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Challenging dichotomies - exploring resilience as an integrative and operative conceptual framework for large-scale urban green structures

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  • H. Erixon
  • S. Borgström
  • E. Andersson

Abstract

Urban planners and urban planning as a field face a major challenge in balancing urban development interests against the need to safeguard socially equitable and ecologically functional green space. This need is still commonly seen through a modernist lens, whereby large-scale green areas are viewed as an antithesis to the city, creating a polarised landscape seemingly free from cross-scale social and ecological interactions. This study reports on a transdisciplinary work process that aimed to challenge this polarisation by exploring more integrative and operative planning approaches to large-scale urban green structures, using the concept of resilience, both as a theoretical umbrella and in relation to a case study in Stockholm, Sweden. The exploration took the form of a series of workshops in which professionals from the fields of planning, urban design, ecology, landscape architecture, and environmental history, as well as city-wide and regional planning, took part. Throughout the process, tentative designs served as "touchstones", bringing questions from a theoretical level to a hands-on, specific, local context. This paper identifies three ways that resilience science can be useful in the planning and management of large urban green structures. Firstly, resilience can introduce complexity and thus make visible synergies and " win-win " situations within planning. Secondly, in highlighting change, resilience can offer alternatives to present conservationist perspectives on green space planning and thus offer constructive ways out of planning-related deadlocks. Thirdly, resilience can be advantageously combined with the concept of "legibility" in clarifying common goals and thus helping to build a constituency which will sustain large-scale green structures over time.

Suggested Citation

  • H. Erixon & S. Borgström & E. Andersson, 2013. "Challenging dichotomies - exploring resilience as an integrative and operative conceptual framework for large-scale urban green structures," Planning Theory & Practice, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 14(3), pages 349-372, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:rptpxx:v:14:y:2013:i:3:p:349-372
    DOI: 10.1080/14649357.2013.813960
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    Cited by:

    1. Johan Colding & Stephan Barthel, 2017. "The Role of University Campuses in Reconnecting Humans to the Biosphere," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 9(12), pages 1-13, December.
    2. Dan Lupu & Liviu-George Maha & Elena-Daniela Viorica, 2023. "The relevance of smart cities’ features in exploring urban labour market resilience: the specificity of post-transition economies," Regional Studies, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 57(12), pages 2406-2425, December.
    3. Hanna Erixon Aalto & Lars Marcus & Jonas Torsvall, 2018. "Towards a Social-Ecological Urbanism: Co-Producing Knowledge through Design in the Albano Resilient Campus Project in Stockholm," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 10(3), pages 1-25, March.

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