LUDA    
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No. 01 / April/May 2003
 
Improving the Quality of Life in Large Urban Distressed Areas
LUDA is a research project of Key Action 4 "City of Tomorrow & Cultural Heritage" of the programme "Energy, Environment and Sustainable Development" within the Fifth Framework Programme of the European Commission.

 

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editorial

LUDA e-newsletter is a free electronic newsletter, edited by the LUDA research team of the Institute of Ecological and Regional Development in Dresden (Germany). Every three months, the e-newsletter informs us about the project's progress, current affairs and interesting topics.

The LUDA e-newsletter is structured around the following topics:
In the column highlights we let you know about the most important events related to the project. The column worth knowing tells us about new and interesting literature, web-sites, events etc. related to the subject of the project. The partners and subscribers are kindly requested to foreward us some useful hints and information to be published.
Essay is an opportunity to read and discuss about issues relevant to the project. In the first LUDA e-newsletter Prof. John Ratcliffe and Dr Lorcan Sirr of The futures Academy at Dublin Institute of Technology discuss the need for a more imaginative aproach to the challenges that confront cities today.
In the column hints and upcoming events we would like to inform you about the next steps, events and the latest results of the project.

The IOER LUDA Team

LUDA - Project Background

Most European cities have large urban areas suffering environmental, economical and social distress, which results in a high level of political pressure to make rapid improvements to the quality of life. Especially in the take-off phase of urban rehabilitation, this often leads to an uneconomic use of resources and it narrows options for development. It contrasts with the need for far-sighted strategic planning and development addressing three main challenges of these areas: their large dimension, the complexity of problems and the uncertainty of their future development. LUDA-project seeks to tackle this challenge by providing tools and methods for a more strategic approach towards urban rehabilitation, and by supporting cities in initiating and managing such an approach in its early stages.

The overall goal of the project is to contribute to the improvement of the quality of life in large urban distressed areas by providing a systematic strategic planning and development approach with special consideration of the take-off phase of rehabilitation processes. The leading question is how an integrated strategic process of sustainable rehabilitation and development for large urban distressed areas with a complex set of problems, rather vague development perspectives and high public pressure for rapid improvements can be initiated and better managed during its initial stages.

The project brings together six cities as well as ten research institutions and non-governmental organisations from eight different European countries in an interdisciplinary way. Furthermore it provides a platform for a broader discussion with other cities, research institutions and civic organizations. Teamwork and permanent information exchange are ensured by establishing interactive, interdisciplinary workshops, video conferences and a net of cities. Mutual exchange and networking between cities and research partners are oriented towards establishing learning processes.
More details about the project, participants and results will be available shortly on the LUDA web-site
www.luda-project.org

 

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highlights

The Italians partners launched the LUDA-Project

On 7th March the Italian project partners (the Municipality of Florence and the University of Florence) launched the LUDA-project during a press conference hold in Palazzo Vecchio (Florence).
Mr Guido Sacconi, member both of European Parliament and European Board on the Environment, Public Health and Consumer Policy was one of the speakers. The project was presented by Dr. Gianni Biagi, Lord Mayor Counsellor for Town Planning, Prof Dr. Bernard Müller, LUDA Project Co-ordinator, Prof Romano del Nord and Ennio Di Nolfo, Pro-Chancellors of the University of Florence, and Prof Vincenzo Bentivegna responsible for the LUDA project at the University of Florence.
The City of Florence has an important role within the project consortium since the city will co-ordinate the inputs from the six cities involved in this research project. In Florence the case study area will be the neighbourhood of Brozzi-Peretola. A peripheral area which is marked by physical, economic and social isolation within the urban fabric.

by Carlos Smaniotto (IOER) and Marta Berni (UNIFI)


LUDA Kick-off Meeting at the IOER in Dresden, Germany

From April 14th to 16th 2003 the Institute of Ecological and Regional Development (IOER) hosted the international kick-off meeting project LUDA. More than 30 representatives from the partner institutions came together to discuss the perspectives of large urban distressed areas (LUDA). The project coordinator from the European Commission Mr Favrel took also part in the Dresden meeting.

