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Migration from Post-Soviet countries to Poland and the Baltic States: trends and features
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In: Baltic Region ; 13 ; 4 ; 79-94 (2022)
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Spaces, Places, and Geographies of Public Spheres: Exploring Dimensions of the Spatial Turn
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In: Media and Communication ; 9 ; 3 ; 1-4 ; Spaces, Places, and Geographies of Public Spheres (2022)
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Structures of the Public Sphere: Contested Spaces as Assembled Interfaces
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In: Media and Communication ; 9 ; 3 ; 16-27 ; Spaces, Places, and Geographies of Public Spheres (2022)
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Relational Urbanisation, Resilience, Revolution: Beirut as a Relational City?
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In: Urban Planning ; 7 ; 1 ; 183-192 ; Urbanisation, Crisis, and Resilience: The Multiple Dimensions of Urban Transformation in Beirut, Lebanon (2022)
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Planning Adaptation: Accommodating Complexity in the Built Environment
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In: Urban Planning ; 7 ; 1 ; 44-55 ; City as Flux: Interrogating the Changing Nature of Urban Change (2022)
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Abstract:
Obsolescence and vacancy are part of the traditional building life cycle, as tenants leave properties and move to new ones. Flux, a period of uncertainty before the establishment of new direction, can be considered part of building DNA. What is new, due to structural disruptions in the way we work, is the rate and regularity of flux, reflected in obsolescence, vacancy, and impermanent use. Covid-19 has instantly accelerated this disruption. Retail failure has increased with even more consumers moving online. While employees have been working from home, rendering the traditional office building in the central business district, at least temporarily, obsolete. This article reflects on the situation by reporting findings from an 18-month research project into the practice of planning adaptation in the English built environment. Original findings based on interviews with a national sample of local authority planners, combined with an institutional analysis of planning practice since the 1947 Town and Country Planning Act, suggest that the discipline of planning in England is struggling with the reality of flux. There is a demand for planning to act faster, due to the speed of change in the built environment, and liberal political concerns with planning regulation. This is reflected in relaxations to permitted development rules and building use categories. However, participants also indicate that there is a concurrent need for the planning system to operate in a more measured way, to plan the nuanced complexity of a built environment no longer striated by singular use categories at the local level. This notion of flux suggests a process of perpetual change, turbulence, and volatility. However, our findings suggest that within this process, there is a temporal dialectic between an accelerating rate of change in the built environment and a concomitant need to plan in a careful way to accommodate adaptation. We situate these findings in a novel reading of the complex adaptive systems literature, arguing that planning practice needs to embrace uncertainty, rather than eradicate it, in order to enable built environment adaptation. These findings are significant because they offer a framework for understanding how successful building adaptation can be enabled in England, moving beyond the negativity associated with the adaptation of buildings in recent years. This is achieved by recognizing the complex interactions involved in the adaptation process between respective stakeholders and offering an insight into how respective scales of planning governance can coexist successfully.
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Keyword:
adaptation; Area Development Planning; built environment; complexity; flux; Landscaping and area planning; Landschaftsgestaltung; Raumplanung; Raumplanung und Regionalforschung; Regional Research; Städtebau; temporality; urban planning
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URL: https://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/76932 https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/4590 https://doi.org/10.17645/up.v7i1.4590
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7 |
Mitteldeutschland - Regionalbegriff und Handlungsraum
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In: "Metropolregion Mitteldeutschland" aus raumwissenschaftlicher Sicht ; 30 ; Arbeitsberichte der ARL ; 13-51 (2021)
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Kleinstädte als Forschungsgegenstand: Bestimmungsmerkmale, Bedeutungen und Zugänge
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In: Kompendium Kleinstadtforschung ; 16 ; Forschungsberichte der ARL ; 5-23 (2021)
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Coffeehouses (re)appropriated: counterpublics and cultural resistance in Tabriz, Iran
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In: Urban Planning ; 5 ; 4 ; 183-192 ; Built environment, ethics and everyday life (2020)
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Urban Narrative: Computational Linguistic Interpretation of Large Format Public Participation for Urban Infrastructure
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In: Urban Planning ; 5 ; 4 ; 20-32 ; The City of Digital Social Innovators (2020)
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Metropole - Größe, Funktion und Symbolik: Eine quantitative Textanalyse deutscher Printmedien für Berlin und Hamburg
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In: Raumforschung und Raumordnung / Spatial Research and Planning ; 78 ; 3 ; 213-231 (2020)
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Wie entstehen Themen in der Planungswissenschaft?
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In: Raumforschung und Raumordnung / Spatial Research and Planning ; 77 ; 3 ; 225-240 (2020)
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Integration Geflüchteter in nordrhein-westfälischen Städten und Gemeinden
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In: 12 ; FGW-Studie Integrierende Stadtentwicklung ; 79 (2020)
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Comparative Planning Research, Learning, and Governance: The Benefits and Limitations of Learning Policy by Comparison
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In: Urban Planning ; 5 ; 1 ; 11-21 ; Comparative Planning, Learning and Evolving Governance (2020)
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Urban Arrival Infrastructures between Political and Humanitarian Support: The 'Refugee Welcome' Mo(ve)ment Revisited
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In: Urban Planning ; 5 ; 3 ; 67-77 ; Urban Arrival Spaces: Social Co-Existence in Times of Changing Mobilities and Local Diversity (2020)
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Integration Geflüchteter in groß- und kleinstädtischen Räumen in NRW: Zugang zu Wohnung, Arbeit und Kontakten
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In: 12 ; FGW-Impuls Integrierende Stadtentwicklung ; 4 (2020)
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Dauercamping als multilokale Wohnform
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In: Multilokale Lebensführungen und räumliche Entwicklung: ein Kompendium ; 13 ; Forschungsberichte der ARL ; 253-259 (2020)
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Zwischen sinnlichem Erleben und sprachlich-rationalem Begreifen: zur Reflexion der ästhetischen Dimension der Forschung in der Geographie
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In: Europa Regional ; 26.2018 ; 1 ; 49-61 (2019)
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Barriers of culture, networks, and language in international migration: a review
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In: Region: the journal of ERSA ; 5 ; 1 ; 73-89 (2019)
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