Planning the Productive City: Rethinking Urban Industrial Spaces
Editat de Carl Grodach, Jessica Fermen Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 iun 2026
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781032981482
ISBN-10: 1032981482
Pagini: 350
Ilustrații: 70
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 mm
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1032981482
Pagini: 350
Ilustrații: 70
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 mm
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
Academic, Postgraduate, Professional Reference, and Undergraduate AdvancedCuprins
1. Introduction: Planning the Productive City Part I: Evolving planning approaches and visions of industrial lands 2. Two Steps Forward, One Step Back? Adaptation in Regional Industrial Land Preservation 3. Regional planning for industrial land use: The case of Portland, Oregon (USA)\ 4. Production activities and spaces within the ecological transition in Italy: Approaches, visions, and challenges in industrial land use planning 5. From the City of Dreadful Night to MedTech and Microbrews: Evolving planning imaginaries of the industrial city Part II: Industrial Policies and Land Use Conflicts 6. Urban industrial districts, property market displacements and “clusters of last resort” 7. New Industrial Policies, Old Inequalities: The Case of Chicago’s Lincoln Yards 8. From industrial areas to industrious neighborhoods: examining the London model 9. Resisting industrial displacement and gentrification: insights from Germany Part III: Transformations in Industrial Economies and Spaces 10. What does the growth of e-commerce mean for the future of industrial lands? 11. Cultural Manufacturing Resilience in Seoul's Seongsu Neighborhood: Urban Industrial Transformation and Survival Tactics 12. Making the future of the city: insights and lessons from Athens and Rotterdam 13. Finding space for industries: Clustering patterns and building typologies of urban manufacturing in Munich and Stuttgart 14. Dialectics of urban and peri-urban industries: An explorative analysis of the Turkish context Part IV: Labor, Skills, and Learning 15. Made with equity: Inclusive innovation in urban manufacturing 16. Educational and Technology Campuses in Industrial Parks 17. Walk and talk perspectives on productive lands: Advocating for industrial lands through Jane’s Walk experiences 18. A labor perspective on the productive city: The case of Hamerkwartier in Amsterdam Part V: Urban Industry and the Climate Imperative 19. Bluing the Green: Nurturing Manufacturing as Green City Strategy 20. Fixed in the City: Accessibility of different types of repair in London and Amsterdam 21. The shape of urban industry in a regenerative economy: An adaptation scenario for medium-sized cities 22. Making Space for Construction Companies in a Context of No Net Land Take: The Case of Flanders, Belgium
Notă biografică
Carl Grodach is Foundation Professor of Urban Planning and Design at Monash University, Australia. His research focuses on economic development and land use planning in relation to urban manufacturing, industrial lands, cultural industries, and circular economies.
Jessica Ferm is Associate Professor in Planning and Urban Economies at the Bartlett School of Planning, University College London, UK. Her research expertise is in the planning and governance of diverse and inclusive economies, and she has published widely on industrial land use planning, sustainable urban manufacturing and affordable workspace.
Jessica Ferm is Associate Professor in Planning and Urban Economies at the Bartlett School of Planning, University College London, UK. Her research expertise is in the planning and governance of diverse and inclusive economies, and she has published widely on industrial land use planning, sustainable urban manufacturing and affordable workspace.
Recenzii
“Planning the Productive City: Rethinking Urban Industrial Spaces asks how after decades of being ignored manufacturing can be reintegrated into urban economic development strategies. The rich European and U.S. cases presented in this edited volume examine how cities deemphasized manufacturing—mostly to their peril—and how many are prioritizing industry and industrial land to create new economic activity. The book is a hopeful examination of how manufacturing still matters.”
Joan Fitzgerald, Professor of Public Policy and Urban Affairs, Northeastern University
“Cities once produced things, which helped to grow ideas and the economy. Great cities now live off an economy of ideas and don’t know how or where things are produced. Without spaces for production, cities cannot eat, be sanitised, build, move or grow. Through making things, materials have knowledge, ideas are grounded and waste is just a resource. This book brings together an excellent collection of insights from across the world, on how cities can make place for production.”
Adrian Hill, Director, Osmos Network and Cities of Making
"This book debuts with a relevance that the editors and contributors could not have foreseen. Well over half of the world’s population (4.4 billion) lives in urban areas. The global economy’s ability to meet this population’s needs requires high functioning international supply chains. In turn, urban industrial spaces are essential inputs to these supply chains. This is especially the case when global politics are disrupting supply chains. The authors' contributions to this book give us greater and much needed understanding for creating productive industrial spaces that support and improve urban global population conditions."
Nancey Green Leigh, Professor Emerita, School of City and Regional Planning, Georgia Institute of Technology
Joan Fitzgerald, Professor of Public Policy and Urban Affairs, Northeastern University
“Cities once produced things, which helped to grow ideas and the economy. Great cities now live off an economy of ideas and don’t know how or where things are produced. Without spaces for production, cities cannot eat, be sanitised, build, move or grow. Through making things, materials have knowledge, ideas are grounded and waste is just a resource. This book brings together an excellent collection of insights from across the world, on how cities can make place for production.”
Adrian Hill, Director, Osmos Network and Cities of Making
"This book debuts with a relevance that the editors and contributors could not have foreseen. Well over half of the world’s population (4.4 billion) lives in urban areas. The global economy’s ability to meet this population’s needs requires high functioning international supply chains. In turn, urban industrial spaces are essential inputs to these supply chains. This is especially the case when global politics are disrupting supply chains. The authors' contributions to this book give us greater and much needed understanding for creating productive industrial spaces that support and improve urban global population conditions."
Nancey Green Leigh, Professor Emerita, School of City and Regional Planning, Georgia Institute of Technology
Descriere
Bringing together detailed studies of over 25 cities in 14 countries, this comprehensive volume puts urban industrial land and productive activities at the center of discussions around the future of cities and argues that industry can play a critical role in promoting socially equitable, economically resilient, and climate-sensitive places.