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Urban Morphology versus Urban Redevelopment and Revitalisation

Proceedings of the XXIX Conference of the International Seminar on Urban Form 2022

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  • 2025
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Über dieses Buch

Dieses Open-Access-Buch bietet einen umfassenden Überblick über aktuelle theoretische und praktische Expertise am Zusammenfluss von Stadtmorphologie und Stadtsanierung. Seine ganzheitliche Perspektive befasst sich mit theoretischen Erklärungen und Ansätzen sowie praktischen Erfahrungen bei der Gestaltung urbaner Orte. Der umfangreiche methodische Abschnitt veranschaulicht Innovation und Entwicklung in diesem Bereich. Die Sektionen Stadtmorphologie versus Stadtumbau und Revitalisierung bieten Einblicke aus verschiedenen Perspektiven: aus politischer, sozialer, kultureller und wirtschaftlicher. Jeder Teil untersucht die Schnittmenge mit dem Gebiet der morphologischen Studien. Die Transformationen des städtischen Gefüges stehen im Mittelpunkt der beiden letzten Abschnitte; sie befassen sich mit historischen Prozessen und überprüfen aktuelle architektonische und städtebauliche Lösungen.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter

Open Access

Chapter 1. Introduction. Urban Redevelopment and Revitalisation. A Multidisciplinary Perspective

The XXIX ISUF conference book explores the multifaceted theme of urban redevelopment and revitalisation through the lens of urban morphology. It underscores the growing relevance of urban rehabilitation, particularly in light of the principles of urban metabolism and circular economy. It addresses the theoretical and methodological intersections between urban morphology and urban rehabilitation, advocating for a multidisciplinary approach to tackle the diverse challenges of urban renewal. Key themes include political, legal, and administrative conditions influencing urban transformations, and the social and cultural determinants affecting spatial redevelopment. The book also offers a comprehensive review of current theoretical and practical expertise, providing insights into economic, functional, infrastructural changes, and the impacts of climate change on urban strategies. It examines methodological advancements, ranging from traditional case studies to advanced digital tools like GIS and AI. The volume includes detailed analyses of political and economic systems’ influence on urban renewal, case studies on social participation, and the impacts of migration and cultural diversity. Additionally, it discusses theoretical concepts linking urban morphology with urban renewal, exploring sustainability and climate change effects. Practical architectural and urban solutions are highlighted, showcasing implementations from various countries to offer a global perspective on the morphological method in urban revitalisation.

Anna Agata Kantarek, Małgorzata Hanzl, Tomasz Figlus, Łukasz Musiaka, Artur Zaguła

Methods for Analysing the Transformation of Spatial Structures of Settlements

Frontmatter

Open Access

Chapter 2. Morphogenesis and Urban Change in Newcastle upon Tyne: Context and Process

This paper will argue that the study of morphological processes has lagged behind the identification and classification of morphological patterns. Examples from Newcastle upon Tyne will be used to illustrate this argument, ranging from mediaeval burgage plots, through a typology of nineteenth-century working-class terraced housing that emerged in the west end of the city, and more recent twentieth-century social housing. It is concluded that a deeper understanding of urban forms is dependent on a stronger focus on the processes operating at a variety of scales.

Michael Barke

Open Access

Chapter 3. Quantitative Analysis of Urban Form Through Urban Section: A Case Study of Nanjing, China

A more comprehensive and in-depth understanding of the urban form has been a long-term interest of urban morphology. Compared to a plan view, urban section helps to understand the three-dimensional shape of a city from a transection. As a linear graph, the section can be quantified with some indicators easily and accurately. However, a single section cannot adequately describe the entire urban form, and a series of sections are needed to construct a representation of it. In this research, we test two different series of sections: parallel series and rotational series. In the former, all sections are distributed in parallel at a certain spacing, while in the latter, all sections are rotated around a center point. Taking four different districts of Nanjing, China, as the cases, two series of sections are applied to implement the quantitative analysis of urban form. The different parameters are also analyzed by comparison to determine reasonable values. The results show that the both series are effective in representing the urban morphological characteristics with reasonable parameters. In addition, the rotational series section method has unique advantages in expressing the urban form in different directions.

Ziyu Tong, Jingjing Dong, Lian Tang, Zhichao Yu

Open Access

Chapter 4. Historical–Geographical and Procedural Typological Approach in Urban Renewal: As a Case Louroujina, Northern Cyprus