The kick-off meeting not only briefed the partners about the progress that has been made since the project's beginning but paved the way for its next steps. A precondition for the development of appropriate methods and tools a framework is going to be developed. This framework will point out approaches for explaining the appearance of LUDA and characterise their determinant elements. In several working groups the participants discussed about the spatial dimension of LUDA, the complexity of issues and problems as well as the uncertainty concerning their future development. It was highlighted that currently available methods of urban planning and urban development are not adequate and sufficient to aim at a sustainable development of these areas.

An excursion to the Dresden Weißeritz area allowed an insight in one of the six LUDA case studies. Between the edge of downtown and the border to suburban Freital this part of Dresden is characterised by large industrial brownfields as well as unused and abandoned structures. This is not only a visible sign of deterioration, but due to contaminations, also a danger for the environment. regarding the economic situation of the area it can be said that there is an distinct lack of vitality. The flooding of the river Weißeritz in August 2002 has created even further uncertainty concerning the area's future commercial development. After all, the Weißeritz area is also marked by social problems which are partly above city average.

Although the participants put emphasis on differences of problems and issues between distressed urban areas, they agreed with the call for urgent action. The LUDA project therefore will formulate decision making aids and policy recommendations. Thus, the Dresden kick-off meeting can be seen as the first important milestone on the path to improving the quality of life in large urban distressed areas across Europe.

by Andreas Otto, IOER

Press review

An interview with the participants Prof. Dr. Bernhard Müller (Project-Director), Dr. Dagmar Petrikowa, (Slovakian University of Technologies), Vincent Favrel (European Commission) and Thomas Pieper (City of Dresden) was transmitted by the German broadcasting station MDR (Mitteldeutsche Rundfunk) on 22.04.2003. The content were the expectations from different points of view from a research project.

LUDA was already brought up in many journals like:

Sächsische Zeitung, issue April 3rd 2003, in German
Rundbrief Geographie, issue March 2003, in German
Dresdner Amtsblatt, issue 15/2003, in German
La Nazione, March 8th 2003, in Italian
Il Corrieri di Firenze, March 8th 2003, in Italian
ARL-Nachrichten, issue 4/2002, in German

by Carlos Smaniotto, IOER

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worth knowing

Literature:

Conway M. / Konvitz J. (2000): Meeting the Challenge of Distressed Urban Areas. In: Urban Studies, Vol. 37 No. 4/2000, 749 - 774
From the summary: "The emergence of distressed urban areas in the 1990s was unexpected. Governments have reacted with a series of policy initiatives. (…) The scale of the problem - up to 20 per cent of the total population may live in distressed urban areas - and the complexity of causes are two factors which have complicated the design and implementation of policy. Better indicators are needed, especially to check the tendency towards a rhetoric of polarisation which makes the problems appear impossible to solve. (…) There is a need for policy - makers and academic researchers to work towards a common agenda and a shared discourse. In the final analysis, the study of distressed areas can reveal much about the nature of larger urban economic and social processes. (…)"

Faludi, A / Korthals Altes, W.(1994): Evaluating Communicative Planning: A revised Design for Performance Research. In: European Planning Studies, Vol. 2, 403 - 418
From the summary: "This paper adds to the literature on the "performance" rather than the "conformance" of plans, relating the arguments to an issue that is under-researched: the evaluation of communicative planning. With the "IOR-School", it argues that the purpose of planning is to improve the quality of decisions. To establish how plans can do that, the paper looks at the interaction between the maker of a plan and those responsible for subsequent decisions as a process of communication. Drawing inspiration from literature according an inalienable role to the reader of a text in interpreting it, the paper proposes a modified design for performance research."

Web-sites:

www.sustainable-cities.org - Campaign Interactive, the Webpage of the European Sustainable Cities & Towns Campaign and the European Sustainable Cities Project
www.difu.de/stadtoekologie/praxis - Difu (German Institute of Urban Affairs) - Database of model examples of the ecological urban measures and projects.

