The Urban Planning Imagination. Nicholas A. Phelps

Читать онлайн.
Название The Urban Planning Imagination
Автор произведения Nicholas A. Phelps
Жанр Социология
Серия
Издательство Социология
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781509526284



Скачать книгу

and plans have been criticized not merely for trying to ‘order’ the dynamic and inherently disorderly development of cities and regions. The concepts that have been used … are seen to reflect a view of geography which assumes … contiguous space … that physical proximity is a primary social ordering principle and that place qualities exist objectively, to be … made by physical development and management projects. (Healey, 2004: 47)

      The reliance on land-use plans to shape physical developments was a peculiarly twentieth-century phenomenon. Set within the fixed administrative boundaries of individual local governments, each plan – where it existed – was prepared over years of data collection, analysis and projection regarding demographic shifts, housing requirements, employment trends, transport use, commuting, health provision, educational attainment, retail spending, leisure patterns, tourism and the like prior to public consultation, by which time the plan was likely to be out of date.

      In a world in which most development is now undertaken by citizens and clubs it may seem anachronistic that we still rely on plans produced by the state. Moreover, many of the trends affecting cities today – the ‘gig’ or digital ‘platform’ economies – have only indirect relationships to land use. Equally, some of the most influential and seductive of ‘plans’ have not been land-use or zoning plans, though they have still portrayed fixed arrangements between morphological elements. It was the spatial form of Ebenezer Howard’s Garden City idea that became the ideal, not its land-ownership and governmental formulations. What will be the fate of these sorts of plans?

      While the urban planning imaginaries associated with bounded regions are well established, the planning imagination associated with the networks, flows and virtuality (or synchronicity) of contemporary life is immature by comparison. A problem for urban planning – given its dual analytical and normative aspects – is whether these new imaginaries are capable of being rendered visually and rhetorically in ways that are seductive or practical as guides for intervention. Can those planning theories that seek to mobilize the communicative, collaborative or deliberative (Forester, 1993; Healey, 1997; Innes and Booher, 2010) properties of networks, flows and virtual connections of citizen, club and state actors ever appeal or be harnessed to practices of planning actors? I discuss these properties further in chapter 5.

      The contemporary urban planning imagination may recognize cities as less enmeshed in a hierarchical set of bounded places orchestrated by nation states than as present within the horizontal networks of connections between a vast number of cities and associated citizens, clubs or states. Plans are capable of expressing the character of the city as a network of nodes. This much is familiar in the topological maps of the metro systems of London, New York or Paris. These maps are also pieces of art though many of them can be illegible to all but the initiated.

      Notwithstanding some of the silences of world-city analysis, which I return to in chapter 7, it is useful in drawing attention to questions of social polarization (Friedmann and Wolff, 1982: 322). Saskia Sassen (1991) later developed this line of thought, arguing that structural transformation towards service industries and the crowding-out of manufacturing in many global north world cities has seen the loss of skilled manual occupations (middle-income). These generalities have specific ramifications for urban planning and planners in world cities, where housing affordability and investment in schools, parks, transit, hospitals and the like are vital to reproducing the success of those same city economies.

      The world-cities literature addresses itself almost exclusively to the economic rather than the political or planning networks of cities. Nevertheless, if ‘city powers … are mobilized through networks’ (Allen, 2010: 2898), then, by extension, the urban planning of cities might be said to be networked. City networks appear to have proliferated in number, diversity and depth, with implications for urban planning thought and practice that have barely been considered (Davidson et al., 2019). Despite the possibilities, there are obstacles to information pooling let alone collective action across networks of cities (Miao and Maclennan, 2019). The statutory planning efforts of local governments across the world rely on evidence bases that are now often produced by club actors. How, then, will policy experimentation in networks of cities shape the production and availability of alternative planning knowledge?

      Urban planning has long wrestled with the relationship of the settlement of land to the flows under, over and across it that affect the health of citizens and that are needed to sustain settlement. The need for the healthy metabolism of cities that informed early modern planning drew inspiration from already mature water, waste and metro-system engineering achievements. However, flows arguably take on new individuated meaning in an information-rich age (Castells, 2005) with implications for the balance of citizen, club and state planning actors as they continue to shape our cities.

      The supply of water and the removal of waste have been central to ancient and modern urban planning alike. They were the early and universal concerns of modern urban planning as it developed from the 1800s onwards in the global north, as I discuss in the next chapter. Cities such as London and Paris pioneered the introduction of city-wide water-supply and sewerage systems, and these