Title: ICT FOR URBAN PLANNING IN THE CITY OF MASSA
1ICT FOR URBAN PLANNING IN THE CITY OFMASSA
Council of Europe Forum for the Future of
Democracy Madrid, 16th October 2008
Dott. Francesco Molinari, fmol_at_altec.gr
2TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Lessons learnt from this Case Study
- Participatory Urban Planning Scenario
- Issues in ICT Urban Planning
- Degrees of Innovation of this trial
- Case Study Description
- Location of the City of Massa
- Role of the Municipality
- The Massa Structural Plan
- A tribute to the LexiPation Project
- Fact Sheet
- Technology Platform
- Trials Location
- Methodology for Consensus Making
- The Living Labs Concept
- Facts figures from Massa Living Lab
- Configuration and Deployment
- Results
- A few screenshots
- Conclusions and ?
3PARTICIPATORY URBAN PLANNING
- Not a novel idea
- Pioneering implementations span from Finland
(City of Hämeenlinna, Helsinki/Arabianranta, City
of Tampere) to Kenya (Town of Kitale), from
Brazil (Porto Alegre) to Germany (Berlins
Citizen Juries, Frankfurt and Hamburg spatial
discourses), from Iceland (Garðabær/Reykjavik) to
(a great deal of cases in) the US - Basic concept to engage citizens and
stakeholders in a socially constructed and
mutually agreed model of urban planning / design
/ improvement - Open aim harnessing collective intelligence and
local knowledge to improve the quality of policy
making - Hidden aim to ensure better acceptance of the
final planning decisions - Quite often, legislation supports the development
of these experiments (mandatory concertation)
4ICT URBAN PLANNING
- Born offline, Participatory Urban Planning has
migrated and gained momentum from ICT
implementations - A few examples
- Participatory GIS
- Online Debates
- Crowdsourcing (Jeff Howe, 2006)
- Main issues
- Digital divide and Social exclusion
- Involvement of participants (experts / non
expert) - Handling the Time Factor
- Preference Aggregation
- Commitment of policy makers
5(1/5) DIGITAL DIVIDE SOCIAL EXCLUSION
- Problems
- Lack of access
- Low-speed access
- Internet illiteracy
- Some peoples voices are low, but have to be
listened to - Some contents are hard to understand for normal
people - People tend to make easy proposals, inspiring
though badly dressed - Solutions (from the Massa case)
- Alternate offline and online participatory
sessions - Talk, explain, communicate
- Make it as easy as possible
- Listen, listen, listen
6(2/5) PARTICIPANTS INVOLVEMENT
- Problems
- People are busy during working time, tired
afterwards! - They may not know about it
- They may not care about it
- They might be scared
- They would like to be asked
- They would like to be sure
- Solutions (from the Massa case)
- Allow sufficient time to the preparation of
trials (months rather than days) - Use a multi-media communication strategy
- Rely on word-of-mouth
- Preserve anonymity of participants
- Keep peoples attention high during the trials
7(3/5) HANDLING THE TIME FACTOR
- Problems
- In a public debate, there is not time enough to
let everyone have their say - A long lasting discussion usually doesnt affect
the conclusions that much - The more noise, the more room for the tyranny
of chairpersons decisions - Solutions (from the Massa case)
- Dont start with a predefined policy agenda
- Collect citizens opinions as inputs for future
policy drafting - Give a second chance for advice
8(4/5) PREFERENCE AGGREGATION
- Problems
- In a public debate, its usually hard to reach a
common platform of consensus - Participants are never representative of the
underlying population - Voting mechanisms may not be fair to minority
opinions - Time changes peoples opinions quite often
- Noise is always there
- Solutions (from the Massa case)
- Dont look for representative advice
- Profile your users during (anonymous)
registration - A particular mechanism for preference aggregation
known as the DEMOS process
9(5/5) COMMITMENT OF POLICY MAKERS
- Problems
- The known dilemma between deliberation and
representation - The vicious circle of reciprocal mistrust
(between citizens and governments) - Risk of second thoughts from policy makers
- Strong dependence of political commitment on
first feedback received - Ineffectiveness of bottom-up initiatives
- Solutions (from the Massa case)
- Tie your hands from the start with the full
process explanation - Dont ask too much, be clear with objectives
- Integrate the trial in the administrative process
10THE MUNICIPALITY OF MASSALOCATION
- Massa is situated in the northernmost part of the
Tuscany Region, in a zone where sea and land come
together in a spectacular contrast created by
nature. - Population is approximately 70,000 inhabitants
and is distributed over 5 boroughs.
10
11OVERVIEW OF THE CITY LANDSCAPE
11
12ROLE OF MUNICIPALITIES IN ITALY
- According to the Italian laws, Municipalities
provide some basic services to the population of
households and enterprises that fall under their
territorial jurisdiction. - A few examples social care, primary education,
building permits, public housing, streets
cleaning and maintenance, urban and land use
planning. - This also gives life to a plethora of specific
rules and regulations issued by the
Municipalities under their constitutional
autonomy. - Municipal rules and regulations must comply with
the upper-level (Regional and State) norms and
legal/administrative provisions.