The city is observed and shaped by the development and transformation of its dynamics during the process. Urban morphologies research; analyze the transformation and formation of physical forms of cities in the historical process and transformation. Morphological studies are examined from different perspectives in many countries in a wide range and are spreading to different geographies day by day. English School, one of the pioneers of these studies, MRG Conzen examines morphology through historical–geographical perspective, while Italian school S. Muratori evaluates morphology through typological processes point of view. MRG Conzen, who started to examine morphology at macro-scale in planning processes, and JWR Whitehand, MP Conzen, and M. Bark, who had a great influence on the development of these theories, examined urban morphology in the context of (a) town plan, (b) townscape, and (c) fringe belts by the means of planning level. On the other hand, S. Muratori and his continuation G.F. Cannigia, who examine micro-scale morphology from an architectural point of view, advance urban morphology within the scope of (a) buildings, (b) urban tissue, and (c) urban organism. The studies created by these two schools also have an important place in the discussion of rehabilitation and protection plans on theory. Suggestions and solutions for the practical application of theory, which is being discussed today, are actually examples of the practical analysis of these studies. In this context, the aim of this study is to examine and put into practice the morphological analysis methods, which are considered together with the architectural scale theories and practices, starting from historical–geographical approach within the scope of planning scale and typological procedural approach on rehabilitation and renewal projects. While doing all this, it is to examine the role of local users, NGOs, governmental bodies, and municipalities (local bodies) at every stage of these projects and the place of their inclusion in the project in practice. The results of this research will lead both the planners and architects in rehabilitation and renovation projects, by creating a basis for the method, and how the method will be analyzed in terms of morphology in future studies and its reflections on practice.

Nevter Zafer Cömert

Open Access

Chapter 5. Intellectual Heritage for Morphological Studies in Belgrade, Serbia: Understanding Spatial Transformations Through Review of Academic and Practical Thoughts and Actions from 1969 to 1981

If heritage is about continuity, then intellectual heritage is about continuity of knowledge, ideas and thoughts that allows us to learn from the past and make informed decisions in the future. Accordingly, the paper strives to establish review of academic and practical thoughts and actions within the scope of urban morphology in Belgrade starting from the period after World War II until the beginning of 1980s. Therefore, the two research questions were (a) what kind of theoretical and methodological approaches have emerged in local context over this period and (b) on which manner these approaches reflect, confirm, or deny emerging interpretations around global research landscape in spatial transformation? The research engages the literature review method through three steps: (1) analysis of relevant bibliographic units from magazine Urbanism of Belgrade dating from the most influential planning period (1969–1981), (2) content analysis of selected units and (3) deriving key notions and actions. These sources provide background for tracing the intellectual progression for the field on local level—key authorities and precedents. The paper results—over the timeline—in the evolution of theoretical and practical reflection on morphological studies in a local context, and provides a new theoretical perspective for understanding intellectual heritage and for guiding future actions, contributing to critical visions and disciplinary discussion within Serbian Network of Urban Morphology (SNUM). The research has both practical and theoretical impetus and is based on the assumption that research on locally specific approaches on the renewal processes is an important puzzle in understanding the global research agenda in the subject area and accordingly seeks to show the roots and precedents in the context of Serbia.

Vladan Djokić, Milica P. Milojević, Aleksandra Milovanović, Aleksandra Djordjević, Mladen Pešić

Open Access

Chapter 6. Quantity Versus Quality: Do Citizens in Denser Neighbourhoods Have Poorer Access to Urban Open Spaces? A Pilot Study in Stavanger, Norway

The sufficient provision of urban open spaces (UOS) is fundamental for sustaining good quality of life in cities. This is an aspect long established within urban planning. Indeed, the balance between built masses and open spaces has been crucial for the discipline’s development and innovative practices in spatial design. This paper presents a pilot study correlating the concentrations of built form and population with 10-minute walk access to UOS, including both grey and green areas. We realise this in three steps. First, we verify the availability of all UOS for flexible utilisation by the public. Second, all UOS are evaluated through a qualitative score matrix. And third, we assess the amount of UOS that is accessible from each residential building within the 10-minute isochrone through network analysis. The research results challenge the notion that citizens in denser neighbourhoods have poorer provisions of good quality UOS. On the contrary, the examined case studies illustrate that inhabitants within denser areas have physical access to a greater quantity of UOS. This fact becomes even more significant when one considers the individual open spaces’ elements, amenities and connectivity. The realised analysis indicates that if one aims to effectively assess the provisions of UOS within cities, a more complex and diverse picture must be drawn in the evaluation process. Only then the impact of planning strategies such as urban densification can be fairly evaluated with respect to the pressure the process puts on the available green and grey UOS.

Todor Kesarovski, Fabio Hernández-Palacio

Open Access

Chapter 7. Reading for Rewriting Chinese Urban Form: The Dual Typo-Morphology of Nanshijie Block in Ganzhou

Reading urban form is essential for establishing a cultural relationship with the site’s history, memory and future writings. As Chinese historic sites are generally considered the loci of a despatialised textual memory lacking physical substance, the condition of latency and disappearance together with an overestimation of intangible values too often open the path to unjustified erasures, substitutions and re-historicisation through replicas. Yet, by understanding the place not only through what is today detectable by the eye but rather as a historically layered and culturally defined context, we can inaugurate a methodology to decode the site as an “already-written” text that requires interpretation and guides future writing. The Nanshijie site in Ganzhou Historic City is a paradigmatic urban text that has become unreadable. Through the reading of morphology and building types combined with the hermeneutic work of decoding traces and absences, the research revealed the latent urban form in three structuring components and “Latent Structures” that still inform the site’s readability and potential rewritability. The cognition and interaction between these essential components should be the starting point for defining the “city part” and its conservation boundaries, that is, integrating preservation, regeneration and design approaches into one co-evolutionary rewriting of urban form.

