79 research outputs found
#dialoghi di sostenibilità: mobilità sostenibile da opzione ideologica a scelta logica
Piani e architetture d'autore in Terra di Lavoro. Sfide incompiute e nuove ecologie industriali
Emergency and spatial planning towards cooperative approaches
The dependency of risk scenarios on the dynamics of urban transformation clearly highlights the need of ensuring a closer cooperation between spatial and emergency planning processes. So far the relationships between these processes have been rather limited, leading at most to the transposition of the emergency plans' indications in the spatial plans. Nevertheless, more cooperative approaches would be crucial to increase safety, resilience and sustainability of human settlements, above all when the latter are threatened by different hazard factors. In order to explore barriers and opportunities for a better cooperation between emergency and spatial planning tools, this contribution will focus on the Campi Flegrei in the Campania Region (Southern Italy): an area densely populated, hosting a significant historical, cultural, and natural heritage, and prone to volcanic, seismic and hydrogeological hazards. The case study area is also characteized by the coexistence of emergency and spatial planning tools acting on different spatial scales, developed by different actors and not always fully consistent each other. In detail, based on the in-depth analysis of the location and accessibility of emergency facilities, crucial to guarantee an effective response in the aftermath of hazardous events, we will here highlight both the main criticalities of the emergency plans recently carried out for the selected Municipalities and the difficulties and opportunities related to a better integration between spatial and emergency planning at municipal scale
Rigenerazione territoriale sostenibile delle aree negate: l’analisi GIS delle aree dell’Agro Aversano
The Provincial Territorial Plan of Caserta, approved in 2012, recognizes the ‘denied areas’ as parts of the territory devoid of territorial functions and marked by evident functional, physical, or environmental degradation. More than ten years after the approval of the Provincial Plan, some of these areas have been regenerated, many are still waiting for a transformation and new denied areas can be identified. The analysis of the current state of denied areas, their features, and their potential for transformation resulted in a GIS database useful both for updating the knowledge framework of the Provincial and Urban Plans, and to supporting the definition of urban and territorial regeneration strategies, the choice of alternatives, and the prioritization of actions. Thanks to the definition of a GIS database, knowledge frameworks are enriched with a repository of spatial data on the current state of denied areas and a tool to enable the setting of strategies and interventions for unlocking the potential of a sustainable revitalization of marginalized and fragile ecosystems
Approaches and tools for communities’ engagement in marginal areas
The paper aims at providing a methodological path to improve local communities’ ability to re-discover the value of their local, natural, and cultural capital, and outline shared strategies for its enhancement. The defined methodological path, addressed to knowledge co-creation and co-design of visions and strategies for future development, has been tested on selected case studies in Southern Italy, both of them characterised by high levels of marginality. Preserving local identities and increasing the sense of belonging of communities to their living places are, indeed, crucial for ensuring a sustainable and shared development process in marginal areas
Pianificazione di emergenza e pianificazione urbanistica in Campania: un focus sull’area metropolitana di Napoli
Territorial sustainable regeneration: a case study
This contribution proposes an analysis of the current state of the denied areas identified by the Provincial Plan and new ones of 19 municipalities in the Province of Caserta and a classification by type of transformation based on some specific characteristics of the area and the context. Figure 1 shows the still existing denied areas and the new functions assumed by the already transformed areas. The percentage of denied areas identified by the PTP which have not yet been recovered is less than 25% in Casapesenna, Parete, San Cipriano, and Trentola; between 25 and 50% in Lusciano, San Marcellino, Succivo, and Teverola; more than 50% in the remaining 11 municipalities. About 37% of recovered areas has a residential function, these are mostly small and peri-urban areas, while about 20% of recovered areas has a productive/commercial function and are mostly medium-large areas. Only about 14% of recovered areas has an agricultural function and only 10% have an environmental function. The remaining 19% have a function different from the previous categories or mixed. Over the years, other areas have been progressively abandoned and today present the same characteristics defined by the PTP for denied areas (figure 1). Most of them are small-medium areas located on the edges of compact urban centres, in predominantly residential or agricultural areas, and characterized by environmental and physical degradation
Pianificazione paesaggistica e rischi, un approccio sincretico nella gestione territoriale
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