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Samenvatting An Introduction to Spatial Planning in the Netherlands, ISBN: 9781032136998 Going Dutch

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Dit document bevat een samenvatting van het boek 'An Introduction to Spatial Planning in the Netherlands' van Patrick Witte and Thomas Hartmann. Deze samenvatting is Engels. This document includes an English summary of the book 'An Introduction to Spatial planning in the Netherlands' by Patrick Witte and Thomas Hartmann.

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An introduction to Spatial Planning in the Netherlands


Going Dutch

Spatial planning – an exploration of the discipline
Three elements that are crucial for an understanding of planning:
 Public activity
 Future
 Space

Projective scenarios are forecasting and is short-term.
Prospective scenarios are backcasting and long-term.

The object of reference in (spatial) planning is space, or a territory (neighbourhood, municipality,
region, state), while in sectoral planning it is a topic or sector (agriculture, tourism, transport).

The trias politica is a separation of powers in liberal democracies in order to prevent abuse of power
 Legislative branch: elected politicians making laws
 Executive branch: implementing and enforcing laws
 Judicial branch: courts and organs

Process
Object How is it planned?
What is planned?



The
planning triangle




Context
Why is something planned?


Blueprint planning (1940s-1970s)
 Focus on object
 Reconstruction after the war
Collaborative planning (1980s-1990s)
 Focus on planning processes
 Citizens claimed participation
 Planning as ‘mirror of society’ > wicked problems
Open planning
 Critique on process planning
 Context became more important
 Actively shaping society




Theory in practice – examples from the Netherlands
1901: Residental act (Woningwet) required formulation of city extension plans.
Between 1945 and 1965 there was a rapid population growth and housing
shortages, so planning was professionalised the Wet Ruimtelijke Ordening (WRO).
Between 1965 and 1985 the idea of a ‘makeable society’ became popular in the
Netherlands.
In the 1990s, the ‘Vinex’ policy became successful by public-private partnerships

, An introduction to Spatial Planning in the Netherlands




The object of planning
Object of planning: five key characteristics
 Physical connection (Immovability and place attachment)
 Inert nature (Irreversible, immovable and inert nature of land)
 Heterogeneity (Every location is different from another)
 Functions (Functional uses are spatially bounded)
 Price (Difference in price and value)

Land-use planning Spatial planning
Regulations on how land may be used More strategic and ambitious
Regulate the rights of others Strategic planning for entire cities/regions
Using numerical standards Integral

Contraction: used to stop deterioration of neighbourhoods
Conservation: protecting the qualities in planning

Land-use planning at different scales
 National level: steer the development of main structure
 Regional level: develops spatial visions & specifying national planning concepts
 Local level: legally binding land-use plans
 Multi-level dynamics: abstract to concrete ideas

Investments in infrastructure
 Cause economic development
 Development in transport infrastructures and growth of the regional economy stimulate
each other. > However, there is a lack of proof in this claim.
 Economic costs of external effects like noise, congestion and emissions
Transport infrastructure is dependent on economic development and vice versa.
Investments in infrastructure are important for the development of spatial structures and mobility.
Traffic effects attainability of houses and the other way around.
The question which development is caused by infrastructure is hard to determine.

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