Laura Anna Pezzetti, Li Bao

Open Access

Chapter 8. From Maps to Diagrams. A Morphological Tool to Unravel Transitional Processes

Studying the regeneration and revitalisation of urban tissues involves addressing transitional changes as processes occurring over time. Traditional methods in the Italian morphological theory aim to develop a qualitative and conjectural approach to uncover transitional laws within the city. In these methods, maps play a fundamental role in studying the process providing a first interpretation of what changes and what remains fixed inside the city. However, a gap exists between traditional studies and emerging quantitative methodologies. This research investigates maps developing their diagrammatic components to bridge traditional approaches with new perspectives in the field. The starting point is the analysis of maps of the cities of Venice (Saverio Muratori), Como (Gianfranco Caniggia), and Turin (Augusto Cavallari-Murat). By decomposing these three maps, it becomes possible to define the temporal, symbolic and diagrammatic components that make these maps a tool for studying urban change with a forward-looking perspective. The research enhances map components that can help visualise the qualitative method, working on diagrammatic elements of the tool. This approach is a starting point for developing a methodology and a tool to read morphological transitional events. The final output is a diagram that bridges the gap between traditional methods and innovative AI tools.

Rossella Gugliotta

Open Access

Chapter 9. Typology and Morphology: The Gene of Chinese Traditional Town Form

This round table aims at the conceptual exploration of theories, tools and case studies for a comparative reading of Chinese Traditional Town Forms, focussing on how to interpret Chinese morphology and to view the relationship between Chinese traditional town forms and its building types. The main question of research epistemology and methodology is the contact point between analysis and design.

Laura Anna Pezzetti, Wowo Ding

Open Access

Chapter 10. Typo-morphology in the Cognition of Traditional Landscape Region—Case Study of Urban Design Project in Changting Town, China

Typo-morphology can be seen as the research perspective and methodology of urban morphology. The terms typo-morphology are typological and morphological because they describe urban forms according to the detailed classification of building types, emphasizing the relationship between building types and overall form in the evolution of urban morphology. In order to better integrate urban morphological research with practice to identify traditional landscape region, it is worthwhile to apply the perspective and method of typo-morphology to deeply recognize the traditional landscape characteristics of the old town based on local types. This study examines the characteristics of GIS platform on the basis of the tradition of Conzen and Caniggia through the case of our urban renewal projects in Changting Town, a historic town in the south of China. First of all, investigation and learning of local building types with traditional characteristics are the tools to understand the basic unit of urban form preliminarily. Secondly, presenting traditional landscape characteristics from two aspects including characteristics of building composition and spatial perception, and doing some simple data overlay analysis helps us to clarify more scientific traditional landscape areas. Finally, we have determined the reasonable traditional landscape region by combining the discussion of other historical information in details. The paper concludes that the term typo-morphology are meaningful in delineating traditional landscape region, which makes an important contribution to the renewal and protection of old town in China.

Yidan Liu, Lian Tang, Wowo Ding

Economic, Functional, Infrastructural Changes and Political, Legal, and Administrative Conditions for the Redevelopment and Renewal of the Urban Tissue

Frontmatter

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Chapter 11. The New Urban Agenda in Urban Redevelopment: The Central Role of Public Space Networks

Public spaces, and their intimate structural relationship to private spaces, have long been a central interest of urban morphologists. Recent developments in network science have shed new light on the complexity of public space networks, with specific implications for policy, education, and practice. These developments come at a historical moment when all 193 member states of the United Nations have recently adopted by acclamation the New Urban Agenda, a landmark framework agreement for global urbanization through 2036. As it happens, the New Urban Agenda has much to say about public space networks, their structure, and their importance—but implementation remains a historic challenge.

Michael W. Mehaffy

Open Access

Chapter 12. From Feudalism to Socialism: Socialization Process and Changes in Political Meaning of the Built Environment in Traditional City Central Areas

Institutional plot refers to the built environment with relatively strong political and power attributes in Conzenian School. Under the background of urban development and political change, the spatial organization and social relations of institutional plot changes with the use and accessibility, which has specific performance in core element, crowd flow, element organization and structure, reflect a lot of the political control of the city. It can be expressed in the following three forms: (1) Breakthrough of function, (2) Breakthrough of town plan and (3) Breakthrough of the accessibility. In this paper, two case studies corresponding to the above breakthrough processes were carried out in Beijing, which were located in the central location of traditional cities, the most representative expression of political space in China, experienced the historical change with political meanings from feudal to modern society. We believe that the findings can reflect the relationship between morphological transformation and urban political and social reform. In the process of socialist China’s transformation, the institutional plot and monumental space under the original feudal system have been transformed accordingly, which are long with the reshaping of society and citizens. A mechanism of influence should be established between the renewal of the institutional plot and the political, social and cultural conditions.