12
13MASSA STRUCTURAL PLAN
- Long expected (gt 30 years)
- According to Regional Law No. 1/2005
- The Structural Plan is not just for (re)designing
the landscape and framing land use, but is the
tool for sustainable development of a given area - The Structural Plan lies under the competence of
the Municipality, in accordance with
upper-level Plans issued by the Province and
the Region - The Municipality is forced to involve all the
relevant stakeholders in the evaluation of the
new Draft Plan - The idea has been to do this before and not
after the preparation of a formal draft
13
14PRECONDITIONS FOR THE MASSA TRIAL
Regional Legislation and General Urbanistic Laws Drafting of the Structural Plan by the Cabinet
First adoption by the City Council (observations) Interaction with local stakeholders
Scope for ICT based trials
14
15LEXIPATION PROJECTS FACT SHEET
- One of the six Pilot Actions on eParticipation
funded in 2006 by the European Commission -
- Objectives
- to integrate the Living Labs methodology set
forth in the context of User led Innovation
Theory with an existing technology platform
(DEMOS) allowing to conduct moderated online
discourses within small communities of people
(a sort of online focus groups or forums) - to define an ideal workflow for citizens
involvement at the different stages of the
legislative process - to conduct four (participatory) trials at the
different tiers of EU institutional setup,
namely - the City State/Regional tier (Hamburg, Germany),
- the Prefectural/Provincial tier (Thessaloniki,
Greece), - the Municipality tier (Massa, Italy),
- the small Community tier (Alston Moor, UK)
16THE FOUR LEXIPATION TRIALS
17DEMOS TECHNOLOGY PLATFORM
- A server based web application
- Scripting language PHP, Optimised for MySql,
Supporting additional standards like XML, SQL,
RSS syndication and SOAP - A classical 3-tier architecture
- All HTML and Layout is stored in separated
XML-Files, which can be pre-produced and edited
manually or generated with external content
management systems. - The presentation layer can produce a large
variety of formats for web browsers and other
devices like mobile phones - HTML, XML, E-Mail (rich content and MIME
enabled), Microsoft-Office-Formats, PDF, WAP, RSS
as well as all kinds of ASCII- and Unicode-Text
files - A completely customisable layout
- Additional software modules offer a variety of
functions such as - automated keyword index generation, web-GIS
client, integrated web mail and other community
features
18CONTENT OF THE TRIALS
Legislation Process Stage Hamburg Massa Alston Thessaloniki
Formation of Decisions (Agenda Setting, Prior Analysis) v v v v
Legislation Drafting (Discussion of Draft Laws / Regulations) v v
Implementation (of Laws / Regulations) v v
Amendments Follow Up v v
19TRIALS FACTS FIGURES
- Hamburg May/June 2007 (17 days)
- urban planning
- 285 registered users, 968 contributions, 16.000
unique visitors, 36.000 page hits - Thessaloniki September/October 2007 (78 days)
- environmental decision making
- 62 registered users, 35 contributions, 12.000
unique visitors, 10.941 page hits - Massa November/December 2007 (45 days)
- urban planning
- 93 registered users, 202 contributions, 1.800
unique visitors, 21.000 page hits - Alston Moor December 2007/January 2008 (36 days)
- local legislation review and amendment
- 273 registered users, 52 contributions, 464
unique visitors, 7.106 page hits
20THE LIVING LABS CONCEPT
Source Niitamo Kulki (2005)
21LIVING LAB CONFIGURATION WORKFLOW
- Contextualisation meaning all the preparatory
actions involved in the trial, from the
collection of background material to its
publication on the public administrations web
site - Selection and motivation of participants meaning
the activities aimed to restrict / widen the
panel of citizens and/or stakeholders
representatives that will be involved in the
trial - Concretisation meaning the actual trial setup,
measurement of participants characteristics,
description of the thematic focus, statement of
objectives from the Administration and supply of
pieces of draft/approved legislation (if
existing) and other background material to
support an informed judgement - Running of the trial use of the DEMOS system
made available within LexiPation to reach an
agreement with participants (if possible) or to
collect and cluster the public opinion through
moderated online discourses - Feedback from results the internal, and usually
partly undisclosed, activities leading to
harmonisation of law-making activities with the
trial outcomes
Source Pierson Lievens (2005)
22TRIALS DEPLOYMENT
23MASSA TRIAL CONFIGURATION
Contextualisation Avvio del procedimento available on line since December 2006. On 29th June 2007 the Municipality presented the results of a socio-economic foresight by an external entity
Selection and Motivation The site was kept open to all citizens (anonymously registered). Several offline meetings with local stakeholders (trade unions, business associations, the 5 borough councils) prepared the debates
Concretisation September 2007 publication of background information on the site. Start of a multimedia dissemination campaign.
