Buch, Englisch, 155 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 440 g
Reihe: Urban Sustainability
Designing Regenerative Cities through Adaptive Reuse and Circular Innovation
Buch, Englisch, 155 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 440 g
Reihe: Urban Sustainability
ISBN: 978-981-954137-9
Verlag: Springer
reimagines how cities can thrive through constraints, whether environmental, economic, or spatial, by harnessing ingenuity, local knowledge, and innovative design. This book focuses on how adaptive reuse, circular thinking, and participatory governance might lead to urban resilience rather than high-tech fixes or significant advancements. It makes the case that being "resourceful" in the urban context means changing our values for things like relationships, materials, ecosystems, and lived experience in addition to getting more done with less.
The transformative tactics that influence the urban futures of both Global North and Global South contexts are examined in this book in a current and fact-based manner. It combines several approaches, i.e., formal and informal, grassroots and institutional, to show how locally rooted activities may make cities more regenerative, inclusive, and adaptable. The book is structured around four central themes that collectively define resourceful urbanism: “Community-Led Innovation”, “Adaptive Reuse and Retrofitting”, “Circular Resource Management”, and “Multifunctional Urban Spaces”.
Each theme is illustrated through two in-depth case studies, one from a developed context and one from a developing context, showing how contextually tailored interventions can drive systemic transformation.
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Chapter 1. Beyond Scarcity: Reimagining Urban Futures Through Resourceful Innovation.- Part I. Community-led Innovation.- Chapter 2. From Derelict Riverside to Residents’ Commons: Coin Street Community Builders and the Politics of Collective Urban Stewardship.- Chapter 3. Building with Scarcity: Koroipita and the Resourceful Urbanism of the Pacific.- Part II. Adaptive Reuse and Retrofitting.- Chapter 4. From Tracks to Commons: The Goods Line and Adaptive Urbanism in Sydney, Australia.- Chapter 5. From Grain to Gallery: The Zeitz MOCAA and the Cultural Rebirth of Cape Town’s Waterfront.- Part III. Circular Resource Management.- Chapter 6. Loops of Value: The Kalundborg Industrial Symbiosis and the Architecture of Circular Exchange in Denmark.- Chapter 7. Everyday Circularity: Informal Labour and the SWaCH Model in Pune, India.- Part IV. Multifunctional Urban Spaces.- Chapter 8. Landscapes of Multiplicity: Yokohama’s Zoorasia and Forest Park Network.- Chapter 9. Resourceful Social Urbanism: Medellín’s Library Parks as Engines of Collective Transformation.- Chapter 10. From Ingenuity to Transformation: The Future of Resourceful Urbanism.




