approaches

Posts which focus on the way to tackle issues, for example a participative approach to planning

First day at World Urban Forum, WUF

20120904-074745.jpg
First day of WUF.
Impressions? Not as quiet as my first impression in the photo! For me the main thing, despite all the sessions that are organized, is meeting people, often after a few, sometimes after many years.

In sessions, presentations are often too short to really get into and discuss subjects. Attendance ranges from the crowding of doors and sitting on the floor of a session of slum dwellers international, to an empty room for a session that just didn’t happen.

Anything memorable apart from meeting old friends? A presentation on planning in Palestinian refugee camps, told in stories, with the question of how to plan with people for future development of a camp where they don’t want to be in the future. The answer? Talk of improvement and not development, but get on to address intolerable living conditions. Subtle, but important in the context.

In the same session, the moderator asked what presenters had learned from their experience. One lesson shared was that participation in planning was not just about asking a lot of people questions about what they felt, but a negotiation where the planner has to engage with their own contribution. Participation is not abdication of the responsibilities and contributions of the professional, but an ongoing exchange where all sides should contribute. That sort of participation needs to be based on trust, and that takes time and needs the experience that comes from time spend in the field.

Let’s see what day 2 has in store.

Crossing borders

 

 

 

This web site/ blog  has been in planning for some time, but implementation has finally happened.  I hope you enjoy it, find something useful and even contribute.

Urban Planning is (as always) in a state of flux, but if it didn’t exist it would have to be invented.

Building bridges is about the connections that are necessary between professions and between professionals and users if fast growing (and sometimes fast declining) cities are to get the management they need to work well.  I ran a refresher course with Ronald Wall for IHS in Egypt last year with this title.  It was good to get participants thinking about  international flows of investment capital and what this means for what you can really plan.

Rotterdam new Central Station development

Rotterdam’s new Central station during construction in 2012.  The station renewal is a major strategic infrastructure project linking inner city renewal with high speed rail link to Amsterdam, Antwerp, Brussels, Paris and London.  The station is also linked by metro to The Hague via  Randstadt rail – using a former commuting rail line now linked by tunnel to Central Station.   The whole project is a fascinating example of integrated planning – linking the new housing (Vinex)  locations between Rotterdam and The Hague with the two cities.

Rotterdam new Central Station under construction 2012