Research Project:
Governing densification - The impact of performance-based planning on qualitative urban densification (GoverDENSE)

crisfund.leadorganizationsInstitute of Geography, Political Urbanism and Sustainable Spatial Development
crispj.coordinatorInstitute of Geography, Political Urbanism and Sustainable Spatial Development
crispj.investigatorGerber, Jean-David
crispj.investigator.affiliationInstitute of Geography
crispj.partnerouInstitute of Geography, Political Urbanism and Sustainable Spatial Development
dc.date.accessioned2025-03-31T07:52:14Z
dc.date.available2025-03-31T07:52:14Z
dc.description.abstractThe present project aims to study the institutional determinants of densification challenges. It analyses how densification processes are governed and simultaneously questions the impacts of current attempts at increasing the performance of planning implementation in terms of sustainability. Its overarching research question examines the conditions under which spatial planning can lead more effectively to increased densification while retaining urban quality for all, including more vulnerable socio-economic groups. More specifically: (1) What are the conditions of success and failure of densification processes considering all three - economic, ecological and social - dimensions of sustainability? (2) How does performance-based planning (PBP) contribute to overcome the barriers to achieving densification? (3) In addition, a GIS-based methodology will be developed to analyze how densification outcomes can be measured in the framework of existing institutions.Densification implies to deal with the already built environment. Planning therefore takes place within a tight web of existing rights and duties engraved in complex institutional norms and regulation. Potential for redevelopment projects is often given, but the land is frequently not accessible; because land rights are secured by strongly protected property titles, it is particularly difficult for planning administrations to fight against hoarding strategies. Planning administrations can develop strategies to reinforce their position in front of powerful landowners or economic interests. We refer to these strategies as “land policy”, a more encompassing concept than spatial planning (Alterman 1990). Against this complex institutional backdrop, this project examines whether performance-based planning (PBP) can contribute to streamline the implementation of densification objectives. PBP refers to the application of performance management principles within planning policy and local planning processes to increase effectiveness and actually achieve desired spatial outcomes. Densification is a contested process because of its redistributive effects: for some, it can potentially lead to more traffic, more noise, loss of green surfaces, loss of view, greater clienteles for common services, and higher housing costs. The latter dimension is probably the most fundamental: to implemented densification, redevelopment is needed, which is most often associated with price increases, one of the central drivers of gentrification. Densification will be appraised as a political field by analyzing its socio-political consequences on different categories of stakeholders and their responses. A study design involving a comparison between the two functional regions of Bern in Switzerland and Utrecht in the Netherlands will be used. Using a neoinstitutionalist approach, we will reconstruct eight “stories of densification” (four per country) at the project level (subcases). Relying on a mixed-method approach, in each national setting, a detailed analysis of institutions, policy instruments, performance incentives (PBP), actors’ strategies and conditions of the resource (sustainability) will be performed. Simultaneously a GIS analysis will reconstruct densification processes over the whole functional regions including socio-political and economic indicators. This project will contribute to the “institutional turn” in planning (Gerber et al. 2018) and conceptualize densification as an governance challenge. A particular attention will be paid to the negotiations affecting the different dimensions of sustainability, a major challenge for performance-oriented planning being to densify without increasing social inequalities. On a more practical note, it will provide new insights in effective ways toward increased densification while retaining urban quality for all.
dc.description.sponsorshipInstitute of Geography, Political Urbanism and Sustainable Spatial Development
dc.description.sponsorshipInstitute of Geography
dc.description.sponsorshipCRED - Geographie
dc.description.sponsorshipInstitute of Geography, Human Geography
dc.description.sponsorshipInstitute of Geography
dc.identifier.urihttps://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/208416
dc.language.isoen
dc.relation.funding188939
dc.relation.publicationComparing types and patterns: A context-oriented approach to densification in Switzerland and the Netherlands
dc.relation.publicationNon-compliance and non-enforcement: An unexpected outcome of flexible soft densification policy in the Netherlands
dc.relation.publicationEnsuring Public Access to Green Spaces in Urban Densification: The Role of Planning and Property Rights
dc.relation.publicationFor whom do we densify? Explaining income variation across densification projects in the region of Utrecht, the Netherlands
dc.relation.publicationCommoning the compact city: The role of old and new commons in urban development
dc.relation.publicationPlanning the Dense and Healthy City for All - Access to Green Spaces in Densification Projects
dc.relation.publicationFor whom do we densify? Explaining income variation across densification projects in the region of Utrecht, the Netherlands
dc.subject.ddc900 - History::910 - Geography & travel
dc.subject.keywordsSpatial Planning
dc.subject.keywordsDensification
dc.subject.keywordsLand Use Planning
dc.subject.keywordsGovernance
dc.subject.keywordsInstitutions
dc.titleGoverning densification - The impact of performance-based planning on qualitative urban densification (GoverDENSE)
dspace.entity.typeProject
local.fakeitemtrue
local.submitter
oairecerif.acronymGoverDENSE
oairecerif.amount731727
oairecerif.amount.currencyCHF
oairecerif.funderSchweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung
oairecerif.funding.endDate2024-08-31
oairecerif.funding.startDate2020-04-01
oairecerif.fundingParentGoverning densification - The impact of performance-based planning on qualitative urban densification (GoverDENSE)
oairecerif.identifier.urlhttps://data.snf.ch/grants/grant/188939
oairecerif.project.startDate2020-04-01
unibe.additional.sponsorshipCRED - Geographie
unibe.additional.sponsorshipInstitute of Geography, Political Urbanism and Sustainable Spatial Development
unibe.additional.sponsorshipInstitute of Geography, Human Geography
unibe.additional.sponsorshipInstitute of Geography
unibe.funding.accesstypePublic
unibe.funding.creditholderGerber, Jean-David
unibe.funding.fundertypePublic
unibe.funding.fundrefdoihttps://doi.org/10.13039/501100001711
unibe.funding.fundrefid501100001711
unibe.funding.typePublic Grant
unibe.primaryconductorInstitute of Geography, Political Urbanism and Sustainable Spatial Development
unibe.primarycontact.affiliationInstitute of Geography
unibe.project.expectedcompletionDate2024-08-31
unibe.project.primarycontactGerber, Jean-David

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