Projects:

Urban II is the Community Initiative of the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) for sustainable development in troubled urban districts of the European Union for the period 2000-06.
As a follow-up to Urban I in 1994-99, Urban II aims more precisely at promoting the design and implementation of innovative models of development for the economic and social regeneration of troubled urban areas. It will also strengthen information and experience-sharing on sustainable urban development in the European Union.
Urban II has the following objectives:
a. to promote the design and implementation of highly innovative strategies of economic and social regeneration in small and medium-sized towns and declining areas in major conurbations;
b. to reinforce and share knowledge and experience on regeneration and sustainable urban development in the European Union.
More information about the project is available under: http://europa.eu.int/comm/regional_policy/urban2/index_en.htm

by Patrycja Bielawska - Roepke, IOER

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essay

IMAGINEERING CITIES : A plea for more 'futures thinking' in urban planning and development


Professor John S. Ratcliffe,
Dr. Lorcan Sirr.

City and City Planning

Cities are moving centrestage. At the same time, the global backcloth is changing. There is a widespread recognition that we live in an era of rapid change in which new discoveries, philosophies and technologies play an ever more prominent part in shaping social and economic development. The world is becoming increasingly complex, more competitive and better connected. There is economic internationalisation on the one hand, yet cultural decentralisation on the other. Society has shifted from an industrial base to an information and knowledge orientation. Advances in genetics, materials, energy, computing, robotics, miniaturisation, medicines, therapies and communication proceed apace. The developed world is getting smaller, older and wealthier, whilst the developing world grows bigger, younger and relatively poorer. A blurring of boundaries between disciplines, industries and social enterprises is taking place. And, as those boundaries fade, the lines connecting the constituent parts become more critical, so that networks, systems and holistic thinking are more meaningful. Moreover, crucial issues on a global level - demographic, natural resources, the environment and human culture - have to be addressed. All in all, a veritable transformation, or great disruption, is occurring. Something old is coming apart at the seams, and something new is emerging.

For city planning, this transformation demands a more imaginative approach towards the way communities think, talk, plan and act creatively in tackling the urban issues they face. This essay argues that the futures field through such visioning methods as foresighting and 'prospectives', using techniques like environmental scanning, scenario learning and planning and other forms of structured 'brainstorming' and collaborative decision-making can provide a more valid conceptual framework, and greater operational effectiveness, through collaborative processes in addressing the challenges that confront cities today.

Striking a somewhat pejorative note, it can be argued that over the past forty years or so city planning has abrogated its role as a visionary profession concerned with creating better alternatives for the future. The complexity of urban planning, together with the contentious nature of radical reforming proposals, has defeated it. Uncertainty, diversity and dispute have forced planning into retreat. Short-term compromise decisions have seemed to predominate. A camouflage of public relations masquerading as public participation on the one hand, together with a refuge behind the restrictions imposed by a methodological rationale favouring reliance upon past data and current reaction on the other, has precluded the assiduous search for a preferred future.

In particular, the planning field can be criticised over recent years for neglecting time and the future in favour of present-focused decisions about space. Spatial analysis and territorial planning techniques have advanced considerably. Methods for tackling the time dimension in planning, however, are far less developed than those for addressing the spatial dimension, and it becomes increasingly obvious that the town planners toolkit for exploring the future needs to be upgraded and expanded. Interdisciplinary connections, moreover, lie at the heart of city planning, and here the urban planning field is further exposed to criticism from more narrowly trained experts in contributing disciplines, for the future is the only topic that other professions have ceded to planners as relatively uncontested turf (Myers, 2001).

Certainly, very little attention has been paid by the planning profession to developing a more informed, structured, collaborative and imaginative approach towards the study of the future, in growing contrast to other sectors of society such as science, technology, business, the military and, of late, even central government.

