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Content
2023, Volume 8, Issue 3
2023, Volume 8, Issue 2
2023, Volume 8, Issue 1
- 1-4 Urban Heritage in Transformation: Physical and Non-Physical Dimensions of Changing Contexts
by Frank Eckardt & Aliaa AlSadaty
- 5-18 Change in the Dispersed Territory: (Proto)Types for a New Urban Paradigm
by Maarten Gheysen & Sophie Leemans
- 19-29 The Role of the Public-Private Interface and Persistence of Historic Character in Nezu, Tokyo
by Milica Muminović
- 30-38 Impacts of Change: Analysing the Perception of Industrial Heritage in the Vogtland Region
by Leo Bockelmann
- 39-51 Continuity and Change: Socio-Spatial Practices in Bamberg's World Heritage Urban Horticulture
by Heike Oevermann & Daniel Keech & Marc Redepenning & Li Fan & Patricia Alberth
- 52-66 Towards Liveability in Historic Centres: Challenges and Enablers of Transformation in Two Latvian Towns
by Margarita Vološina & Evija Taurene & Pēteris Šķiņķis
- 67-82 Patterns of Detachment: Spatial Transformations of the Phosphate Industry in el-Quseir, Egypt
by Mirhan Damir & Martin Meyer & Hellen Aziz
- 83-98 Endangered Urban Commons: Lahore’s Violent Heritage Management and Prospects for Reconciliation
by Helena Cermeño & Katja Mielke
- 99-109 Permanences Against Cultural Amnesia: Reconstructing the Urban Narrative of the Rum Community of Fener, Istanbul
by Ilgi Toprak
- 110-120 Portraying Urban Change in Alfama (Lisbon): How Local Socio-Spatial Practices Shape Heritage
by Catarina Fontes & Graça Índias Cordeiro
- 121-136 A Bourdieusian Framework for Understanding Public Space Heritage Transformations: Riga’s Castle Square
by Helena Gutmane
- 137-150 Urban Heritage Rehabilitation: Institutional Stakeholders’ Contributions to Improve Implementation of Urban and Building Regulations
by Cilísia Ornelas & João Miranda Guedes & Isabel Breda-Vázquez & Virginia Gallego Guinea & Alessandra Turri
- 151-164 Conservation Planning and the Development Trajectory of the Historic Core of Worcester, England
by Heather Barrett
- 165-168 Bombed Cities: Legacies of Post-War Planning on the Contemporary Urban and Social Fabric
by Seraphim Alvanides & Carol Ludwig
- 169-181 Revisioning and Rebuilding Britain’s War-Damaged Cities
by Peter J. Larkham & David Adams
- 182-195 Post-Second World War Reconstruction of Polish Cities: The Interplay Between Politics and Paradigms
by Łukasz Bugalski & Piotr Lorens
- 196-210 From Reconstruction to Urban Preservation: Negotiating Built Heritage After the Second World War
by Birgit Knauer
- 211-225 “Reconstructionism”: A Strategy to Improve Outdated Attempts of Modernist Post-War Planning?
by Uwe Altrock
- 226-238 Intelligibility of Post-War Reconstruction in French Bombed Cities
by Alice Vialard
- 239-254 A Spatio-Temporal Analysis of the Urban Fabric of Nuremberg From the 1940s Onwards Using Historical Maps
by Carol Ludwig & Seraphim Alvanides
- 255-265 Dockers in Poplar: The Legacy of the London County Council’s Replanning of Poplar, East London
by Rosamund Lily West
- 266-278 Post-War Architecture and Urban Planning as Means of Reinventing Opole’s Past and Identity
by Barbara Szczepańska
- 279-282 Social Justice in the Green City
by Roberta Cucca & Thomas Thaler
- 283-295 Green Gentrification, Social Justice, and Climate Change in the Literature: Conceptual Origins and Future Directions
by Roberta Cucca & Michael Friesenecker & Thomas Thaler
- 296-311 Environmental Microsegregation: Urban Renewal and the Political Ecology of Health
