Difference between revisions of "Economic dimension of urban planning"

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= Economic dimension of urban planning =
 
= Economic dimension of urban planning =
Urban planning involves multiple dimensions such as security, safety, mobility and the societal and cultural dimensions. The '''economic dimension''' is one of the core dimensions of urban planning. It deals in the first place with the economic functionality of urban objects, but also with the economic impact of spatial development plans, the economic output of these impacts and the tools used to estimate and predict these impacts (see clickable map below).
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The '''economic dimension''' is one of the core dimensions of urban planning and deals with the economic functioning of urban objects and the related impact of urban development and security threats (including security measures).
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== Description ==
 
The importance of the economic dimension of urban planning is increasing mainly because of two reasons:
 
# An increasing amount of urban planners believe in the potential contribution of the planning system to maximize the net welfare of society with the help of appropriate policy measures that influence the delivery of a more attractive, competitive and successful urban area<ref name="D1.1">Source: DHP. End user requirement report (D1.1) VITRUV.</ref>.
 
# The increasing population in cities places more and more pressure on the development of land and has lead to the consolidation of the urban core. And, although this has led to a strengthening of the economic and social functions of the cities and surrounding areas, urban planners are at the same time forced to recognize the increasing threats caused by both natural and human causes that can have a devastating impact on the economic and social functioning of the urban area<ref name="D1.1"></ref>.
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==The economic dimension of security aspects in urban planning==
 
The economic aspect of security in an urban planning context is relevant for urban planners in three major ways:
 
# First of all, [[Economic impact of security threats|security threats]] (crime & terrorism) lead to (negative) direct and indirect economic effects on a local, regional and national level.
 
# On top of that, security measures lead to investment costs and to secondary economic effects (e.g, the longer waiting lines at airports due to the upgraded security measures since 9/11). These effects are called: [[Economic effects of security measures|"economic effects of security measures]]".
 
# Finally, security measures influence the behaviour of criminals and terrorists due to the process of crime displacement and crime diffusion ([[The economics of criminal and terrorist behaviour|the economics of criminal and terrorist behaviour)]].
   
 
==Structure of the economic dimension of urban planning==
 
==Structure of the economic dimension of urban planning==
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desc bottom-left
 
desc bottom-left
 
</imagemap>
 
</imagemap>
 
==Increasing importance of the economic theme in urban planning==
 
The importance of the economic dimension of urban planning is increasing mainly because of two reasons:
 
# An increasing amount of urban planners believe in the potential contribution of the planning system to maximize the net welfare of society with the help of appropriate policy measures that influence the delivery of a more attractive, competitive and successful urban area<ref name="D1.1">Source: DHP. End user requirement report (D1.1) VITRUV.</ref>.
 
# The increasing population in cities places more and more pressure on the development of land and has lead to the consolidation of the urban core. And, although this has led to a strengthening of the economic and social functions of the cities and surrounding areas, urban planners are at the same time forced to recognize the increasing threats caused by both natural and human causes that can have a devastating impact on the economic and social functioning of the urban area<ref name="D1.1"></ref>.
 
 
==The economic dimension of security aspects in urban planning==
 
The economic aspect of security in an urban planning context is relevant for urban planners in three major ways:
 
# First of all, [[Economic impact of security threats|security threats]] (crime & terrorism) lead to (negative) direct and indirect economic effects on a local, regional and national level.
 
# On top of that, security measures lead to investment costs and to secondary economic effects (e.g, the longer waiting lines at airports due to the upgraded security measures since 9/11). These effects are called: [[Economic effects of security measures|"economic effects of security measures]]".
 
# Finally, security measures influence the behaviour of criminals and terrorists due to the process of crime displacement and crime diffusion ([[The economics of criminal and terrorist behaviour|the economics of criminal and terrorist behaviour)]].
 
   
 
==Related subjects==
 
==Related subjects==

Revision as of 13:48, 11 October 2012

Economic dimension of urban planning

The economic dimension is one of the core dimensions of urban planning and deals with the economic functioning of urban objects and the related impact of urban development and security threats (including security measures).

Description

The importance of the economic dimension of urban planning is increasing mainly because of two reasons:

  1. An increasing amount of urban planners believe in the potential contribution of the planning system to maximize the net welfare of society with the help of appropriate policy measures that influence the delivery of a more attractive, competitive and successful urban area[1].
  2. The increasing population in cities places more and more pressure on the development of land and has lead to the consolidation of the urban core. And, although this has led to a strengthening of the economic and social functions of the cities and surrounding areas, urban planners are at the same time forced to recognize the increasing threats caused by both natural and human causes that can have a devastating impact on the economic and social functioning of the urban area[1].

The economic dimension of security aspects in urban planning

The economic aspect of security in an urban planning context is relevant for urban planners in three major ways:

  1. First of all, security threats (crime & terrorism) lead to (negative) direct and indirect economic effects on a local, regional and national level.
  2. On top of that, security measures lead to investment costs and to secondary economic effects (e.g, the longer waiting lines at airports due to the upgraded security measures since 9/11). These effects are called: "economic effects of security measures".
  3. Finally, security measures influence the behaviour of criminals and terrorists due to the process of crime displacement and crime diffusion (the economics of criminal and terrorist behaviour).

Structure of the economic dimension of urban planning

The relationships between the economic concepts within the economic domain are illustrated below (clickable map):

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Related subjects


Footnotes and references

  1. 1.0 1.1 Source: DHP. End user requirement report (D1.1) VITRUV.

MAP

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