Implementation October/November several thematic foci one general forum. Moderators to drive the discussions.
Expected Feedback Improvements to the draft Structural Plan before its formal submission to the Council
24SCREENSHOTS FROM MASSA SITE
http//pianostrutturale.comune.massa.ms.it
25ONLINE DEBATES ORGANISATION
26EXAMPLES OF DISCUSSION TOPICS
- How to increase the ratio between number of
private parking sites and number of homes (cars) - Up to which extent the availability of parks and
green areas should be extended (beyond a given
minimum standard) - How to cope with the social needs of some
intensively populated areas of the city - Which incentives might well increase the use of
public transport by the citizens - How the outlook and use of existing cycling lanes
can be improved - How to reduce the negative impact of noise,
traffic etc. on the coast belt
26
27THE DEMOS PROCESShttp//www.demos-project.org
- Three discussion phases
- Broadening
- Initiate the forum, facilitate and broaden the
debate identify the most important aspects or
subtopics of the chosen subject matter, also by
conducting polls or surveys within the
participants. - Deepening
- Initiate a (limited) number of sub-forums e.g. on
the basis of the poll or survey results this
leads to intense discussions on specific aspects
in smaller groups of interested participants,
while the main forum is still there to catch
those participants who want to enter the
discussion or keep it on a more general level. - Consolidating
- Close the sub-forums and transfer the summaries
and related survey results into the (still
existing) main forum, to see the particular
subtopic as part of the big picture that will
finally emerge.
28EXAMPLES OF INPUTS RECEIVED
- Create speedy road deviations avoiding traffic
congestion for those who simply need to go across
the City centre - Increase the number of public places and central
streets totally closed to the traffic - More (free of charge) parking areas surrounding
the City centre - A number of public buildings should be restored
and recreated for public use - Services and functions locations should be moved
away from the City centre, to reduce traffic
congestion
28
29CONCLUSIONS
- The LexiPation project successfully tested the
integration of an existing ICT platform (and
process) for moderated discourse making within an
innovative participatory urban planning (and more
generally policy design) workflow - Living Labs has proven especially helpful in
ensuring a timely and appropriate deployment of
ICT in the context of eLegislation, in terms of - integration of relevant stakeholders,
- uninterrupted support by politicians,
- dissemination and marketing activities to arouse
the publics attention and involvement. - Results seem to be less dependent on the
institutional tiers of Public Administration
involved, more on local (pre)-conditions such as - the topic of discussion (idea generation better
suited) - familiarity with Internet debates of the local
population - potential for reuse in the legislative process
- a careful configuration of the Living Lab trial
-
30THE DARK SIDE OF THE MOON
- Organisational Impact
- Time is needed to properly customise the platform
from scratch (probably saved in next experiments) - A strong commitment from IT staff (monitored by
the political side) is also needed - Socio-Economic Impact
- What happened next? The electoral cycle killed
the experiment - The sustainability issue
- That was a stone in the pond
- How to ensure replication etc.?
-
-
31THANKS FOR YOUR ATTENTION
- QA
- Contact fmol_at_altec.gr
- Project Website http//www.lexipation.eu
- Trial Website http//pianostrutturale.comune.mass
a.ms.it - Disclaimer The present research was part funded
by the European Commission under the 2006/1 Call
for Pilot Actions in the topic of eParticipation.
However, the opinions expressed here are solely
of the Author and do not necessarily reflect the
official views of any European Communities
Institution.
32REFERENCES
- Daren C Brabham (2007), Crowdsourcing the
Citizen Participation Process for Public Planning
Projects, http//ssrn.com/abstract1123325. - Paul Chege (2006), Participatory Urban Planning
and Partnerships Building Supporting Provision
of Access to Basic Services for the Urban Poor,
Proceedings of the 5th FIG Regional Conference,
Accra, Ghana. - Jeff Howe (2006), The rise of Crowdsourcing.
Wired, 14, 6 (June) http//www.wired.com/wired/ar
chive/14.06/crowds.html. - INTELCITIES Project (2006), Electronic and Mobile
Participation in City Planning and Management. - Akito Murayama (2005), Governance for
Sustainable Urban Regeneration, Proceedings of
the IFHP Spring Conference. - Veli-Pekka Nitamo Seija Kulkki (2005),
State-of-the-art in utilizing Living Labs
approach to user centric ICT innovation a
European approach, http//www.cdt.ltu.se/main.php
/SOA_LivingLabs.pdf?fileitem2402350. - OECD/World Bank Institute (2007), Beyond Public
Scrutiny Stocktaking of Social Accountability in
OECD Countries. - Jo Pierson Bram Lievens (2005), Configuring
Living Labs for a thick Understanding of
Innovation, Proceedings of the EPIC Conference,
pp. 114-127.