by Klaus Geiselhart & David Spenger
- 312-321 “Passive” Ecological Gentrification Triggered by the Covid-19 Pandemic
by Dani Broitman
- 322-333 A New Phase of Just Urban Climate Action in the Rocky Mountain West
by Clara Stein & Corina McKendry
- 334-345 Reframing Urban Nature-Based Solutions Through Perspectives of Environmental Justice and Privilege
by Willi Bauer
- 346-360 Making Thessaloniki Resilient? The Enclosing Process of the Urban Green Commons
by Maria Karagianni
- 361-371 Urban Heat Transition in Berlin: Corporate Strategies, Political Conflicts, and Just Solutions
by Hendrik Sander & Sören Weißermel
- 372-387 Building Equality: A “Litmus Test” for Recognising and Evidencing Inequalities and Segregation in the Built Environment
by Michael Crilly & Georgiana Varna & Chandra Mouli Vemury & Mark Lemon & Andrew Mitchell
- 388-398 Food and Governmentality in the Green City: The Case of German Food Policy Councils
by Alena Birnbaum & Petra Lütke
- 399-413 How Context Matters: Challenges of Localizing Participatory Budgeting for Climate Change Adaptation in Vienna
by Byeongsun Ahn & Michael Friesenecker & Yuri Kazepov & Jana Brandl
- 414-425 Fiduciary Activism From Below: Green Gentrification, Pension Finance, and the Possibility of Just Urban Futures
by Jessica Parish
2022, Volume 7, Issue 4
- 1-12 Accessible and Inclusive Cities: Exposing Design and Leadership Challenges for Bunbury and Geelong
by Adam Johnson & Richard Tucker & Hing-Wah Chau & Elmira Jamei
- 13-24 Comparative Analysis of 20-Minute Neighbourhood Policies and Practices in Melbourne and Scotland
by Hing-Wah Chau & Ian Gilzean & Elmira Jamei & Lesley Palmer & Terri Preece & Martin Quirke
- 25-41 Integrating Health Into the Urban Master Plan of Vic, Barcelona: A Comprehensive Approach
by Anna Puig-Ribera & Marta Rofin & Judit Bort-Roig & Eva Aumatell & Albert Juncà & Marc de San Pedro & Francesc Garcia-Cuyàs & Cati Chamorro & Lorena Perona-Ribes & Josep Ramon Torrentó & Guillem Jabardo-Camprubí & Fabiana Palmero & Marina Geli
- 42-60 Putting Health at the Heart of Local Planning Through an Integrated Municipal Health Strategy
by Angela Freitas & Paula Santana
- 61-74 Co-Benefits of Transdisciplinary Planning for Healthy Cities
by Roderick J. Lawrence
- 75-89 Public Space Usage and Well-Being: Participatory Action Research With Vulnerable Groups in Hyper-Dense Environments
by Stephanie Y. S. Cheung & Danyang Lei & Faye Y. F. Chan & Hendrik Tieben
- 90-95 City Models and Preventive Planning Strategies for Resilient Cities in Germany
by Detlef Kurth
- 96-112 Greenery and Urban Form vs. Health of Residents: Evaluation of Modernist Housing in Lodz and Gdansk
by Małgorzata Hanzl & Magdalena Rembeza
- 113-123 A Healthy City for All? Social Services’ Roles in Collaborative Urban Development
by Lina Berglund-Snodgrass & Maria Fjellfeldt & Ebba Högström & Urban Markström
- 124-139 Transit-Oriented Development and Livability: The Case of the Najma and Al Mansoura Neighborhoods in Doha, Qatar
by Almaha Al-Malki & Reem Awwaad & Raffaello Furlan & Michael Grosvald & Rashid Al-Matwi
- 140-152 Rethinking the Contextual Factors Influencing Urban Mobility: A New Holistic Conceptual Framework
by Taha Chaiechi & Josephine Pryce & Emiel L. Eijdenberg & Simona Azzali
- 153-166 Inequitable Housing Practices and Youth Internalizing Symptoms: Mediation Via Perceptions of Neighborhood Cohesion
by Richard C. Sadler & Julia W. Felton & Jill A. Rabinowitz & Terrinieka W. Powell & Amanda Latimore & Darius Tandon
