Regenerative Territories : Dimensions of Circularity for Healthy Metabolisms.

Yazar:Amenta, Libera
Katkıda bulunan(lar):Russo, Michelangelo | van Timmeren, Arjan
Materyal türü: KonuKonuSeri kaydı: Yayıncı: Cham : Springer International Publishing AG, 2022Telif hakkı tarihi: �2022Tanım: 1 online resource (335 pages)İçerik türü:text Ortam türü:computer Taşıyıcı türü: online resourceISBN: 9783030785369Tür/Form:Electronic books.Ek fiziksel biçimler:Print version:: Regenerative TerritoriesLOC classification: GFÇevrimiçi kaynaklar: Click to View
İçindekiler:
Intro -- Introduction to the Volume -- Contents -- Editors and Contributors -- 1 Dimensions of Circularity for Healthy Metabolisms and Spaces -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 The Circular Economy Paradigm Shift Requires a Socio-Ecological Perspective, Looking Beyond Boundaries -- 1.3 Circular Economy Is Based on Systems Thinking and Territorial Metabolism -- 1.4 A Circular Economy Calls for a Renewed Approach to the Public Domain and Stakeholder Involvement -- 1.5 Amplifying the Definition of Circular Economy with the Inclusion of Wastescapes -- 1.6 Planning the Circular Economy as an Open Collaborative System -- References -- Part I New Definitions: Amplifying the Perspective of Circular Economy -- 2 Territorialising Circularity -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Framing the Territorial Dimension in the CE Debate -- 2.3 The Necessity of Representation: Towards Spatialising and Contextualising Circularity -- 2.4 Resource Cartographies: The AMA Case-Study -- 2.4.1 Mapping the Flow -- 2.4.2 Justaxposing Flow and Infrastructural Network -- 2.4.3 Unfolding Stock and Flow Relationship -- 2.4.4 A Circular Stock and Flow Relationship: Defining Resource Shed -- 2.5 Reflection and Conclusion -- Bibliography -- 3 Shifting Risk into Productivity: Inclusive and Regenerative Approaches Within Compromised Contexts in Peri-Urban Areas -- 3.1 Overlapping Risks in Peri-Urban Areas -- 3.1.1 Territorial Risks and Resources in Campania -- 3.2 Land Productivity: From Exploitation Toward Regeneration -- 3.3 Adaptive Remediation Approach for Peri-Urbanity in Transition -- 3.4 The Agency of Waste -- 3.5 Conclusions -- References -- 4 The Circular Metabolic Urban Landscape: A Systematic Review of Literature -- 4.1 Introduction: The Transition Toward Circular Metabolic Urban Landscapes -- 4.2 Methodology and Research Design.
4.3 Results: Themes and Challenges of UM Studies for Circular Cities -- 4.4 Discussion and Conclusions -- References -- 5 Urban Manufacturing for Circularity: Three Pathways to Move from Linear to Circular Cities -- 5.1 Circular Economy in Cities in the Making -- 5.2 Three Readings of Urban Conditions -- 5.2.1 Circularity and Technology -- 5.2.2 Urban Integration -- 5.2.3 People, Networks and Policy -- 5.3 Developing an Integral Approach Through Participation and Collaboration -- 5.4 Discussion and Reflection -- References -- Part II The Spatial Scope of Circularity -- 6 Evolving Relations of Landscape, Infrastructure and Urbanization Toward Circularity -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Flanders: Embracing the Circular Economy -- 6.3 Campine: Past and Future (Water) Cycles -- 6.4 Antwerp: Waste and Wastelands -- 6.5 Rural Vietnam: Culture, Economy and Ecology Tied to Locational Assets -- 6.6 Urbanizing Vietnam: Torn Between Two Worlds -- 6.7 Toward a Twenty-First Century Circularity -- References -- 7 Circular City: Urban and Territorial Perspectives -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Approaches: Circular Economy and Urban Metabolism -- 7.3 Urban Areas and Urban Flows -- 7.4 Circular City -- 7.5 Conclusion -- References -- 8 New Urbanization Phenomena and Potential Landscapes: Rhizomatic Grids and Asymmetrical Clusters -- 8.1 Foreword: Territories of the Circular Economy -- 8.2 Status Quo: Analogies and Differences -- 8.3 The Fringe: Two Models -- 8.4 New Greenbelt Scenarios -- 8.5 Spatial Models: "Asymmetrical Cluster" and "Rhizomatic Grid" -- 8.6 Conclusions: Potential Hypercontextual Landscapes -- References -- 9 From Wastescapes Towards Regenerative Territories. A Structural Approach for Achieving Circularity -- 9.1 Introduction: Circular Metabolisms and the Regeneration of Wastescapes.