The Futures Concept

There is a growing realisation, in all areas of life, that the future is not fixed. The notion that the future can be 'shaped' or 'created' has gained currency over the past decade, and is increasingly the basis upon which organisations of all kinds make their plans. As Charles Handy (1989) put it:

"The future is not inevitable. We can influence it if we know what we want it to be."
By trying to make things happen, rather than guess what might happen, organisations, and individuals for that matter, have to embrace uncertainty, and deal with it by continually reviewing a wide range of policy options. This is the business of discovery and the concept of futures.

The crucial questions most usually facing those working in the futures field in the examination of an issue or policy include:
" What are the main continuities?
" What are the major trends?
" What are the most important change processes?
" What are the most serious problems?
" What are the new factors 'in the pipeline'?
" What are the main sources of inspiration and hope?

A similar set of issues is faced by city planners.

A useful metaphor to describe the aim of the futures field is to provide a 'map of the future'. In essence, futures studies supplies policy makers and others with views, images and alternatives about futures in order to inform and protect decisions in the present. It is important to note, that the underlying purpose of future studies is not to make predictions, but rather to gain an overview of the present human context in order to illuminate alternative futures. Interpretation not forecast. So too with city planning.

Put very simply, the purposes of future studies are to discover or invent, examine or evaluate, and propose possible, probable and preferable futures. They may, however, be more usefully summarised as (Slaughter, 1995):
" Raising issues of common concern that may be overlooked in the conventional short-term view.
" Highlighting dangers, alternatives and choices that need to be considered before they become urgent.
" Publicising the emerging picture of the medium-term future in order to involve the public in the decision-making process.
" Identifying the dynamics and policy implications of the transition to a sustainable world and placing them on the political agenda.
" Facilitating the development of social innovations.
" Helping people to become genuinely empowered to participate in creating the future.
" Helping organisations to evolve in response to the changing global and local outlook.

Clearly, these prime aims should be shared with the goals of urban planning and development.

Urban Planning and a Futures Approach

The relationship between futures and planning is an important one to understand. Futures, through foresight and prospective is a discipline with an intellectual domain and the tools to apply it. Planning is first and foremost a technique. Indeed, it is one of the tools or techniques that can be used in foresight or prospective to implement the preferred future. Conceptually, moreover, foresight or prospective are previous steps to planning (Serra, 2001). Strategic thinking should precede strategic planning.

Planning, by definition, is to conceive an objective and the means to achieve it. It is less helpful when it comes to determining which is the best objective and how that objective can reasonably be attained. Planning, furthermore, will fall short of foreseeing the potential obstacles or pitfalls that might prevent the attainment of that desired future. This is because foresighting or prospective and planning have a completely different theoretical approach: foresight/prospective wants to open the scope to look further into the future, and in different mental contexts, to improve the chances of detecting all the conceivable variables and project them as far as possible; planning, on the contrary, aims to reduce and concentrate the scope, focussing efforts to converge in a concrete objective and place it near enough in the future so as to be quite sure of its accomplishment. It has been suggested that this is why in the business world planning has a better image than futures (Ibid).

Futures methodologies, however, are different from long-range planning in at least three distinct areas.
" They recognise that the future will not be an extension of the past. Futures methods and techniques expect events that cause discontinuities to occur.
" There may be numerous possible futures. The future will be a function of various factors as well as various possible relationships among those factors.
" Innovation has the potential to accelerate the rate of change and to cause fundamental shifts in the nature of business and life.

Conventional planning techniques developed in a lineal and incremental world do not have the flexibility needed to address multi-faceted and rapidly paced change. They also fail to incorporate entrepreneurial forces that change what it takes for organisations to succeed.

Almost by definition, the core concern of urban planning is the future. The forces of change, complexity and uncertainty, however, all conspire to reinforce the need for a more systemic, holistic and integrated approach towards urban planning relying more on intuition, participation and adaptability, as opposed to the traditional mechanistic, empirical and rationalist approach based on observation, measurement and logical analysis. The former seeing the town or city more as an organism and being process-oriented, and the latter a machine being more goal-oriented.

