470 likes | 625 Views
The performance of spatial planning within a complex area development. Learning to anticipate the spatial strategy formation in the face of conflicting interests at ‘SPOORZONE DELFT’. Alan Kazzaz. P5 presentation. 12 – 4 – 2011. Dept. Of Urbanism. Presentation structure.
E N D
The performance of spatial planning within a complex area development Learning to anticipate the spatial strategy formation in the face of conflicting interests at ‘SPOORZONE DELFT’ Alan Kazzaz P5 presentation 12 – 4 – 2011 Dept. Of Urbanism
Presentation structure The legitimacy and performance of the Dutch spatial planning practice Case introduction Theoretical focus Empirical testing • Conclusions and recommendations on planning practice 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 02
Case introduction Spoorzone Delft (Adapted from De Jong Luchtfotografie, 2010) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 03
Case introduction A dualistic project (Author’s illustration) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 04
Spoorzone Delft Project area (Author’s illustration) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 05
Spoorzone Delft Towards implementation 2008: implementation phase “everything has been agreed upon, From now its only a matter of fine-tuning while executing” (Bijleveld, 2010) (BestemmingsplanSpoorzone Delft, 2006) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 06
Spoorzone Delft Planning challenge • However, today: • Dissatisfied stakeholders • Disagreement on expected results • Unfeasible plan • Delays and a new planning challenge 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 07
Spoorzone Delft Crisis the cause of conflicts ? A lack of adaptive capacity to respond to meaningful developments 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 08
Theoretical focus Goal of planning 2. Context of planning Suitable planning in the context of area development Role of planning 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 09
Goal of planning Towards legitimate public action Social world: dynamic biased viewpoints ‘material outcome’ Planned effects and externalities ‘Mobilized bias’ Through practices of power exertion “Knowledge & action” (Friedmann, 1987) (Author’s illustration) • “Planning is a techno-ethical challenge…” • (Forester, 1989) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 10
Context of planning Dutch traditional planning culture (Author’s illustration) • Technocratic planning tradition • A positivistic planning approach Planning • “Comprehensive integrated approach” • (Hajer and Zonneveld, 2000) Steering • “The Dutch planning profession pays very limited attention to the • societal and political context in which planning is to take place” • (Kreukels, 1997) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 11
Context of planning Top down planning exercise (Author’s illustration) State controlled planning Legitimized by the representative Capacity of a sovereign state public • Inefficient operability • Undesirable developments • Unrealistic ambitions private people 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 12
Context of planning Ontological dynamics (semi) Public State sovereignty Collective Individual Cross-sectoral interdependency Private market (Adapted from Jonge, 2007) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 13
Role of planning Integrating planning to deciding (Author’s illustration) Interactive collaborative steering: Governance “The performance of planning” (Faludi, 2000) Planning • Planning practice could focus attention, influence bias and mobilize directive action • Faludi, 1979; Forester, 1989; Fischer, 1993; Healey, 1997; Oxley, 2004 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 14
Planning paradigm Area development (Author’s illustration) National Pose conditions Provincial Municipal Co-produce plans Civil society Private sector • “The government should formulate objectives; not solutions” • Wolting, 2006 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 15
Empirical testing Spoorzone Delft Nature of the project 3. • Planning mechanism • Initiation • Mobilization • Public collaboration • Cross-sectoral collaboration Inconsistencies in planning operability 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 16
Nature of the project The railway viaduct in Delft Railway viaduct was constructed in 1965 Local nuisance Urban spatial fragmentation Obstructive curve in railline the viaduct was conceived as necessary evil (Author’s illustration; photo source: Engel, 2007) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 17
Initiation Rail-21 1987: A proposed railline duplication by the NS (Author’s illustration) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 18
Mobilization A wider perspective 1993: Urban development perspective “The greater the ambition, the higher the amount of required actors will have to be” klijn, 2004 list of requirements: 1600 homes 50.000 m2 office space (Adapted from www.palmbout.nl) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 19
Public Collaboration A dualistic comprehensive focus Ministry of V&W ‘Bereikbaarheidsoffensief Randstad’ Delft Delft Delft Delft Delft Ministry of VROM ‘Nota Ruimte 5’ Region Haaglanden Ballast Nedam Province Z-H (Author’s illustration) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 20
Public collaboration Masterplan Functions (Author’s illustration, adapted from Delft, 2003) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 21
Public collaboration Masterplan Functions (Author’s illustration, adapted from Delft, 2003) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 22
Public collaboration Masterplan Building heights (Author’s illustration, adapted from Delft, 2003) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 23
