A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Planners, blended (in)formality and a public interest of fragments
Planners need to manage the plurality of everyday living conditions faced by monetary poor communities in South African cities. Here, we develop the concept of blended (in)formality to move beyond binary approaches which classify these communities as having either formal or informal status. Drawing on McFarlane’s (2018, 2021) notion of fragments, we explore how formal planning and spontaneous unplanned urban interventions do not merely co-exist but work together. We formulate a public interest of fragments to demonstrate how communities can benefit from approaches to planning which employ a more fluid understanding of the interactions between the formal and informal.
Planners, blended (in)formality and a public interest of fragments
Planners need to manage the plurality of everyday living conditions faced by monetary poor communities in South African cities. Here, we develop the concept of blended (in)formality to move beyond binary approaches which classify these communities as having either formal or informal status. Drawing on McFarlane’s (2018, 2021) notion of fragments, we explore how formal planning and spontaneous unplanned urban interventions do not merely co-exist but work together. We formulate a public interest of fragments to demonstrate how communities can benefit from approaches to planning which employ a more fluid understanding of the interactions between the formal and informal.
Planners, blended (in)formality and a public interest of fragments
Andres, Lauren (author) / Denoon-Stevens, Stuart (author) / Jones, Phil (author)
Planning Practice & Research ; 39 ; 207-222
2024-03-03
16 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Planning and the public interest: Still a relevant concept for planners?
Online Contents | 2016
|Planning, Policy and the Public Interest: Planning Regimes and Planners' Ethics and Practices
Online Contents | 2010
|Planning, Policy and the Public Interest: Planning Regimes and Planners' Ethics and Practices
Taylor & Francis Verlag | 2010
|