Added to the 'chaos' of the urban context is the contentious nature of the decision making process in planning where dispute, dissent and disagreement are inherent ingredients in the mix of ideas and views that constitute the community of stakeholders seeking to shape and direct the future for their own designs. To deal with this, the reigning metaphor among the planning fraternity is fast becoming that of "collaborative planning", where the aim is to build a convergence of values and meanings that go beyond the specialised knowledge and language of experts. Such collaborative planning provides an umbrella for a range of different perspectives and seeks to investigate the diversity of experience, attitudes and values in different groups and communities.

According to this approach, it is knowledge, and the ways in which varying forms of knowledge are integrated, rather than the straightforward transmission of information, that increasingly is seen as being necessary in responding to the complexity of spatial land use planning decisions (Puglisi, 2000). To achieve this level of collaboration, through effective communication and productive interaction, whilst tackling the complexity and uncertainty of continuous change that besets urban planning and development, a futures approach is progressively being seen as a powerful way in which towns and cities can picture, shape and direct their preferred prospective.

Successful Competitive Cities

From a variety of city based futures studies over the past few years there is emerging a consensus as to the essential ingredients that contribute to creating successful competitive towns and cities. These can usefully be summarised as follows:

" Vision; having normally four dimensions - an ambition for the future, a collective desire, a shared values system and several major medium-term strategic axes. A true vision for the future is based on serious study, broad public collaboration and has real content. It cannot be bought "off-the-rack" or achieved without a collective change in municipal mind-set. Urban visioning is a relatively new phenomenon and involves scaling-up the idea of the business plan from the level of the firm or corporation to the level of the town or city (Landry, 2000).

" Entrepreneurship; ensuring that innovative and creative individuals and organisations can gather, thrive and grow. The concept of the 'learning city' is central to the nurturing of entrepreneurship and the development of high levels of innovative capacity. There is also the need constantly to promote a forward-looking prospective approach so as to engender considerable flexibility into the strategic planning process and a marked agility in operational programmes and project implementation.

" Specialisation; working on the principle that every town or city can be the best in the world at something. Policies, plans and proposals should be crafted to fit the unique circumstances of each individual urban area. Such 'particularity' should also identify the special assets of a given territory and take steps to maintain and enhance them so as to sustain a distinctive and competitive edge. A town or city should be seen as a 'brand' and promoted as such. In the vernacular of the advertising industry, the 'unique selling proposition' or USP should be sought and sold.

" Social Cohesion; fostering a harmonious mix of population, in non-segregated areas, with accessibility and safety and having, so far as possible, equality of treatment and opportunity. In most foresighting exercises conducted by the author, the potential threat to urban stability by forces of social exclusion is seen as the single most serious portent facing towns and cities today. Successful urban management has to recognise the importance, interrelationship and integration of networks within the city so that effective communication, collaboration and partnership can be seen to benefit everyone in the community. Above all, perhaps, successful competitive cities of the future must address, as a matter of urgency, the legacy of urban deprivation and the existence of distressed urban areas in the present.

" Governance; appreciation that change, complexity and uncertainty in society require a process in which local political institutions implement their policies, plans and programmes in concert with civil society actors, and within which these actors and interests gain influence over urban politics (Pierre, 1998). Such an approach needs a clear analysis of environmental, social and economic issues together with their links; an identification of the main obstacles standing in the way of implementing better policies; a clear understanding of the relevant and respective roles and responsibilities of various levels of government; be aware of, and have a positive approach towards 'new tools' in urban planning and development innovation; assist and promote reinvestment by both old and new businesses in the area; comprehend and reinforce the concept of 'clusters'; and have a capability to work on a broad area basis and build alliances to discourage neighbour-beggaring wasteful policies.

