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Integrated Planning: Towards a Mutually Inclusive Approach to Infrastructure Planning and Design

Author

Listed:
  • Dario Hernan Schoulund

    (Department of Architecture, Faculty of Engineering, Built Environment and Information Technology, Hatfield Campus, University of Pretoria, Pretoria 0002, South Africa)

  • Carlos Alberto Amura

    (Department of Constructions and Structures, School of Civil Engineering, Engineering Faculty, Las Heras Campus, University of Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires 1126, Argentina)

  • Karina Landman

    (Department of Town and Regional Planning, Faculty of Engineering, Built Environment and Information Technology, Hatfield Campus, University of Pretoria, Pretoria 0002, South Africa)

Abstract

Increasingly independent fields of specialization, civil engineering, and urban design find themselves practicing in isolation on the same urban issues. The result surfaces on the relative qualities of public spaces: projects that are functionally successful but spatially poor, and vice versa This is critical in the global south, where infrastructure is prioritized, and politicized, as the key driver of change but often heedless of spatial consequences. The present study explores the dynamics of integration between logics arising from technical and spatial fields, and the planning processes under which such integration is feasible. An urban design/infrastructural project in Argentina, stalled for more than two decades under regulatory policies, was selected as a case study. An overview and background of the adopted planning/design methodologies are followed by a structural/spatial analysis, focusing on type, logistics, and construction on the one hand, and on indicators of successful public spaces on the other: access, uses, comfort and image. Aspects that a priori appeared as inevitable compromises found a common, but the critically logical ground in which urban and structural thinking complemented each other. More than a functional asset, infrastructure presents an opportunity to re-think the future of the built environment as a typology that could be conceived, designed and evaluated, on the same terms as successful public spaces.

Suggested Citation

  • Dario Hernan Schoulund & Carlos Alberto Amura & Karina Landman, 2021. "Integrated Planning: Towards a Mutually Inclusive Approach to Infrastructure Planning and Design," Land, MDPI, vol. 10(12), pages 1-18, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jlands:v:10:y:2021:i:12:p:1282-:d:685886
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
    1. Dalit Shach-Pinsly & Isaac Guedi Capeluto, 2020. "From Form-Based to Performance-Based Codes," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 12(14), pages 1-20, July.
    2. Christien Klaufus & Paul Van Lindert & Femke Van Noorloos & Griet Steel, 2017. "All-Inclusiveness versus Exclusion: Urban Project Development in Latin America and Africa," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 9(11), pages 1-15, November.
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