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Urban Living Labs as an instrument for co-creating sustainable cities? – Reflections on Hamburg and Milan in the CLEVER Cities project
This research focuses on the role that Urban Living Labs can play in facilitating urban transformation through co-production, and asks how far these ULLs can deliver policy changes and transition of the urban governance setting. As a basis for this research, the authors analyse co-creative transdisciplinary research pro-cesses in the CLEVER Cities project (Horizon 2020). Co-production and co-creation are terms that are lately populating the academia with the intent to define the active engagement of citizens in shaping public ser-vices (Brandsen & Honingh 2018). Beyond the discussion on the actual signifi-cance of the two terms, such engagement approaches have been extensively deployed for implementing urban transformations in spatial planning (Davis & An-drew 2017; Puerari et al. 2018; Loorbach et al. (eds.) 2016). On this theme, en-gagement can occur through different formats and scales, of which the most com-mon are Urban Living Labs (ULL). The ULL concept is currently reaching its peak of glory as a tool for commonly advancing urban regeneration projects (Fran-tzeskaki & Kabisch 2016; Chronéer et al. 2021). ULLs are often used for fostering participation of various stakeholders in a complete co-creation process towards the achievement of a shared consensus and a more open transparent decision-making, thus advancing urban resilience wherein an important role is reserved to citizens and local groups of interest. The plethora of interests and expertise sum-moned in ULLs is expected to bring to the fore high levels of social innovation, while generating a sense of belonging and empowerment among the participants (Rizzo et al. 2021; AMS 2021). Given the specificity of such an environment, the complexity of governing the process of a ULL is enormous and steering its’ development requires mostly a relevant effort. Furthermore, the challenges addressed within ULLs are often re-lated to localised conditions and are therefore directed to generate extremely place-based social and/or physical ...
Urban Living Labs as an instrument for co-creating sustainable cities? – Reflections on Hamburg and Milan in the CLEVER Cities project
This research focuses on the role that Urban Living Labs can play in facilitating urban transformation through co-production, and asks how far these ULLs can deliver policy changes and transition of the urban governance setting. As a basis for this research, the authors analyse co-creative transdisciplinary research pro-cesses in the CLEVER Cities project (Horizon 2020). Co-production and co-creation are terms that are lately populating the academia with the intent to define the active engagement of citizens in shaping public ser-vices (Brandsen & Honingh 2018). Beyond the discussion on the actual signifi-cance of the two terms, such engagement approaches have been extensively deployed for implementing urban transformations in spatial planning (Davis & An-drew 2017; Puerari et al. 2018; Loorbach et al. (eds.) 2016). On this theme, en-gagement can occur through different formats and scales, of which the most com-mon are Urban Living Labs (ULL). The ULL concept is currently reaching its peak of glory as a tool for commonly advancing urban regeneration projects (Fran-tzeskaki & Kabisch 2016; Chronéer et al. 2021). ULLs are often used for fostering participation of various stakeholders in a complete co-creation process towards the achievement of a shared consensus and a more open transparent decision-making, thus advancing urban resilience wherein an important role is reserved to citizens and local groups of interest. The plethora of interests and expertise sum-moned in ULLs is expected to bring to the fore high levels of social innovation, while generating a sense of belonging and empowerment among the participants (Rizzo et al. 2021; AMS 2021). Given the specificity of such an environment, the complexity of governing the process of a ULL is enormous and steering its’ development requires mostly a relevant effort. Furthermore, the challenges addressed within ULLs are often re-lated to localised conditions and are therefore directed to generate extremely place-based social and/or physical ...
Urban Living Labs as an instrument for co-creating sustainable cities? – Reflections on Hamburg and Milan in the CLEVER Cities project
Alessandro Arlati (Autor:in) / Jörg Knieling (Autor:in) / Israa Mahmoud (Autor:in) / Eugenio Morello (Autor:in) / A. Arlati, J. Knieling, I. Mahmoud, E. Morello / European planning Cultures / Arlati, Alessandro / Knieling, Jörg / Mahmoud, ISRAA HANAFI ELSAYED HANAFI / Morello, Eugenio
01.01.2022
Aufsatz (Konferenz)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
DDC:
710
Eco-Cities: Sustainable Urban Living
Springer Verlag | 2024
|UB Braunschweig | 1999
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