Xueqi Chen, Feng Song

Open Access

Chapter 13. Exploring the Interaction Between Urban Landscape and Regeneration Decision-Making Factors in the Context of Urban Regeneration, Exemplified by Liverpool Docklands

Urban regeneration is emerging as an important means of transforming cities for development, with built environment as the main object of operation. Modern urban regeneration process has become a mechanism in the evolution of urban landscape, where decision-making factors such as legal, institutional and administrative systems have a direct impact on the implementation of regeneration activities. In turn, the built environment will also influence the urban decision-making process. Accordingly, this article interprets the important role of decision-making factors in urban regeneration from the perspective of urban landscape, taking Liverpool docklands as a case as it bears the history of shipping and trade and is also the main area of Liverpool’s urban regeneration. Based on the literature and official documents, this article reviews the urban regeneration process staging in Liverpool Docklands, identifies the decision-making factors, and constructs an explanatory framework, then the role of decision-making factors in shaping urban landscape is interpreted in stage. It is found that the role of decision-making factors is rooted in the notion of legitimacy of development power and influenced by institutional systems and administrative relationships, generally involving different agents from public, private and intermediate organisations. And the role in shaping urban landscape takes three forms: restrictive, chance and evolutionary.

Junyuan Lu, Feng Song

Open Access

Chapter 14. The Impact of Plot Configuration on the Patterns of Spatial Change: A Diachronic Approach to the Urban Redevelopment Processes in New York, Melbourne and Barcelona

Investigation of the patterns of urban (re)development and identification of the laws behind these processes are critically important to understand how cities evolve under different material conditions. Without denying the effect of socio-economic, cultural and historical peculiarities, it could be argued that ‘urban form’ itself is also an important aspect guiding future patterns of redevelopment. This research aims to examine morphological conditions created by plot structures and their impact on the patterns of urban redevelopment in three international case studies: Midtown Manhattan (New York), Central Melbourne (Melbourne) and Eixample (Barcelona). Physical changes that occurred in each selected site during identified analysis periods are mapped and measured by relying on a longitudinal geospatial database generated from various cartographic resources. The relationship between patterns of physical change and selected quantitative urban form descriptions of plots (plot size, accessible plot density, plot frontage, accessible plot frontage and accessible plot size diversity) is analysed in a diachronic manner. The empirical investigation indicates that character of plot configuration plays an important role in guiding long-term physical change. Critical discussion of these morphological parameters will contribute to our understanding of urban redevelopment processes and help to achieve resilient and adaptable urban spaces by providing specific design conditions.

Onur Tümtürk

Open Access

Chapter 15. The Impact of Innovation Economy on Urban Form and Its Transformation: Taking Cases on Shenzhen

In recent years, many startup businesses have grown with the development of the so-called high-tech industries. Unlike conventional enterprises, these firms prefer to settle down in city centers, which gradually form innovation clusters leading to renewal processes that transform old buildings in the city. The aim of this paper is to research how the innovation economy has boosted such renewal processes and its impact on urban form. Shenzhen has been selected as the case study, which is known as the fastest-growing Chinese city highly dependent on its high-tech industry. The method is to map the distribution of 19,232 innovation companies by linking their spatial information with their innovation capacity indexes. Certain concentration areas can be identified and classified as innovation clusters according to their business models. The innovation clusters are categorized into four types. Their distribution patterns, characteristics, and formulation principles were analyzed to investigate the relation between the business composition of innovation clusters and urban morphology. By analyzing the Che-Gong-Miao area, the function of old factory buildings and their value in the renewal process was revealed. A set of morphological principles can be concluded regarding such renewal processes driven by the innovation economy.

Zhenyuan Yang, Kai Xu

Social and Cultural Determinants of Spatial Redevelopment and Regeneration

Frontmatter

Open Access

Chapter 16. Urban Regions Under Stress: The Case of Madrid After the Lockdown

Urban density, mobility, and revenue disparity are relevant factors in terms of urban analysis and project. The COVID-19 pandemic declared in March 2020 has meant a stress test for urban regions, as the alteration of mobility patterns led to changes in social dynamics. This paper investigates the correlations between the evolution of the disease and these three factors. The analysis focuses on the Madrid Urban Region, in Spain, and uses open data available from cadastral, census, and health-related official websites. This use of public information also provides a test on how such inputs could fit in a regional digital twin and can help replication. The analysis shows that overall, the basic structure of regional urban centralities, those with more people at day than at night, keeps stable in the central city and relevant economic areas. There are signs of temporary relocations to low-density areas, to holiday homes, which decreased in 2021. And there is no mathematical correlation between density and disease at the end of the period; figures show, however, of significative correlation during the initial stages, so density, at the household level (housing overcrowding) more than at the neighborhood level (dwellings per hectare), appears as an initial driver for disease expansion whose influence has been dampened progressively over time.

