Collaborative planning as an instrument in the municipalities green planning : case study of Malmö, Sweden and Vanda, Finland

The urban green areas have a great importance for the local environment in the cities and for people's health. Municipalities own many of the urban green areas and they make plans for these areas, so called green plans, to improve the long-term decision-making. Public participation is getting more a...

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Autor principal: Olsson, Jenny
Formato: L3
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Landscape Architecture, Planning and Management (from 130101) 2007
Materias:
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author Olsson, Jenny
author_browse Olsson, Jenny
author_facet Olsson, Jenny
author_sort Olsson, Jenny
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description The urban green areas have a great importance for the local environment in the cities and for people's health. Municipalities own many of the urban green areas and they make plans for these areas, so called green plans, to improve the long-term decision-making. Public participation is getting more and more attention in the society and when including public participation in planning it is called collaborative planning. This project is a comparison of two green plans of which one is using traditional planning and the other one is using collaborative planning. By comparing them, strengths and weaknesses with collaborative planning can be visualised. The vision of the traditional plan made in Malmö, Sweden, is to fulfil the citizens green need with a variety of green areas. The vision of the collaborative plan in Vanda, Finland, is to plan together with the citizens for a sustainable management. Malmö's plan is using inventories and analyses to give a clear picture of the situation today. From that, the planners have developed suggestions for improvement of the green structure. Vanda's planning process started with public meetings where the citizens were valuing the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats with the green areas. Smaller working groups were then further evolving this material. Local development committees were prioritising which the most important green areas are, as well as prioritising the suggestions for improvement of the green structure. A draft plan was made and sent out for consideration as well as presented at open meetings, changes were made and then the plan was finally approved upon. Strengths with collaborative planning are that the knowledge of the citizens, planners and experts is combined. When local people can influence the green areas they become adapted to the local needs. The decisions taken get a better quality and conflicts are dealt with in an early stage. Weaknesses with collaborative planning are that the process is more difficult to handle. The results are more difficult to present because it does not provide quantitative facts and clear analyses but is the result from a discussion and a learning process. Collaborative planning takes more time than traditional planning and therefore more resources are needed.
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institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
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publishDate 2007
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spelling RepoSLU113272017-10-10T07:24:26Z Collaborative planning as an instrument in the municipalities green planning : case study of Malmö, Sweden and Vanda, Finland Olsson, Jenny collaborative planning municipalities urban forestry public participation green plans The urban green areas have a great importance for the local environment in the cities and for people's health. Municipalities own many of the urban green areas and they make plans for these areas, so called green plans, to improve the long-term decision-making. Public participation is getting more and more attention in the society and when including public participation in planning it is called collaborative planning. This project is a comparison of two green plans of which one is using traditional planning and the other one is using collaborative planning. By comparing them, strengths and weaknesses with collaborative planning can be visualised. The vision of the traditional plan made in Malmö, Sweden, is to fulfil the citizens green need with a variety of green areas. The vision of the collaborative plan in Vanda, Finland, is to plan together with the citizens for a sustainable management. Malmö's plan is using inventories and analyses to give a clear picture of the situation today. From that, the planners have developed suggestions for improvement of the green structure. Vanda's planning process started with public meetings where the citizens were valuing the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats with the green areas. Smaller working groups were then further evolving this material. Local development committees were prioritising which the most important green areas are, as well as prioritising the suggestions for improvement of the green structure. A draft plan was made and sent out for consideration as well as presented at open meetings, changes were made and then the plan was finally approved upon. Strengths with collaborative planning are that the knowledge of the citizens, planners and experts is combined. When local people can influence the green areas they become adapted to the local needs. The decisions taken get a better quality and conflicts are dealt with in an early stage. Weaknesses with collaborative planning are that the process is more difficult to handle. The results are more difficult to present because it does not provide quantitative facts and clear analyses but is the result from a discussion and a learning process. Collaborative planning takes more time than traditional planning and therefore more resources are needed. SLU/Dept. of Landscape Architecture, Planning and Management (from 130101) 2007 L3 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/11327/
spellingShingle collaborative planning
municipalities
urban forestry
public participation
green plans
Olsson, Jenny
Collaborative planning as an instrument in the municipalities green planning : case study of Malmö, Sweden and Vanda, Finland
title Collaborative planning as an instrument in the municipalities green planning : case study of Malmö, Sweden and Vanda, Finland
title_full Collaborative planning as an instrument in the municipalities green planning : case study of Malmö, Sweden and Vanda, Finland
title_fullStr Collaborative planning as an instrument in the municipalities green planning : case study of Malmö, Sweden and Vanda, Finland
title_full_unstemmed Collaborative planning as an instrument in the municipalities green planning : case study of Malmö, Sweden and Vanda, Finland
title_short Collaborative planning as an instrument in the municipalities green planning : case study of Malmö, Sweden and Vanda, Finland
title_sort collaborative planning as an instrument in the municipalities green planning : case study of malmö, sweden and vanda, finland
topic collaborative planning
municipalities
urban forestry
public participation
green plans