TRANSITION MANAGEMENT IN CITIES Transition Management in Rotterdam City ‘Sustainability as a win-win’ Lecturers: Dr. Niki Frantzeskaki, DRIFT, Erasmus University Rotterdam, NL Email: [email protected] Nico Tillie, TU Delft Email: [email protected]
TRANSITION MANAGEMENT IN
CITIES
Transition Management in Rotterdam City
‘Sustainability as a win-win’
Lecturers: Dr. Niki Frantzeskaki, DRIFT, Erasmus
University Rotterdam, NL
Email: [email protected]
Nico Tillie, TU Delft
Email: [email protected]
This lecture is based on research with Transition Managementapplication in the city of Rotterdam that was conducted with theMUSIC project
http://www.themusicproject.eu
Photos, icons and material from these slides should not be usedwithout gaining permission of the lecturers.
Source: Tillie N., M. Aarts, M. Marijnissen, L. Stenhuijs, J.Borsboom, E. Rietveld, D. Doepel, J. Visschers, and S. Lap.2012. Rotterdam – People make the inner city, IssuedGemeente Rotterdam. 5th International Architecture BiennaleRotterdam. (downloadable from Rotterdam City website)
http://www.themusicproject.eu
Transition management approach
Organizing a joint searching and learning process
focused upon long-term sustainable solutions
Envisioning, learning, and experimenting
Creating new ways of thinking
Questioning
Assumptions, problem perceptions, solutions
• Process design proposition: frontrunners can initiate a transition when given thinking and action space
• Transition arenas are facilitated spaces that bring together a frontrunning group of actors
from creating a niche
to create an agenda to its empowerment
• A step-wise participatory process to create a vision and strategic transition pathways to provide routes for action in order to initiate a
transition
Transition management approach
Types of Interventions searched and co-
created with Transition Management
Transition
Team
•Experimentation
& Implementation
•Partnerships
& Broadening•Preparation
•Exploration
•Problem structuring
& Envisioning
•Backcasting
& Agenda Building
Transition
Arena
Transition
Experiments
Transition
Networks
MUSIC Project – Guidance Manual
Download: http://www.drift.eur.nl/?p=2796
Lecture 3
• Transition Management in Aberdeen city, United Kingdom
• Insights on how to open-up sustainability dialogues
Lecture 4
• Transition Management in Rotterdam city, the Netherlands
• Insights on co-creating a densification strategy in tune with sustainability goals
Lecture 5
• Transition Management in Port Villa city, Vanuatu
• Pathways for urban sustainability and urban water management in South Pacific’s capital
Lecture 6
• Transition Management in La Botija region, Honduras
• A regional application of Transition Management
Lecture 7
• Transition Management in Carnisse neighborhood in Rotterdam, The Netherlands
• How to create social capital and empowerment for sustainability transitions in neighboorhood scale
Aberdeen(United Kingdom)
Ghent(Belgium)
Montreuil(France)
Rotterdam(The Netherlands)
Ludwigsburg(Germany)
8
According to New York times, Rotterdam is the
10th listed place to go in 2014
9
Looking across at the complex that houses the nhow hotel. Robin Van Lonkhuijsen/Agence France-Presse -- Getty Images
Step 2: formulating a transition challenge
Analysing system
Problem analysis
Projected on to future
Translating problem into
Challenges & opportunities
From…. (problem)… to… (desirable)
list of things that need to be “transitioned”
Domains of Change
Urban Challenges in Rotterdam
Now only 15.000 people live in city center
Quality of public space and green is an identified social need
City as a working space, not a living space
Desirable target:
30.000 more inhabitants + 141 HA green
Rotterdam’s Context
• Rotterdam is a city that innovates from the bottom up
• Cradle of new ideas, culturally diverse city (> 147 nationalities in one
city)
• Legacy of good planning, good experience that fosters collaboration
of the city’s planning with citizens and businesses
• Co-create sustainability with frontrunners in the city
• Citizens’ contribute with their innovation capital (knowledge, ideas,
initiative, energy) and city contributes with the overarching
knowledge and facilitating an organic relationship and growth of
sustainability innovations
Step 3: formulating guiding principles
From… To…
• effectiveness
• circularity
• decentralised
• interdependency
• integration
• what are the benefits?
• netocracy
• facilitate
• efficiency
• linearity
• centralised
• (in)dependency
• fragmentation
• what are the costs?
• hierarchy
• control
Densification + Greening = Urban Sustainability
Sustainable transformation of urban space by communities,
practitioners and businesses
14
Step 4: Envisioning a desirable future
Imagining the future
visualising and specifiying
Out-of-the-box thinking
Attract and inspire through a living vision
Compass, ‘Leitbild’
not ONE image, ‘basket of images’
Imaginaries but not utopias
Creating a Sustainability Vision
Step 5: generation of transition pathways
Distinguish different images
Connecting the future and the present
(combining “forecasting” and “backcasting”)
17
11-7-201618
DENSIFICATION PATHWAY
11-7-201619
GREENING PATHWAY
Insight the Transition
Pathways
Which pilots and innovations from
citizens and small businesses were
taken up for scaling within the
transition pathways?
11-7-201621
DENSIFICATION PATHWAY
Vertical Infill
11-7-201623
! "#$%&'()*%#)+,"- ). '/0
! "#$! !
! " #$%&'%( $! )$*$%+$$%&'%! , '*$*$%- &( . . */ $$0- +
Klushuhizen / DIY houses Rotterdam
Infill
11-7-201626
GREENING PATHWAY
11-7-201627
Urban greening / Urban farming on empty lots
Step 6: transition experiments
Pilot projects
targeted and specific
Starting small
try out and learning
Transforming existing, old projects
and creating new experiments
28
11-7-201629
DENSIFICATION PATHWAY
30
Floating Pavilion
Pilot on floating
urbanisation
Group picture of participants of the short-course
on urban transition management by DRIFT, in
Sept. 2015
Governance for transitions
• action needs to tap into and be in confluence with on-going dynamics in
order to steer the system with incremental steps towards a new
sustainable (system) state (confluence dynamics)
Examine what inhibits transitions and inform
governance action to overcome hurdles
• small-scale action needs to be directed to domains in which a small
intervention can result in tipping towards larger changes or simply, seek
for such changes that can cascade towards broader system’s innovation
(tipping innovation’s cascade)
Design governance interventions based on early
lessons from emerging or tested innovation
• action needs to also refer to processes that will couple with or reroute
on-going processes in a co-evolutionary continuum (feed in and onto co-
evolutionary processes).
Steer on-going processes to a sustainable direction
32
read more @ www.drift.eur.nl
read more @ http://transitionsnetwork.org/
Design governance interventions based on early
lessons from emerging or tested innovation
- Empirical case from City Ports case Rotterdam-
35