J. Barros-Guerton, J. M. Ezquiaga-Domínguez

Open Access

Chapter 17. Residential Community Renewal Performance Assessment Based on Social Network Analysis—Taking Jialingqiao Xicun Community, Chongqing Municipality, for Example

Restricted by the times and economic conditions, public spaces of old residential communities have problems, such as low utilization and uneven resource distribution. Because of these problems, resident activities and communication are limited and residents lack the sense of belonging. This necessitates the establishment of activity spaces suitable for communication through the renewal of old residential communities. Activity spaces of this kind can help re-establish residents’ social connections. This paper aims at assessing the performance of residential community renewal. Social network analysis is used to build the community public space network and the resident daily behavior and activity network, respectively. Meanwhile, the aforesaid two networks are comparatively analyzed from the perspective of the network structure and influence of node, and considering four parameters (density, small world density, node betweenness centrality, and structural hole) as well as its derivative indexes. Taking existing residential community for a case analysis, this paper quantitatively assesses and compares the public spaces of the residential community, finding that the inconsistency between the public space network and the resident activity network is attributable to elements, such as quality of space, space accessibility, and node combination. On that basis, strategies for optimization of spatial design are proposed.

Simai Pang, Bo Yan

Open Access

Chapter 18. Urban Morphological Transformation in Modern Ningbo: Social Change and Street System

This paper explores the early modernization of a medium-sized Chinese city, Ningbo. Based on the remapping of the street system in modern Ningbo by every 10 years from 1844 to 1936, the whole process of the late Qing and Republican eras was divided into two periods, with the port opening and the establishment of the municipal system as the critical junctures. The transformation and re-structuring of the street system limited to the walled city in the late Qing to a systematic one covering the whole urbanized area in the 1930s was explored. This transformation was driven by the construction of the Foreign Settlement in the Jiangbei area and then the introduction of municipal ideas by the local gentle and commercial group class.

Panpan Jin, Naoto Nakajima

Open Access

Chapter 19. Chinatown’s Key, Built Form Elements of Sense of Place: Findings from an Immersive Visual Survey

Cities are made up of multiple diverse cultural areas that are rooted in heritage. These areas evolve over time experiencing pressures for change and redevelopment that can erode their sense of place and perpetuate their marginalization. Chinatown in Calgary is one of those areas with strong historical roots and under redevelopment pressure. An immersive, web-based public engagement process using 360-degree photography was used to measure the community’s perception of the importance and impact of built form elements on Chinatown’s sense of place. The built form elements prioritized included streetscape design and programming with a preference for pedestrian over vehicular traffic reflecting its historical use; the buildings’ architectural language with a complexity of motifs, and the use of traditional materials and construction technics that evoke its original culture; buildings respecting human scale; street-wall permeability; and signage as a visible reminder of the original languages. The findings of this study contribute to the understanding of how the built environment contributes to the sense of place in ethnic and heritage areas. They form the basis for urban design guidelines and contribute to more appropriate redevelopment proposals. Helps build inclusivity and a degree of certainty for the future of marginalized ethnic areas of our cities.

Francisco Alaniz Uribe, Nathan Stelfox, Emily Kaing

Theoretical Concepts for Understanding the Redevelopment and Revitalisation of Spatial Structures and Directions of Changes in Historic Urban Structures

Frontmatter

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Chapter 20. Christopher Alexander’s Challenge for Implementation: Report from an ESRG Symposium

The architect Christopher Alexander was one of the most influential figures of late twentieth-century urban and architectural theory. His books Notes on the Synthesis of Form, A Pattern Language, and The Nature of Order have been influential across a surprising variety of fields. Yet Alexander struggled with implementation over his own career, and in advising others on how to take forward his ideas. One offshoot of this effort has been the Environmental Structure Research Group (ESRG), a research coordination network convened by his student Michael Mehaffy (the author). This paper reports on the proceedings of the group, including its meeting in Krakow, Poland and over Zoom in September of 2022.

Michael W. Mehaffy

Open Access

Chapter 21. Urban Form and Sustainability. New Adaptive and Resilient Tools and Strategies for the Regeneration of Territories of Unauthorized Production

The prefiguration of new strategies and tools for the regeneration of the territories of unauthorized production constitutes a field of research full of perspectives for the purpose of building new physical and intangible assets and configurations, capable of raising the levels of settlement and environmental quality, inclusion of social and economic growth. In the current phase characterized by the increase in environmental fragility, by fragmentation and territorial dispersion, by the risks due to global climate change, and by the economic and socio-health crisis caused by the pandemic, these objectives require the implementation of a unified strategy, integrated and inter-scalar, capable of promoting new planning tools based on adaptive and resilient strategies, aimed at recomposing the morphological-functional characteristics of fabrics and the construction of spaces and infrastructures of the public city. A perspective in which we play a fundamental role interventions capable of increasing the complexity of the urban structure, increasing the relationship between the parts, finalizing the design of the voids to the demands of sustainability, investigating the relationships between plan and project, between architecture, city, and territory, at the search for new urban morphologies and settlement models. In this frame of reference, the paper intends to outline the characteristics of the “Roman case”, particularly characterized from a historical, morphogenetic, and dimensional point of view, highlighting not only the procedural, methodological and operational approaches, the limits, and criticalities, but also the evolutionary paths that could affect the overall process of urban regeneration and territorial rebalancing.