Public collaboration Masterplan Non-negotiable alignment (Author’s illustration, adapted from Delft, 2003) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 24
Public collaboration Masterplan Implementation plan (Author’s illustration, adapted from Delft, 2003) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 25
Public collaboration Masterplan ‘Spoorzone Delft’ was to be executed conform the regulation as set within the masterplan (Delft, 1999) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 26
Cross-sectoral collaboration Institutional arrangement Urban development Railway tunnel Municipality Ministry V&W Conditioning Conditioning Approving Integrating OBS ProRail - ? - Negotiating Contracting Civil Society OCSD Does this governance landscape allow for a legitimate and effective course of decision-making ? Crommelijn NS Poort Ballast nedam (Author’s illustration) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 27
Cross-sectoral collaboration dualistic friction Urban development Railway tunnel Municipality Ministry V&W Conditioning Conditioning Approving Integrating OBS ProRail - ? - Negotiating Contracting Civil Society OCSD 80 million value capturing Crommelijn NS Poort Ballast nedam (Author’s illustration) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 28
Cross-sectoral collaboration Intrinsic steering (Author’s illustration) Masterplan OBS Municipality Civil society OCSD Land-use plan 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 29
Cross-sectoral collaboration Centralized steering (Author’s illustration) Masterplan OBS Municipality Civil society OCSD Land-use plan 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 30
Cross-sectoral collaboration Land-use plan 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 31
Cross-sectoral collaboration Beeldkwaliteitsplan (Delft, 2009) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 32
Cross-sectoral collaboration Conflicts Urban development Railway tunnel Municipality Ministry V&W • too narrow solution spaces for further optimization and anticipation; Conditioning Conditioning Approving “The planning operability has a lack of adaptive capacity to respond to meaningful developments which marks contemporary urban life” (Slagmolen, 2010) Integrating OBS ProRail • Symbolical reassuring participatory activities; - ? - Negotiating Contracting Civil Society OCSD Result: An unfeasible plan Crommelijn Conflict NS Poort Ballast nedam 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 33
Cross-sectoral collaboration Regaining steering competence Municipality Ministry V&W OBS ProRail Civil Society OCSD Crommelijn NS Poort Ballast nedam (Author’s illustration) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 34
Cross-sectoral collaboration A positivistic planning discourse ‘a predictable future’ A B (Adapted from Govaart, 2011) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 35
Cross-sectoral collaboration A post-positivistic planning discourse ‘the acknowledgement of uncertainty’ A responsive alternative A B (Adapted from Govaart, 2011) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 36
Cross-sectoral collaboration Towards a wider institutional embedding Municipality OBS Civil Society OCSD NS Poort Ballast nedam (Author’s illustration) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 37
Conclusions and recommendations 4. Conclusions • Recommendations • Planning context • Planning tools • Planner’s conduct 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 38
Conclusion Towards an integrated outcome (Author’s illustration) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 39
Conclusion Discursive conflict on decision-making Area development ideal Intrinsic steering Reality of practice Control and hierarchy National National Provincial Provincial Municipal Municipal Civil society Private sector Civil society Private sector (Author’s illustration) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 42
Conclusion The performance of planning 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 40
Conclusion Discursive conflict on planning (Author’s illustration) The public and private sector operate under very distinctive principles. A mixed type will not be stable (Simon, 1990) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 41
Recommendation 1 Shaping the planning context Integrality has its limits Municipality Ministry V&W Urban development Railway tunnel OBS ProRail (Author’s illustration) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 43
Recommendation 1 Shaping the planning context Municipal Legitimacy Efficiency Civil Society Private Consumer orientation time (Author’s illustration) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 44
Recommendation 2 Planning tools for urban management Planning tools: ‘Seduction-by design’ planning approaches fail to perform in complex decision-making arrangements; There is a need for learning-oriented planning tools which are to make variables and parameters within urban space explicit in order to facilitate relational clarity on the current situation and to provide a referential frame for negotiation if the current situation is desired to be changed. 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 45
Recommendation 3 The argumentative turn in planning Planner’s conduct: The argumentative turn in planning (Forester, 1989, Fischer, 1993) Planning in the context of complexity requires contextual-sensitive communicative skills to confront the diversity of (sectoral-bound) value patterns towards a shared commitment and a collective focus for action. “Planning with all your senses” (Stein, 2005) 1. Introduction 2. Theory 3. Testing 4. Conclusions and recommendations 46
Thank you (Author’s illustration)