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Polycentrism in Europe

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Clarify its multiple interpretations at various spatial scales. Examine its ... Half an hour (Batten, 1995) 24. How do we measure functional interconnection? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Polycentrism in Europe


1
  • Polycentrism in Europe
  • Simin Davoudi
  • Professor of Planning and Environment
  • Director of CUDEM

Leeds Metropolitan University
2
European Spatial Development Perspective
  • The ESDP
  • 1991
  • Committee of Spatial
  • Development
  • Potsdam

3
Outline
  • Unpack the concept of polycentricity
  • Trace its origin
  • Clarify its multiple interpretations at various
    spatial scales
  • Examine its meaning in the ESDP

4
Polycentrism and Multiple Interpretations
  • A strategic spatial planning tool
  • A specific form of urban structure
  • A socio-economic policy goal
  • A place-marketing image

5
Polycentrism at Multiple Spatial Scales
  • Intra-urban scale (or internal city structure)
  • Inter-urban (or intra-regional) scale
  • Inter-regional (or intra-European) scale

6
Intra-Urban Scale
  • Cities continue to grow outwards
  • Their growth patterns are conceptualised by
  • Monocentric models
  • Polycentric models

7
Intra-Urban ScaleMonocentric Model
  • This model describes the
  • city as a circular
  • residential area
  • surrounding a central
  • business district in which
  • all jobs are located.
  • (Ernest Burgess, 1925)

8
The Future of Urban Forms
  • Kevin Lynch, 1961
  • The Pattern of Metropolis
  • Urban Star
  • Core City
  • Urban Galaxy
  • ..

9
The Future of Urban Forms
  • Catherine Wurster, 1963
  • the Future of Urban Complex
  • Constellation of
  • diversified and
  • integrated cities

10
The Demise of Monocentricity
  • The monocentric model, fit for the ideal 19th C.
    city,
  • became irrelevant in the face of
  • Rapid decentralisation of economic activities
  • Increased mobility through new transport
    technologies
  • Multiplicity of travel patterns and complex
    cross-commuting
  • Changes in household structure and lifestyle

11
Intra-Urban ScalePolycentric Model
  • The shift to a polycentric pattern of urban
    growth has
  • been driven by
  • The changing economic relationships within and
    between firms
  • The significance of agglomeration economies in
    distribution of employment and population
  • The tendency of firms to cluster when spatial
    transactional costs are high

12
The Polycentric City
  • Polycentric city consists of a centre and a
    number of concentrated sub-centres with high
    population and employment density

13
Polycentricity versus Dispersion
  • Polycentric city
  • An organised system of
  • sub-centres
  • Dispersed city
  • An unorganised urban
  • sprawl

14
Halt in Decentralisation
  • Break up in the pattern
  • of decentralisation due
  • to
  • A return to urban living
  • The sustainability pull
  • The pro-active urban policy measures

15
It is happening in America, too!
  • Not all population movements are centrifugal

16
Inter-Urban Scale
  • Polycentric urban region (PUR)
  • a region with three or
  • more historically and
  • politically separate cities
  • with little hierarchical
  • ranking in a reasonable
  • proximity and with
  • functional interconnections

17
European Examples of PUR
  • Flemish Diamond
  • in Flanders, Belgium
  • Brussels
  • Leuven
  • Antwerp
  • Ghent

18
European Examples of PUR
  • Rhine-Ruhr in Germany
  • Dortmund
  • Essen
  • Dusseldorf
  • Cologne
  • Bonn

19
European Examples of PUR
  • Padua-Treviso-Venice
  • Area in Northern Italy

20
Other Examples of PUR
  • Kansai in Japan
  • Osaka
  • Kyoto
  • Kobe

21
Archetypical Example of PUR
  • Randstad in Holland
  • Amsterdam
  • Utrecht
  • The Hague
  • Rotterdam
  • And, the Green Heart

22
Problems of Definition
  • A PUR is a region with three or more cities in a
    reasonable proximity and with functional
    interconnection
  • What is a reasonable proximity?
  • How do we measure functional interconnection?

23
What is a reasonable proximity?
  • One hour (Geddes, 1915)
  • 40 minutes (Blumenfeld, 1971)
  • Half an hour (Batten, 1995)
  • ???

24
How do we measure functional interconnection?
  • A common criterion is the labour market flows
    based on journey-to-work statistics
  • But, what about
  • Non-work trip-generation activities
  • Other flows such as resources, goods and
    information?

25
Capturing Complex Interrelationships
  • Western Wedge
  • of London
  • London Berkshire
  • area

26
Inter-Regional Scale
  • Megalopolis
  • resulted from the
  • coalescence of a chain of
  • metropolitan areas, each
  • of which has grown
  • around a substantial
  • urban nucleus
  • (Gottmann, 1957)

27
Inter-Regional Scale
  • Urban field is a mosaic
  • of different forms and
  • micro-environments
  • which co-exist within a
  • common communication
  • framework, a new scale
  • of urban living
  • (Friedmann Miller, 1965)

28
Inter-Regional Scale
  • Ecumenopolis, or world city, comprises of
  • interconnected settlements across the world.

  • (Doxiadis, 1968)
  • Is the time-space dimension shrinking?

29
Inter-Regional Scale
  • BeSeTo
  • Urban Corridor
  • in East Asia
  • Beijing
  • Seoul
  • Tokyo

30
The ESDP and the Intra-European Scale of
Polycentricity
  • ESDP promotes
  • polycentricity at the level
  • of Europe as whole to
  • achieve
  • Economic competitiveness
  • Social cohesion

31
EU Economic Competitiveness Agenda
  • The pentagon
  • a single zone of global
  • economic integration
  • London, Paris, Milan,
  • Munich and Hamburg
  • 50 of GDP
  • 40 of population
  • 20 of area

32
EU Social Cohesion Agenda
  • Persistent regional
  • disparities are set to
  • grow
  • EU territory is not a
  • level playing field

33
EU Core Periphery Image
  • European Megalopolis (Gottmann, 1976)
  • Golden Triangle (Cheshire Hay, 1989)
  • The Blue Banana (Brunet, 1989)
  • The pentagon (ESDP, 1999)

34
Polycentricity as a Normative Agenda
  • The ESDP promotes polycentrism to
  • Challenge the polarised image of Europe
  • Make the EU
  • Economically more competitive
  • Socially and spatially more equitable

35
Polycentricity as a Normative Agenda
  • A Bunch of Grapes (Kunzmann Wegener, 1991)

36
Challenges to the ESDPs Promotion of
Polycentricity
  • Is a zero-sum game achievable?
  • What kind of policies are most effective?
  • What is to be done?
  • Is the PUR a panacea for economic
    competitiveness?
  • Can a PUR be created artificially?

37
Polycentricity?
  • Polycentricity started as a tentative notion, a
    provisional working model. But, all too swiftly,
    it has become hardened into an idée fixe. It now
    appears everywhere.
  • Instead of being used as an aid to describe an
    existing or merging reality, it is coming to
    determine that reality.
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