Title: Polycentrism in Europe
1- Polycentrism in Europe
- Simin Davoudi
- Professor of Planning and Environment
- Director of CUDEM
Leeds Metropolitan University
2European Spatial Development Perspective
- The ESDP
- 1991
- Committee of Spatial
- Development
- Potsdam
3Outline
- Unpack the concept of polycentricity
- Trace its origin
- Clarify its multiple interpretations at various
spatial scales - Examine its meaning in the ESDP
4Polycentrism and Multiple Interpretations
- A strategic spatial planning tool
- A specific form of urban structure
- A socio-economic policy goal
- A place-marketing image
5Polycentrism at Multiple Spatial Scales
- Intra-urban scale (or internal city structure)
- Inter-urban (or intra-regional) scale
- Inter-regional (or intra-European) scale
6Intra-Urban Scale
- Cities continue to grow outwards
- Their growth patterns are conceptualised by
- Monocentric models
- Polycentric models
7Intra-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)
8The Future of Urban Forms
- Kevin Lynch, 1961
- The Pattern of Metropolis
- Urban Star
- Core City
- Urban Galaxy
- ..
9The Future of Urban Forms
- Catherine Wurster, 1963
- the Future of Urban Complex
- Constellation of
- diversified and
- integrated cities
10The 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
11Intra-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
12The Polycentric City
- Polycentric city consists of a centre and a
number of concentrated sub-centres with high
population and employment density
13Polycentricity versus Dispersion
- Polycentric city
- An organised system of
- sub-centres
- Dispersed city
- An unorganised urban
- sprawl
14Halt 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
15It is happening in America, too!
- Not all population movements are centrifugal
16Inter-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
17European Examples of PUR
- Flemish Diamond
- in Flanders, Belgium
- Brussels
- Leuven
- Antwerp
- Ghent
18European Examples of PUR
- Rhine-Ruhr in Germany
- Dortmund
- Essen
- Dusseldorf
- Cologne
- Bonn
19European Examples of PUR
- Padua-Treviso-Venice
- Area in Northern Italy
20Other Examples of PUR
- Kansai in Japan
- Osaka
- Kyoto
- Kobe
21Archetypical Example of PUR
- Randstad in Holland
- Amsterdam
- Utrecht
- The Hague
- Rotterdam
- And, the Green Heart
22Problems 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?
23What is a reasonable proximity?
- One hour (Geddes, 1915)
- 40 minutes (Blumenfeld, 1971)
- Half an hour (Batten, 1995)
- ???
-
24How 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?
25Capturing Complex Interrelationships
- Western Wedge
- of London
- London Berkshire
- area
26Inter-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)
27Inter-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)
28Inter-Regional Scale
- Ecumenopolis, or world city, comprises of
- interconnected settlements across the world.
-
(Doxiadis, 1968) - Is the time-space dimension shrinking?
29Inter-Regional Scale
- BeSeTo
- Urban Corridor
- in East Asia
- Beijing
- Seoul
- Tokyo
30The ESDP and the Intra-European Scale of
Polycentricity
- ESDP promotes
- polycentricity at the level
- of Europe as whole to
- achieve
- Economic competitiveness
- Social cohesion
31EU 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
32EU Social Cohesion Agenda
- Persistent regional
- disparities are set to
- grow
- EU territory is not a
- level playing field
33EU Core Periphery Image
- European Megalopolis (Gottmann, 1976)
- Golden Triangle (Cheshire Hay, 1989)
- The Blue Banana (Brunet, 1989)
- The pentagon (ESDP, 1999)
34Polycentricity 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
35Polycentricity as a Normative Agenda
- A Bunch of Grapes (Kunzmann Wegener, 1991)
36Challenges 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?
37Polycentricity?
- 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.