Francesco Crupi

Open Access

Chapter 22. Historic Neighborhoods’ Preservation: Applicability of Morphological Regions as a Tool to Protect the Urban Memory and Urban Space of a Black Community Neighborhood in Uberlândia, Brazil

The article relates morphological aspects with the preservation of urban space, architectural heritage, and social and cultural memory of a historic neighborhood in Uberlândia, Minas Gerais, Brazil, applying a morphological analysis in the neighborhood originally known as Nossa Senhora da Aparecida, current Patrimônio, a black community built at the end of the nineteenth century, after the end of slavery. The article presents the urban formation of this small area isolated of the urban fabric, its urban evolution, the constructive aspects, and how the current urbanization processes of the city de-characterizes the neighborhood and erases an important urban memory. The research uses the methodology of morphological regions identification to distinguish the different areas of the neighborhood, differentiated through their building elements and typological patterns. The work ends by presenting simulations of possible scenarios to occur, if urban laws adopt morphological parameters, proposing new urban restrictions that would guarantee the preservation of the historical characteristics.

Glauco Cocozza

Open Access

Chapter 23. Multiscale and Multi-Temporal Simulation of Change of Urban Structures in the Subarctic East Siberian Metropolis of Yakutsk

In the last twenty years, the Metropolis of Yakutsk has experienced significant changes characterised by intense urban growth, densification, and urban structure changes in a complex geographical environment: extremely low temperature during six to seven months, impacts of permafrost dynamics and relative melting, seasonal exposure to ice breakup on the suburban areas. The urban structure and land-use changes conditioned by the urban growth and environmental impacts are analysed at two geographic scales: the meso-urban level with the use of the Landsat-5 TM, Landsat-8 OLI, and Sentinel-2 MSI satellites images covering the period from 2010 to 2020; and at the regional level with the DMSP-OLS PL (1995–2013) and VIIRS-DNB (2015–2020) sensors. The recognition of the urban structures and land use transformations at both scales are based on the use of the combined machine learning data processing. The simulations of the urban structures and land use evolutions to 2030 at the meso-urban and regional scales by Markov chain cellular automata give comparable results of the future trends of the Yakutsk metropolis: reduction of vegetation, forests areas (due to forest fires) and agriculture zones; the increase of bare soil, water surfaces and new urban areas.

Sébastien Gadal, Mounir Oukhattar, Jūratė Kamičaitytė, Moisei Zakharov, Walid Ouerghemmi, Ismaguil Hanadé Houmma

Open Access

Chapter 24. The Invention of the Old City. A Didactic Experiment: Three Projects for Lübeck

The rebirth of the urban image of German cities built up over the centuries—cancelled by the war, later demolitions and modern reconstructions—raises crucial issues in the discussion about strategies to adopt in historical contexts. The small-sized structure of the urban plots, which was often replaced by larger buildings, is the common element present in some German city centers. Different strategies adopt two different kind of interventions: “pilot buildings”, which reconstruct the original buildings as copies; new buildings which reinterpret the original houses in a contemporary way. According to the principles of critical reconstruction, introduced in the European debate starting from the 1970s, the recent transformations of some urban blocks inside the medieval Gründungsviertel (Founders District) in Lübeck has become a positive example for a didactic experiment in the master’s degree at the Politecnico di Milano (2020–2021, with Prof. Annegret Burg). After an in-depth analysis of the historical morphological structure of the urban form of one of the oldest Hanseatic cities of northern Germany, the research work led to design proposals for the blocks around the Marktplatz and the so-called Buddenbrookhaus, aimed at replacing out-of-scale or poor-quality buildings from the post-war reconstruction period with new morphological structures, based on the original form, still legible today thanks to historical maps.

Michele Caja, Pierfrancesco Sacerdoti

Open Access

Chapter 25. Adaptation to Climate Change—A Challenge for Small Towns

A compact city is one of the leading solutions to counteract the negative impact of climate change. It is also considered a node in the Transit-Oriented Development network. However, while a higher urban density can, on the one hand, positively influence public infrastructure, transport and economics, on the other hand, as we learn from the analysis of Berghauser Pont et al., it can have negative environmental, social and health impacts. Therefore, the main objective of this research is to look for the trade-offs, including density and provision of open green areas that will serve climate change adaptation. While climate change adaptation has been explored through extensive literature, there is still much to research, especially when dealing with small towns as an element of the region. Therefore, this paper focuses on a small town—Zgierz (less than 60.000 inhabitants) post-industrial town in central Poland near Lodz. The study presents the quantitative analyses of the urban form of Zgierz town centre, prepared using GIS using open-source data. First, we estimated the current residential densities and calculated population densities by applying the morphological types’ framework. Then we examined the provision and the actual distances to green areas. Moreover, the results were compared with local urban development documents. In conclusion, this paper presents the recommendations for balancing the density and amount of open green areas for the town centre of Zgierz and the scenarios for densifying urban lots in the heritage part of the town.

