A lot of grassroots

Shrinking cities are to be found all over the world with various reasons for shrinkage, all somewhat connected to globalization. Through a literature review of current research and connected to contemporary landscape architecture theory the phenomenon has been studied. This thesis presents why, wher...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Rosén, Rebecka
Formato: Second cycle, A2E
Lenguaje:sueco
Inglés
Publicado: 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/6613/
_version_ 1855571042951495680
author Rosén, Rebecka
author_browse Rosén, Rebecka
author_facet Rosén, Rebecka
author_sort Rosén, Rebecka
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Shrinking cities are to be found all over the world with various reasons for shrinkage, all somewhat connected to globalization. Through a literature review of current research and connected to contemporary landscape architecture theory the phenomenon has been studied. This thesis presents why, where and how cities are shrinking. The focus is on the processes of deindustrialization and suburbanization operating in the United States of America. Detroit is one of the most well known examples of a shrinking city, once the fastest growing city, now the fastest shrinking. It is used as a lens to understand the difficulties and potential of a shrinking city focusing on one of the effects: vacant land. A three months field study was conducted to explore and find an alternative approach to planning for shrinking cities and to find opportunities for the vacant land. The grassroots movement has a strong base in Detroit. Vacant lots are transformed from bottom-up to urban farms, playgrounds, orchards, tree nurseries, pocket parks, art installations and more. This thesis seeks to demonstrate a possible positive transformation of a shrinking city by listening to these processes that are already happening. The thesis have highlighted common considerations for stabilizing a shrinking city and make it livable for the remaining inhabitants, such as (a) leave the concept of growth, (b) see potential in the vacant land, (c) use both long-term planning and short-term action to guide the urban transformation, (d) recognize and identify what is already happening by using local knowledge, (e) both top-down and bottom-up efforts are necessary in the reorganizing process. The thesis concludes with presenting a model of how landscape architects can support grassroots initiatives and mediate between them and the city officials.
format Second cycle, A2E
id RepoSLU6613
institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Swedish
Inglés
publishDate 2014
publishDateSort 2014
record_format eprints
spelling RepoSLU66132014-04-14T09:56:16Z https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/6613/ A lot of grassroots Rosén, Rebecka Landscape architecture Shrinking cities are to be found all over the world with various reasons for shrinkage, all somewhat connected to globalization. Through a literature review of current research and connected to contemporary landscape architecture theory the phenomenon has been studied. This thesis presents why, where and how cities are shrinking. The focus is on the processes of deindustrialization and suburbanization operating in the United States of America. Detroit is one of the most well known examples of a shrinking city, once the fastest growing city, now the fastest shrinking. It is used as a lens to understand the difficulties and potential of a shrinking city focusing on one of the effects: vacant land. A three months field study was conducted to explore and find an alternative approach to planning for shrinking cities and to find opportunities for the vacant land. The grassroots movement has a strong base in Detroit. Vacant lots are transformed from bottom-up to urban farms, playgrounds, orchards, tree nurseries, pocket parks, art installations and more. This thesis seeks to demonstrate a possible positive transformation of a shrinking city by listening to these processes that are already happening. The thesis have highlighted common considerations for stabilizing a shrinking city and make it livable for the remaining inhabitants, such as (a) leave the concept of growth, (b) see potential in the vacant land, (c) use both long-term planning and short-term action to guide the urban transformation, (d) recognize and identify what is already happening by using local knowledge, (e) both top-down and bottom-up efforts are necessary in the reorganizing process. The thesis concludes with presenting a model of how landscape architects can support grassroots initiatives and mediate between them and the city officials. 2014-04-14 Second cycle, A2E NonPeerReviewed application/pdf sv https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/6613/7/rosen_r_140414.pdf Rosén, Rebecka, 2014. A lot of grassroots : possibilities for vacant land in the shrinking city Detroit . Second cycle, A2E. Alnarp: (LTJ, LTV) > Dept. of Landscape Architecture, Planning and Management (from 130101) <https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/view/divisions/OID-644.html> urn:nbn:se:slu:epsilon-s-3206 eng
spellingShingle Landscape architecture
Rosén, Rebecka
A lot of grassroots
title A lot of grassroots
title_full A lot of grassroots
title_fullStr A lot of grassroots
title_full_unstemmed A lot of grassroots
title_short A lot of grassroots
title_sort lot of grassroots
topic Landscape architecture
url https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/6613/
https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/6613/