- 167-178 Hawker Centres: A Social Space Approach to Promoting Community Wellbeing
by Valeriya Radomskaya & Abhishek Singh Bhati
- 179-194 Enlarging the Human Climate Niche: Integrating Urban Heat Island in Urban Planning Interventions
by Rayan Mounayar & Daniel Florentin
- 195-207 Sustainable Heritage Preservation to Improve the Tourism Offer in Saudi Arabia
by Silvia Mazzetto
- 208-212 Planning and the High-Rise Neighbourhood: Debates on Vertical Cities
by Brian Webb & James T. White
- 213-228 Planning for Lower-Income Households in Privately Developed High-Density Neighbourhoods in Sydney, Australia
by Hazel Easthope & Laura Crommelin & Sophie-May Kerr & Laurence Troy & Ryan van den Nouwelant & Gethin Davison
- 229-244 Rise Overrun: Condoization, Gentrification, and the Changing Political Economy of Renting in Toronto
by Sean Grisdale & Alan Walks
- 245-252 Young Families and High-Rise: Towards Inclusive Vertical Family Housing
by Lia Karsten
- 253-266 Negotiating Vertical Urbanization at the Public–Private Nexus: On the Institutional Embeddedness of Planning Committees
by Johannes Herburger & Nicola Hilti & Eva Lingg
- 267-283 Opportunities and Challenges of Municipal Planning in Shaping Vertical Neighbourhoods in Greater London
by Lucía Cerrada Morato
- 284-297 High-Rises and Urban Specificity: Politics of Vertical Construction in Paris, London, and Vienna
by Andrea Glauser
- 298-312 Housing in Germany and the Rebirth of the High-Rise in Post-Modern Urban Design
by Uwe Altrock
- 313-324 “Double Ageing” in the High-Rise Residential Buildings of Tokyo
by Taro Hirai
- 325-338 Planning and Architecture as Determining Influences on the Housing Market: Budapest–Csepel’s Post–War Housing Estates
by Tamás Egedy & Balázs Szabó & Hlib Antypenko & Melinda Benkő
- 339-351 High Neighbor! Residents’ Social Practices in New Danish High-Rises
by Mette Mechlenborg
- 352-363 Common Areas, Common Causes: Public Space in High-Rise Buildings During Covid-19
by Loren March & Ute Lehrer
- 364-376 Urban Verticality Shaped by a Vertical Terrain: Lessons From Chongqing, China
by Yi Jin
- 377-380 The Challenges of Social Infrastructure for Urban Planning
by Ebba Högström & Lina Berglund-Snodgrass & Maria Fjellfeldt
- 381-397 The Spaces of Social Services as Social Infrastructure: Insights From a Policy-Innovation Project in Milan
by Massimo Bricocoli & Benedetta Marani & Stefania Sabatinelli
- 398-408 Apartment Living and Community Care: Experiences of People With Intellectual Disability, Their Families, and Support Staff
by Phillippa Carnemolla
- 409-419 Street-Level Workers and the Construction of Social Infrastructure in Suburban Neighbourhoods
by Jenni Kuoppa & Päivi Kymäläinen
- 420-431 Towards Digital Social Infrastructure? Digital Neighborly Connectedness as a Social Resource
by Yann P. M. Rees & Sebastian Kurtenbach & Katrin Rosenberger & Armin Küchler
- 432-444 Learning From Covid-19: Social Infrastructure in Disadvantaged Housing Areas in Denmark
by Marie Stender & Lene Wiell Nordberg
- 445-456 Non-Formal Cultural Infrastructure in Peripheral Regions: Responsibility, Resources, and Regional Disparities
by Lea Fobel
- 457-469 The Changing Role of Student Housing as Social Infrastructure
by Yvonne Franz & Elisabeth Gruber
- 470-485 A “Motor” for the Neighbourhood? Urban Planning and the Challenges of Relocating Cultural Infrastructures
by Christoph Mager & Madeleine Wagner
- 486-498 Constructing Common Meeting Places: A Strategy for Mitigating the Social Isolation of Disadvantaged Neighbourhoods?