Bartłomiej Olczak, Małgorzata Hanzl

Open Access

Chapter 26. Public Open Spaces and Water: Urban Design in Response to Climate Change

The phenomenon is visible: nature today is at a critical point, and cities are vulnerable. One of the leading causes is the ever-increasing process of soil sealing that has involved cities from the twentieth century onwards. Climate change and soil sealing have weakened the cities that can no longer control natural events. Today, the increasingly prosperous and ever-growing cities must face an issue as crucial as it is urgent: the relationship between ecology and nature, between built and nature. If, on the one hand, water represents a threat to the city, on the other, one of the main resources to deal with climate change effect within urban voids. Starting from the assumption that ever-growing urbanization negatively affects all ecosystem services, and that water is a fundamental resource for ecological restoration and mitigation of the effects of climate change, four European case studies of urban regeneration through the rethinking of public spaces through nature-based solutions are highlighted. The case studies have a recognized architectural quality, belong to the European cultural context of open spaces, and are in metropolitan areas; they are selected following defined variables: reduce heat island effect, improve air/soil/water quality, increase biodiversity, and reuse of urban water.

Carlo Berizzi, Marta Mazurkiewicz, Gaia Nerea Terlicher

Open Access

Chapter 27. Developments in Urban Design Practice in Kadıköy Region of Istanbul: A Morphological Perspective

The Italian school of morphology remarks on the importance of the historical background of a settlement as a guide for the urban design process in addition to the French school that focuses on history as it gives the main character that shapes the current physical structure of a settlement area. Thus, it is aimed to investigate how an urban design can be guided concerning the history of a settlement, regarding the knowledge of these two schools of urban morphology. This paper considers how new ideas may be integrated into the urban form of a city that has been powerfully shaped by a long history. Since the typo-morphological interpretation of settlements; understanding physical form, formation, and transformation using types and typologies; can represent an essential reference point for urban planning and design, this study also aims to investigate past traces and to find clues that can be a reference for the future, and determine the design principles. Haydarpaşa in the Kadıköy district, a focal point welcoming visitor to Istanbul in the past but is an inactive space with potential based on the old Train Station and archaeological excavations of Chalcedon, is selected as the study area. In this scope, typo-morphological analyses in the neighboring Yeldeğirmeni settlement area guided the urban design process in Kadıköy to preserve the historical identity as a transportation hub and a commercial area; on the other hand, assuming a new role of being a recreational area that responds to the requirements of Yeldeğirmeni neighborhood.

Ayşe Sema Kubat, Şebnem Çebi, Mehmet Ronael

Practical Architectural and Urban Solutions

Frontmatter

Open Access

Chapter 28. Invigorate Urban Public Vitality Based on Spatial Characteristic Analysis: A Case Study of Lujiazui Central District

The planning and construction of Lujiazui Central District were essentially completed in the 1990s, and since then, this area has become an important financial central district in China. However, as the public center of the city, Lujiazui Financial District currently struggles to provide daily public activity space for citizens, highlighted by the presence of single-function, insufficient public buildings and the inaccessibility of open spaces. We conducted an analysis of the characteristics of Lujiazui Central District space and carried out a relevant case study to explore the strategies of adding a dimensional function to the mixing degree, creating public spaces in high-rise buildings, improving transport links, and using other methods to reconstruct the built environment. We also proposed related public policy suggestions, so as to stimulate the vitality of people in Lujiazui and create better services for public life.

Ying Yang, Kun Liu, Shuling Liao, Yong Liu

Open Access

Chapter 29. Urban Form of Settlements on Water: A Morphometric Comparison Between Makoko and Venice

Recent studies highlight morphological similarities between centrally located informal settlements and historical cities, suggesting that, despite infrastructural deficiencies, the former possess valuable urban form features, e.g., human-scale design, compactness, and walkability, that are also characteristics of the latter. This research challenges the negative connotations often associated with informal settlements, advancing advocacy for the prevention of evictions and the support of legalisation. In line with these works, we compare the urban form of two aquatic settlements: Makoko, an informal settlement in Lagos, Nigeria, and the Italian city of Venice. Both are analyzed through statistical and visual comparisons of nine metrics of urban form. Since Venice is historical and Makoko was only recently established, the most consolidated part of the latter is also included in the analysis. The outcomes show similarities between Makoko and Venice in terms of building elongation, alignment to streets/canals, diversity of building footprints, and coverage area ratio. Importantly, these similarities are more pronounced in the most consolidated part of Makoko, suggesting that if the settlement continues to develop along its current patterns of change, the similarities to Venice will likely increase. Accordingly, policymakers should reconsider the current eviction approach and facilitate the adaptive development of the settlement.

Alessandro Venerandi, Johan Mottelson, Sergio Porta

Open Access

Chapter 30. Interface Regeneration and Place-Making Spatial Revitalisation of Shapowei Historical Environment in Xiamen

Urban regeneration plays a significant role in optimizing the existing urban infrastructure. With the rise of the digital age, the phenomenon of instant online celebrities has influenced the approach to urban regeneration. A trend has emerged towards focusing on single-space renovations and attracting capital, neglecting the historical context that has shaped the city and the importance of interface regeneration and place-making. This paper takes Shapowei in Xiamen as a case study and examines the special historical elements that have contributed to its spatial evolution, with a particular focus on interface regeneration and place-making. Through literature review and field research, the paper explores the relationship between interface regeneration and place-making in the revitalisation of Shapowei's historical environment, aiming to offer new insights into urban regeneration and the preservation of historical culture.