9.2 Peri-Urban Living Labs (PULLs) as a Collaborative Methodology for the Sustainable Regeneration of Wastescapes -- 9.3 REPAiR Peri-Urban Living Lab (PULL) Methodology and Wastescapes Characterization in the Cases of Amsterdam and Naples -- 9.4 Discussion and Conclusions: How to Regenerate Wastescapes in Peri-Urban Areas -- References -- 10 Towards Circular Port-City Territories -- 10.1 Introduction: Rotterdam Towards a Twofold Objective -- 10.2 Approach: Path Dependence and its Implications -- 10.3 A Historical Overview -- 10.4 Spatial Understanding and Planning Interests -- 10.5 Stadshavens Strategy and the Makers District (M4H) -- 10.6 Conclusion -- References -- Part III Methodology and Representation -- 11 Eliciting Information for Developing a Circular Economy in the Amsterdam Metropolitan Area -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Circular Economy, Spatial Planning and Cartography -- 11.2.1 Circular Economy and Spatial Planning -- 11.2.2 Interactive Cartography for Spatial Planning -- 11.2.3 Representing Waste Management Information -- 11.3 Presentation of Information for Co-Developing CE Economy Strategies -- 11.3.1 Geodesign Decision Support Environment -- 11.3.2 Presenting Information on Waste Flows in Spatial Planning -- 11.3.3 Presenting Circular Economy Strategies -- 11.3.4 Presenting Flow Assessment of Circular Economy Strategies -- 11.4 Conclusions -- References -- 12 Collaborative Decision-Making Processes for Local Innovation: The CoULL Methodology in Living Labs Approach -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 The Living Lab Approach: A Transformative Process -- 12.3 The CoULL Methodology -- 12.4 The CoULL Implementation in Different Decision Contexts -- 12.5 Conclusions -- References -- 13 Urban Metabolism Evaluation Methods: Life Cycle Assessment and Territorial Regeneration.
13.1 Introduction: The City as an Urban Ecosystem and the Concept of Life Cycle -- 13.2 Environmental Assessment: Agendas, Methods and Tools -- 13.3 Cities of Flows: The Concept of UM and Its Evaluation Methods -- 13.4 LCA and Territorial Regeneration: Is There any Correlation? -- 13.5 Conclusions -- References -- Part IV Sustainable Strategies and Solutions for Circular and Healthy Metabolisms -- 14 Planning Wastescapes Through Collaborative Processes -- 14.1 Introduction: In the Public Field -- 14.2 Method and Approach: The Enabling State-Inequalities and Roles -- 14.3 Experiments -- 14.3.1 Wastescape #1: The Collaborative Definition of Uses of a Public Facility on a Metropolitan Scale -- 14.3.2 Wastescape #2: Co-Creating Public Services in Peri-Urban Areas -- 14.4 Discussion and Conclusions -- References -- 15 Manufactured in the Peri-Urban: Regenerative Strategies for Critical Lands -- 15.1 Productive Peri-Urban -- 15.2 Productive/Urban: Caserta Case Study -- 15.3 The Path of P.U.R.E. Research -- 15.4 First Steps, Expected Results and Future Research Paths -- References -- 16 Urban Regeneration: An "Incremental Circularity" Perspective -- 16.1 Circular Economy Vision of Urban Development -- 16.2 Urban Metabolism and Urban Regeneration -- 16.3 Incremental Circularity -- 16.4 Case studies -- 16.4.1 Ferrara: Pioneer Communities for Regeneration -- 16.4.2 Novara: Triggering the Regeneration Starting from Commons -- 16.5 Conclusions -- 16.5.1 There Is No Circular Economy in Cities Without Social Component -- 16.5.2 Temporary Use of Spaces and Collective Uses as Trigger for Long-Term Transformation -- 16.5.3 The Outdoor Spaces as a New Urban Resource -- References -- 17 Reloading Landscapes: Democratic and Autotrophic Landscape of Taranto -- 17.1 Introduction -- 17.2 Democratic and Autotrophic Landscapes: Linking Open-Loop System Circularity.
17.3 Reloading Landscapes: A Correlated Scenario for the Case of Taranto -- 17.4 Conclusions -- References -- 18 Hybridizing Artifice and Nature: Designing New Soils Through the Eco-Systemic Approach -- 18.1 A Paradigm Shift -- 18.2 Recycling Construction Debris for Producing New Anthropogenic Soils -- 18.3 Collaborative Processes for Designing Anthropogenic Soils -- 18.4 Conclusion -- References -- 19 Towards Regenerative Wasted Landscapes: Index of Attractiveness to Evaluate the Wasted Landscapes of Road Infrastructure -- 19.1 Introduction -- 19.2 The Wasted Land of Roads as a Resource -- 19.3 A Methodological Proposal for a Regenerative Process -- 19.3.1 Selection of Case Studies -- 19.3.2 Presentation of Centrality Index and Results -- 19.4 Discussion and Future Perspectives -- Bibliography -- Afterword -- References.
Bu kütüphanenin etiketleri: Kütüphanedeki eser adı için etiket yok. Etiket eklemek için oturumu açın.
    Ortalama derecelendirme: 0.0 (0 oy)
Bu kayda ilişkin materyal yok