by Trine Agervig Carstensen & Christine Benna Skytt-Larsen & Anne Gravsholt Busck & Nina Glomså Søraa
- 499-509 Shared Housing as Public Space? The Ambiguous Borders of Social Infrastructure
by Karin Grundström
- 510-522 Seeing Streetscapes as Social Infrastructure: A Paradigmatic Case Study of Hornsbergs Strand, Stockholm
by Jing Jing
- 523-533 “Ageing in Place” and Urban Regeneration: Analysing the Role of Social Infrastructure
by Camilla Lewis & Sophie Yarker & Mark Hammond & Niamh Kavanagh & Christopher Phillipson
2022, Volume 7, Issue 3
2022, Volume 7, Issue 2
- 1-4 Challenges of Energy Renovation
by Tineke van der Schoor & Fred Sanders
- 5-19 Social Housing Net-Zero Energy Renovations With Energy Performance Contract: Incorporating Occupants’ Behaviour
by Margot Pellegrino & Carole Wernert & Angéline Chartier
- 20-32 Residents’ Perceptions of a Smart Technology Retrofit Towards Nearly Zero-Energy Performance
by Veronika Mooses & Ingmar Pastak & Pilleriine Kamenjuk & Age Poom
- 33-44 The Comfort Tool: Assessment and Promotion of Energy Efficiency and Universal Design in Home Renovations
by Ermal Kapedani & Jasmien Herssens & Erik Nuyts & Griet Verbeeck
- 45-57 Concerns of Owner-Occupants in Realising the Aims of Energy Transition
by Mieke Oostra & Nelleke Nelis
- 58-69 How a Sustainable Renovation Influenced the Environmental Values of Those Involved
by Mazin Bahho & Brenda Vale
- 70-80 Unlocking Grey Scientific Data on Resident Behaviour to Increase the Climate Impact of Dutch Sustainable Housing
by Fred Sanders & Marjolein Overtoom
- 81-96 Reusing Timber Formwork in Building Construction: Testing, Redesign, and Socio-Economic Reflection
by Arno Pronk & Stijn Brancart & Fred Sanders
- 97-107 Let’s Get Sociotechnical: A Design Perspective on Zero Energy Renovations
by Stella Boess
- 108-122 Renewable Energy Communities as a New Actor in Home Energy Savings
by Frans H. J. M. Coenen & Thomas Hoppe
- 123-130 Lessons From EU-Projects for Energy Renovation
by Tineke van der Schoor
- 131-134 From Smart Urban Forests to Edible Cities: New Approaches in Urban Planning and Design
by Alessio Russo & Francisco J. Escobedo
- 135-138 The Place of Urban Food Forests in Cities of the 21st Century
by Paloma Cariñanos & Simone Borelli & Michela Conigliaro & Alessio Fini
- 139-154 Species Richness, Stem Density, and Canopy in Food Forests: Contributions to Ecosystem Services in an Urban Environment
by Cara A. Rockwell & Alex Crow & Érika R. Guimarães & Eduardo Recinos & Deborah La Belle
- 155-159 From Desk to Field: Countering Agrourbanism’s “Paper Landscapes” Through Phenomenology, Thick Description, and Immersive Walking
by Robert France
- 160-173 Factors and Strategies for Environmental Justice in Organized Urban Green Space Development
by Dillip Kumar Das
- 174-185 Citizen Participation in Urban Forests: Analysis of a Consultation Process in the Metropolitan Area of Rouen Normandy
by Charlotte Birks & Damien Féménias & Charly Machemehl
- 186-201 Multifunctional Green Infrastructure in Shrinking Cities: How Does Urban Shrinkage Affect Green Space Planning?
by Olivia Lewis & Sílvia Sousa & Paulo Pinho
- 202-213 Making Green Work: Implementation Strategies in a New Generation of Urban Forests
by Víctor Muñoz Sanz & Sara Romero Muñoz & Teresa Sánchez Chaparro & Lorena Bello Gómez & Tanja Herdt
- 214-217 The Future’s Not What It Used To Be: Urban Wormholes, Simulation, Participation, and Planning in the Metaverse
by Andrew Hudson-Smith & Moozhan Shakeri
- 218-228 Unstable Wormholes: Communications Between Urban Planning and Game Studies
by Moozhan Shakeri
- 229-238 Co-Designing Urban Planning Engagement and Innovation: Using LEGO® to Facilitate Collaboration, Participation and Ideas
by Mark Tewdwr-Jones & Alexander Wilson
- 239-252 Gamifying Decision Support Systems to Promote Inclusive and Engaged Urban Resilience Planning
by Nathan Fox & Victoria Campbell-Arvai & Mark Lindquist & Derek Van Berkel & Ramiro Serrano-Vergel
- 253-263 Curating Player Experience Through Simulations in City Games
by Jayanth Raghothama & Jannicke Baalsrud Hauge & Sebastiaan Meijer
- 264-277 Network of Games: An Ecology of Games Informing Integral and Inclusive City Developments
by Ekim Tan
- 278-294 Playing With Uncertainty: Facilitating Community-Based Resilience Building
by Bryann Avendano-Uribe & Heide Lukosch & Mark Milke
- 295-305 New Insights, New Rules: What Shapes the Iterative Design of an Urban Planning Game?
by Cristina Ampatzidou & Joost Vervoort & Zeynep Falay von Flittner & Kirsikka Vaajakallio
- 306-320 Playing for Keeps: Designing Serious Games for Climate Adaptation Planning Education With Young People
by Stephan Hügel & Anna R. Davies
- 321-329 Procedural Cities as Active Simulators for Planning
by Flora Roumpani
- 330-342 Minecraft and Playful Public Participation in Urban Design
by James Delaney
- 343-354 Incoming Metaverses: Digital Mirrors for Urban Planning
by Andrew Hudson-Smith
2022, Volume 7, Issue 1