224 research outputs found

    Evidence from three real-world geodesign studies.

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    This contribution aims at presenting in comparison three applications of geodesign in strategic planning and design at the metropolitan, inter-municipal, and local scale. The case studies were undertaken in Sardinia, Italy between 2019 and 2023, and each involved a different range of stakeholders from the respective communities. While all the three multi-sessions geodesign workshops were fully digitally supported, two geodesign workshops were held live in person, while the third one was held online. The comparison aims at analysing both the processes and their results, and the potential and limitations of geodesign for strategic adaptive spatial planning practice

    From Finance to Physical Plan: Construction of Garbatella from Garden City Principles

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    http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/120369/1/Cramer-Greenbaum_FromFinanceToPhysicalPlan.pd

    A Conversation on Rainbow Milk: Paul Mendez and Susannah Thompson

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    An edited interview from the Biographical Fictioning masterclass, held by MLitt Art Writing programme in April 2022, between author and critic Paul Mendez (Rainbow Milk) and Susannah Thompson

    Re-Imagining Round Rock

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    http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/120367/1/Cramer-GreenbaumWannemacher_Re-imaginingRoundRock.pd

    Quantifying displacement: Using turnover data to measure physical and psychological neighborhood change

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    Population displacement is difficult to measure, but quantifying its presence is critical to delineating the scope, scale and potential causes of displacement’s effect in urban areas. This paper considers whether the widely available data used to measure turnover can be effectively used to measure other forms of population change. The article presents two new metrics, the Fresh Faces Ratio and the Replacement Index, that better capture some of the nuances of physical and psycholog-ical displacement. It then applies these metrics to city quarters within the city of Zurich, Switzerland, correlates them with turnover and new construction statistics, and assesses their accuracy against residents’ perceptions of change. The research finds that both metrics offer suitable proxies to identify areas where exceptional population changes are taking place, and where residents have a strong sense of these changes. The new metrics can help assess what physical or psychological displacement may or may not result from urban development and new housing construction. Since the new metrics use turnover data already widely available, they are easily adaptable to less data-rich contexts than Zurich. Highlights: • Refashioning turnover data for new metrics measuring displacement • Evaluating new metrics against resident perceptions of change • Potential applicability for comparison across varied data contexts

    Seeing Place:Exhibition at Belsize Community Library

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    Co-produced photographic exhibition from a neighbourhood photo-craw
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