One leading consultant has put the common key to concocting successful and competitive cities more pithily as having visionary individuals, creative organisations and a political culture sharing a clarity of purpose (Landry, op cit). Further, that the key actors in such cities possess certain collective qualities (Ibid):

"….. open mindedness and a willingness to take risks; a clear focus on long-term aims with an understanding of strategy; a capacity to work with local distinctiveness and to find a strength in apparent weakness; and a willingness to listen and learn."

It is argued here that the emerging fields of futures studies, foresighting, prospectives and scenario planning provide the necessary insight, imagination and innovative thinking to facilitate the advancement of successful competitive cities.

Conclusion

One of the main criticisms of conventional urban planning is that the concepts, methods and techniques employed tend to re-inforce the present. This makes it difficult for towns and cities to contemplate, design and build alternative visions of the future more suited to their true desires. What is needed is the conception and development of alternative scenarios, and the adoption of longer perspectives than those commonly afforded by traditional planning approaches. The 'prospective' process provides this. This is not to say that the prospective approach completely replaces the familiar planning process, but rather that it would be of much greater effect if a prospective exercise were conducted at the initial stage of considering a preferred future for a given urban area. Strategic thinking again, before strategic planning. This would enhance the capacity of communities to address complexity, uncertainty and change, as well as determine a shared view of the desired future.

It is argued that within the next couple of decades, one of the most noticeable changes in the field of urban affairs will be the disappearance of the 'Plan' as it is currently perceived - definitive, specific, fixed and agreed - and its replacement with more open-ended landuse control systems for the management and control of resources, as well as mechanisms for conflict avoidance and resolution. Planning will increasingly make use of the 'preferred option' path nested within a series of plausible contingency options that would continuously be reviewed and updated. Furthermore, such scenario-based plans will progressively become integrated forums where the objectives of many sectors are synergised and synchronised. Monitoring and review procedures and techniques will acquire very different roles in the planning process so that eventually the whole cycle of evaluation, planning and implementation, followed by further evaluations and so on, will become a self-renewing system with no clear distinction between the present, the future and the past.

Perhaps the most fundamental change of all in the future of urban planning over the next 20 years or so, however, will be the transition from quantitatively based drivers - economic, physical and scientific - towards the qualitatively based drivers of value systems, beliefs, ethics and aspirations. Just imagine?

"Imagination", as Albert Einstein declared, "is more important than knowledge".

Professor John S. Ratcliffe,
Director - Faculty of the Built Environment, Dublin Institute of Technology, Ireland,
Chairman - The Futures Academy, Dublin Institute of Technology, Ireland.
Visiting Professor - University of Salford, U.K.

Dr. Lorcan Sirr,
Head - The Futures Academy, Dublin Institute of Technology, Ireland.

References

Handy, C. (1989). The Age of Unreason, Arrow, London.
Landry, C. (2000). The Creative City. Earthscan, London.
Myers, D. (2001). APAJ, op cit.
Pierre, J. (ed.) (1998). Partnerships in Urban Governance. Macmillan, London.
Puglisi, M. (2000). "Futures Studies and the challenges of participatory urban planning". Paper at Quest for the Futures Seminar. Turku, Finland, June.
Serra, J. (2001). "Territorial Foresight: More than Planning, Less that Prospective". Paper presented at conference Creating and Applying Vision in the Regions, Dublin, December.
Slaughter, R. (1995). The Foresight Principle. Adamantine, London.

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hints & upcoming events
 
Next events
06-07 July 2003 Workshop in Edinburgh
06-08 November 2003 Workshop in Florence
07 November 2003 LUDA - Public Conference in Florence
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disclaimer / impressum

LUDA Project Team
Project Director: Professor Bernhard Mueller
Institute of Ecological and Regional Development IOER
Weberplatz 1
01217 Dresden (Germany)

fon 0049 351 4679 0
fax 0049 351 4679 212

Editorial staff
Dr. Carlos Smaniotto Costa
Patrycja Bielawska - Roepke
Andreas Otto
Christiane Westphal

luda-team@ioer.de
www.luda-project.org

We are not responsible for the content of external web-sites connected with this e-newsletter.

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