Intro -- Introduction to the Volume -- Contents -- Editors and Contributors -- 1 Dimensions of Circularity for Healthy Metabolisms and Spaces -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 The Circular Economy Paradigm Shift Requires a Socio-Ecological Perspective, Looking Beyond Boundaries -- 1.3 Circular Economy Is Based on Systems Thinking and Territorial Metabolism -- 1.4 A Circular Economy Calls for a Renewed Approach to the Public Domain and Stakeholder Involvement -- 1.5 Amplifying the Definition of Circular Economy with the Inclusion of Wastescapes -- 1.6 Planning the Circular Economy as an Open Collaborative System -- References -- Part I New Definitions: Amplifying the Perspective of Circular Economy -- 2 Territorialising Circularity -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Framing the Territorial Dimension in the CE Debate -- 2.3 The Necessity of Representation: Towards Spatialising and Contextualising Circularity -- 2.4 Resource Cartographies: The AMA Case-Study -- 2.4.1 Mapping the Flow -- 2.4.2 Justaxposing Flow and Infrastructural Network -- 2.4.3 Unfolding Stock and Flow Relationship -- 2.4.4 A Circular Stock and Flow Relationship: Defining Resource Shed -- 2.5 Reflection and Conclusion -- Bibliography -- 3 Shifting Risk into Productivity: Inclusive and Regenerative Approaches Within Compromised Contexts in Peri-Urban Areas -- 3.1 Overlapping Risks in Peri-Urban Areas -- 3.1.1 Territorial Risks and Resources in Campania -- 3.2 Land Productivity: From Exploitation Toward Regeneration -- 3.3 Adaptive Remediation Approach for Peri-Urbanity in Transition -- 3.4 The Agency of Waste -- 3.5 Conclusions -- References -- 4 The Circular Metabolic Urban Landscape: A Systematic Review of Literature -- 4.1 Introduction: The Transition Toward Circular Metabolic Urban Landscapes -- 4.2 Methodology and Research Design.

4.3 Results: Themes and Challenges of UM Studies for Circular Cities -- 4.4 Discussion and Conclusions -- References -- 5 Urban Manufacturing for Circularity: Three Pathways to Move from Linear to Circular Cities -- 5.1 Circular Economy in Cities in the Making -- 5.2 Three Readings of Urban Conditions -- 5.2.1 Circularity and Technology -- 5.2.2 Urban Integration -- 5.2.3 People, Networks and Policy -- 5.3 Developing an Integral Approach Through Participation and Collaboration -- 5.4 Discussion and Reflection -- References -- Part II The Spatial Scope of Circularity -- 6 Evolving Relations of Landscape, Infrastructure and Urbanization Toward Circularity -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Flanders: Embracing the Circular Economy -- 6.3 Campine: Past and Future (Water) Cycles -- 6.4 Antwerp: Waste and Wastelands -- 6.5 Rural Vietnam: Culture, Economy and Ecology Tied to Locational Assets -- 6.6 Urbanizing Vietnam: Torn Between Two Worlds -- 6.7 Toward a Twenty-First Century Circularity -- References -- 7 Circular City: Urban and Territorial Perspectives -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Approaches: Circular Economy and Urban Metabolism -- 7.3 Urban Areas and Urban Flows -- 7.4 Circular City -- 7.5 Conclusion -- References -- 8 New Urbanization Phenomena and Potential Landscapes: Rhizomatic Grids and Asymmetrical Clusters -- 8.1 Foreword: Territories of the Circular Economy -- 8.2 Status Quo: Analogies and Differences -- 8.3 The Fringe: Two Models -- 8.4 New Greenbelt Scenarios -- 8.5 Spatial Models: "Asymmetrical Cluster" and "Rhizomatic Grid" -- 8.6 Conclusions: Potential Hypercontextual Landscapes -- References -- 9 From Wastescapes Towards Regenerative Territories. A Structural Approach for Achieving Circularity -- 9.1 Introduction: Circular Metabolisms and the Regeneration of Wastescapes.