Biao Yin, Lijun Wang

Open Access

Chapter 31. Urban Form, Plans and Procedures in Serbia: Recent Transformations of Urban Tissue and Its Inherited Values

This paper attempts to determine the relationship between the theory of urban morphology and the practice of urban conservation and urban planning based on the example of modernist and postmodernist open residential blocks created in Belgrade and other cities in Serbia in the second half of the twentieth century. The starting point of the paper was based on the fact that these configurations represent both urbanistic and cultural and historical heritage. It examines the values/criteria based on which the two Belgrade urban units have been categorized as cultural heritage. Furthermore, it demonstrates that these criteria can be generalized and applied to numerous examples of urban blocks and units that are still not institutionally protected but are recognized through the work of organizations, researchers, and experts studying the relevant era in the development of architecture and urbanism. The paper indicates the current urban planning and building practices that ignore the values of these units and analyzes relevant literature and documents in order to find out the cause of this problem. It points out the missing elements in the planning and protection systems that would potentially mitigate the effects and prevent further damage to these units. The forms and reasons for endangering these urban units can be viewed in relation to the issues of identification and protection of spatial values, i.e., valuable elements of the urban and physical structure; the key concept/scale at which the plans are developed and implemented; instruments for the spatial value protection at the urban block/groups of blocks level; and implementation/control of the planning solutions. Combining protection and planning practices identifies urban morphology as a common platform for consolidating knowledge about this type of urban heritage and integrating it into practice.

Ana Niković, Božidar Manić

Open Access

Chapter 32. Regenerative Learning Architecture. The School Campus of Vimercate as a Unit of Urban Morphology

Over the past decade, the need for innovation in school buildings has emerged globally. While schools are supposedly seen as pivots of districts’ fabric and community life, insufficient theoretical explorations and design strategies have been devoted to learning architecture and its urban role. Innovation focusses merely on indoor environment in terms of learning zoning, modular furniture and flexible classroom settings in relation to new teaching forms and digital technologies. Rooted in the tradition of Italian urban studies, the paper discusses one research by design reframing innovation challenges from the indeterminate concept of environment to the language and themes of architectural space in the framework of the comprehensive concepts of learning and regenerative architecture. The case of the dilapidated Vimercate High Schools Campus, Italy, is a far-sighted take on the crucial theme of the redevelopment of a 1970s school campus that constitutes an extra-urban morphological region as wide as the town’s medieval centre. Under the conceptual instrumentation of regenerative architecture, the research has inverted the traditional idea of the school as a self-contained citadel making the complex a potential cultural pole strategically located at the intersection between historical and rural landscape circuits. By defining precise themes and techniques of rewriting, learning spaces have been reshaped in analogy with urban form types and landscape, establishing porosity degrees with the surrounding urban structure, introducing functional promiscuity of activities between the town and the educational enclosure, reshaping learning environments as architectural space-places and finally designing new spatial concepts to guide the actions of the public administration.

Laura Anna Pezzetti, Helen Khanamiryan

Open Access

Chapter 33. Study on a Paradigm of Micro-Regeneration of Urban Community—Taking Three Cases of House Upgrading in Xiaoxihu Traditional Block, Nanjing

The large-scale urbanisation experienced by Chinese and other Asian cities over the past few decades has fragmented and demolished urban fabric, functional structures, spatial environments, and even social relations. Various urban-associated diseases have emerged consequently, and urban transformation is required to achieve more sustainable development. The micro-regeneration of urban community orientated on residents’ demands can be an approach to balance the urban development and preservation, to seek harmony between historical heritage, cultural revitalisation, urban distinctiveness, market profits, and local lives. As a positive intervention during the urban transition, it is argued that the elaborate micro-regeneration has turned into one of the significant subjects for both professional and educational fields of architecture towards future urbanism. This paper takes three research-based projects of housing upgrading in Xiaoxihu Community in the traditional quarter of Nanjing as examples of such micro-regeneration. In the interactive mode of “Learn- Research-Practice”, the authors have focussed on value fostering, multilateral cooperation, and an integrated multidisciplinary system, with equal attention to history, culture, space, and social ecology. These projects have further explored inclusive institutions and mechanisms that take both urban regeneration and community revitalisation into account, with nuanced integration of top-down planning and bottom-up self-regulation. Taking a small-scale, incremental approach, it has further investigated the characteristics of diversity and the role of universities, as a producer of knowledge in the urban regeneration process. With a pedagogical and pragmatic paradigm formed, this paper can be a reference to architecture education and practice in other cities facing similar challenges.

Li Bao, Yichang Sun, Han Wang, Zixuan Liu

Open Access

34. Correction to: Urban Form, Plans and Procedures in Serbia: Recent Transformations of Urban Tissue and Its Inherited Values
Ana Niković, Božidar Manić
Titel
Urban Morphology versus Urban Redevelopment and Revitalisation
Herausgegeben von
Małgorzata Hanzl
Anna Agata Kantarek
Artur Zaguła
Łukasz Musiaka
Tomasz Figlus
Copyright-Jahr
2025
Electronic ISBN
978-3-031-77752-3
Print ISBN
978-3-031-77751-6
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-77752-3

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