| Literature DB >> 30147796 |
Niki Frantzeskaki1, Frank van Steenbergen1, Richard C Stedman2.
Abstract
Experimentation as a means of governance for sustainability transitions has been advocated for years by transition scholars and geography scholars. We propose that examining the impact of experimentation requires an understanding of its embeddedness in place as a socio-spatial context. This notion of embeddedness, which conceptually aligns well with the understanding of sense of place, is under-examined in sustainability transitions literature. By conjoining the sense of place and sustainability transition literatures, we conceptualize that sense of place can be one outcome of experimentation fostering sustainability transitions. We examine urban living labs as an open format of urban experimentation, where multiple actors interact with the aim to co-design, test, and implement governance innovations. From the literature, we have distilled three phenomena that relate to a sense of place as mechanisms for transformation: a symbolic understanding or meaning of place; a narrative of place that connects to a transformative vision; and new types of relations between people and place. With this conceptual lens, we analyze our case study, an urban living lab called The Resilience Lab in a neighborhood of the city of Rotterdam, The Netherlands. Drawing from a longitudinal case study research, we contend that urban living labs can connect a sense of change (transformation) with a sense of place by co-creating new narratives of place, by co-producing knowledge on new practices and new relations between people and place, and by allowing the co-design or (re)establishment of places with symbolic meaning. As such, urban living labs facilitate urban sustainability transitions.Entities:
Keywords: Cities; Experimentation; Sense of place; Sustainability; Urban transitions; Vision
Year: 2018 PMID: 30147796 PMCID: PMC6086306 DOI: 10.1007/s11625-018-0562-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sustain Sci ISSN: 1862-4057 Impact factor: 6.367
Fig. 1Map of Carnisse. This map zooms in on The Netherlands and shows were the city of Rotterdam is located (left) and on the right a map of Rotterdam is shown were both the neighborhood of Carnisse is located and the greater district of Charlois
Methodological architecture and overview of activities
| Phase of the Veerkracht Lab | Action research activities | Monitoring and evaluation activities | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre 2011 | Scoping phase | – | 2 meetings on conceptualization of Resilience Lab |
| 09.2011–02.2012 | Setting the scene | – | 3 progress meetings with lab practitioners on the conceptualization of Resilience Lab, 2–3 h long per session |
| 02.2012–06.2013 | Mobilization and place making | 8 participatory workshops, 2-h each with 10–15 participants from the area | 23 of interviews with residents, civil servants, local entrepreneurs, etc |
| 06.2013–12.2015 | Deepening, broadening and upscaling | 10 of participatory observations within local activism with a focus on the community center | 45 of interviews with residents, civil servants, local entrepreneurs, etc. |
| 02.2015–12.2015 | Evaluation and transferability | – | 34 interviews with different actors in the neighborhood |
Fig. 2Symbolic places. Gardeners who are literally place making by putting their shovel and hands in the earth. This picture features the Carnisse garden, a community garden which was reopened by the Resilience Lab together with local residents and volunteers
Fig. 3Sense of place and experimentation. A conceptual map of the relations between sense of place and experimentation for urban sustainability transitions