9.2 Peri-Urban Living Labs (PULLs) as a Collaborative Methodology for the Sustainable Regeneration of Wastescapes -- 9.3 REPAiR Peri-Urban Living Lab (PULL) Methodology and Wastescapes Characterization in the Cases of Amsterdam and Naples -- 9.4 Discussion and Conclusions: How to Regenerate Wastescapes in Peri-Urban Areas -- References -- 10 Towards Circular Port-City Territories -- 10.1 Introduction: Rotterdam Towards a Twofold Objective -- 10.2 Approach: Path Dependence and its Implications -- 10.3 A Historical Overview -- 10.4 Spatial Understanding and Planning Interests -- 10.5 Stadshavens Strategy and the Makers District (M4H) -- 10.6 Conclusion -- References -- Part III Methodology and Representation -- 11 Eliciting Information for Developing a Circular Economy in the Amsterdam Metropolitan Area -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Circular Economy, Spatial Planning and Cartography -- 11.2.1 Circular Economy and Spatial Planning -- 11.2.2 Interactive Cartography for Spatial Planning -- 11.2.3 Representing Waste Management Information -- 11.3 Presentation of Information for Co-Developing CE Economy Strategies -- 11.3.1 Geodesign Decision Support Environment -- 11.3.2 Presenting Information on Waste Flows in Spatial Planning -- 11.3.3 Presenting Circular Economy Strategies -- 11.3.4 Presenting Flow Assessment of Circular Economy Strategies -- 11.4 Conclusions -- References -- 12 Collaborative Decision-Making Processes for Local Innovation: The CoULL Methodology in Living Labs Approach -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 The Living Lab Approach: A Transformative Process -- 12.3 The CoULL Methodology -- 12.4 The CoULL Implementation in Different Decision Contexts -- 12.5 Conclusions -- References -- 13 Urban Metabolism Evaluation Methods: Life Cycle Assessment and Territorial Regeneration.

13.1 Introduction: The City as an Urban Ecosystem and the Concept of Life Cycle -- 13.2 Environmental Assessment: Agendas, Methods and Tools -- 13.3 Cities of Flows: The Concept of UM and Its Evaluation Methods -- 13.4 LCA and Territorial Regeneration: Is There any Correlation? -- 13.5 Conclusions -- References -- Part IV Sustainable Strategies and Solutions for Circular and Healthy Metabolisms -- 14 Planning Wastescapes Through Collaborative Processes -- 14.1 Introduction: In the Public Field -- 14.2 Method and Approach: The Enabling State-Inequalities and Roles -- 14.3 Experiments -- 14.3.1 Wastescape #1: The Collaborative Definition of Uses of a Public Facility on a Metropolitan Scale -- 14.3.2 Wastescape #2: Co-Creating Public Services in Peri-Urban Areas -- 14.4 Discussion and Conclusions -- References -- 15 Manufactured in the Peri-Urban: Regenerative Strategies for Critical Lands -- 15.1 Productive Peri-Urban -- 15.2 Productive/Urban: Caserta Case Study -- 15.3 The Path of P.U.R.E. Research -- 15.4 First Steps, Expected Results and Future Research Paths -- References -- 16 Urban Regeneration: An "Incremental Circularity" Perspective -- 16.1 Circular Economy Vision of Urban Development -- 16.2 Urban Metabolism and Urban Regeneration -- 16.3 Incremental Circularity -- 16.4 Case studies -- 16.4.1 Ferrara: Pioneer Communities for Regeneration -- 16.4.2 Novara: Triggering the Regeneration Starting from Commons -- 16.5 Conclusions -- 16.5.1 There Is No Circular Economy in Cities Without Social Component -- 16.5.2 Temporary Use of Spaces and Collective Uses as Trigger for Long-Term Transformation -- 16.5.3 The Outdoor Spaces as a New Urban Resource -- References -- 17 Reloading Landscapes: Democratic and Autotrophic Landscape of Taranto -- 17.1 Introduction -- 17.2 Democratic and Autotrophic Landscapes: Linking Open-Loop System Circularity.

17.3 Reloading Landscapes: A Correlated Scenario for the Case of Taranto -- 17.4 Conclusions -- References -- 18 Hybridizing Artifice and Nature: Designing New Soils Through the Eco-Systemic Approach -- 18.1 A Paradigm Shift -- 18.2 Recycling Construction Debris for Producing New Anthropogenic Soils -- 18.3 Collaborative Processes for Designing Anthropogenic Soils -- 18.4 Conclusion -- References -- 19 Towards Regenerative Wasted Landscapes: Index of Attractiveness to Evaluate the Wasted Landscapes of Road Infrastructure -- 19.1 Introduction -- 19.2 The Wasted Land of Roads as a Resource -- 19.3 A Methodological Proposal for a Regenerative Process -- 19.3.1 Selection of Case Studies -- 19.3.2 Presentation of Centrality Index and Results -- 19.4 Discussion and Future Perspectives -- Bibliography -- Afterword -- References.

Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2022. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

There are no comments on this title.

yorum yazmak için.

Ziyaretçi Sayısı

Destekleyen Koha