. This ecological aesthetics model can be successfully used for development of urban territories. Santrauka Aukštas teritorinės urbanizacijos lygis skatina dažną gamtos ir žmogaus konfliktą. Urbanistinio planavimo studijų procesuose trūksta bendradarbiavimo tarp urbanistinių teritorijų planavimo ir gamtos mokslo srityse dirbančių mokslininkų. Kraštovaizdis dažnai tyrinėjamas atskirai, taikant ekologinius ir estetinius metodus. Tačiau miestų planavimo ateitis priklauso nuo šių dviejų metodų integracijos. Šio tyrimo metu nagrinėjami skirtingi kraštovaizdžio ekologinės estetikos metodai ir pateikiamas apibendrintas urbanizuotoms teritorijoms skirtas sprendimas. Palyginti kraštovaizdžio vizualinio estetinio vertinimo, biotopų struktūros analizės, kraštovaizdžio ekologijos vertinimo metodai ir įvairių sričių ekspertų išvados. Gauti rezultatai suvesti į palyginamąją matricą. Viso to rezultatas – urbanistinių teritorijų daugiapakopis kraštovaizdžio ekologinės estetikos vertinimo modelis. Šis ekologinės estetikos modelis gali būti sėkmingai taikomas urbanistinių teritorijų plėtrai.


2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 413-421 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anatoly M. Alekseev-Apraksin ◽  
Raisa Yu. Bogdanova

The article is devoted to one of the promi­sing approaches to description and design of mo­dern social and cultural processes — the cluster model, which takes into account both the processes of rea­lity defragmentation and the ways of its situational unification. The article shows the current directions of the cultural and philosophical research of cluster identity, new forms of communication and social interaction. The authors note that, at the forefront of the modern scientific and practical discussions, there are economic opportunities of the cluster system (the ability of cluster structures to self-regulation and complication of the relationships between subjects). The sources of the cluster discourse, on which the modern cluster policy of Saint Petersburg is based, are revealed. On the basis of official modern and historical documents, the article considers the capability and prospects of this approach in urban planning and rationalization of urban and regional development. By the example of Aviagorodok cluster, which began its development in Leningrad in the 1930s, the article demonstrates the lack of grounds for recognition of the economic approach to clustering adopted by the modern government as an innovative concept of development. At the same time, the reconstruction of the eighty-year history of the St. Petersburg air hub development demonstrates that the cluster approach (as a means of polycentric territorial and functional organization) has proved its feasibility and viability in the changing conditions of urban development. The authors conclude that the current official adoption and promotion of the cluster approach in urban planning requires an appropriate theoretical understan­ding, a cultural examination of the permissible ranges for the rationalization of urban environment improvement, as well as a cultural and philosophical analysis of the ability of clusters to form and develop new social and cultural syntheses.


2011 ◽  
pp. 114-131
Author(s):  
Rodrigo J. Firmino

Planners and planning departments are increasingly losing their importance within contemporary public administration, as exaggerated reliance on technical and design practices continue to fragment the public treatment of space. Koolhaas and Mau (1995) argue that planners and, in fact, urbanism are outdated, and that both failed to keep pace with the rapid modernization of urban space. Many studies show that ‘proactive’ planning initiatives related to information and communication technologies tend to appeal to the ill-grounded utopianism of technological deterministic approaches. This chapter aims to explain what has been changing in the world of spatial and urban studies as a response to new patterns of communication supported by information and communication technologies, as well as to shed some light on the challenges posed to planning and governance. This will be done together with the observation of real case scenarios in medium and well-developed cities in Brazil.


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