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L. Wiegers

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A pattern language for age-friendly communities in the Netherlands

Master thesis (2025) - L. Wiegers, R.M. Rooij, Martijn Lugten
This thesis examines the role of the built environment to facilitate ageing populations in the support of the quality of life for elderly. Older people, aged 65 and over, are becoming the majority of cities’ populations, yet are still to get acknowledged by urban planners. Resulting in elderly to experience negative impacts on their abilities to maintain their daily activities. As ageing is only going to increase, a shift towards age-friendly communities is needed to support all ages, but elderly in particular, in their later stages of life. Therefore, this study explores how cities can support elderly in active and healthy ageing, while also exploring how age-friendliness can initiate a re-housing chain, starting with older residents. Central to this research is the research question: “How could age-friendly spatial planning and strategy in Dutch cities support active and healthy ageing for elderly and contribute to a more balanced housing market?”
The pattern language has been used to demonstrate what the important domains of age-friendliness are. Through scenario’s and a vision in the case study location, two neighbourhoods in Apeldoorn, the results are presented. Key findings show how this methodology creates opportunities for active and healthy ageing for elderly, as well as how a quantitative and qualitative senior housing supply is an intermediate goal for the housing market. These results conclude that age-friendly spatial planning enhances the quality of life and can be transferable for other cities to face the societal change. ...

Exploring and envisioning Stadspark-West

This booklet describes the process of work carried out by a group of students within the On Site Studio of the Department of Landscape Architecture at TU Delft (Architecture, Urbanism and Building Sciences)in the spring of 2024. The students
have different academic backgrounds in either architecture, urbanism or landscape architecture and have been divided into dynamic sub-groups focusing on different approaches to analyse and design, but the work is the result of an effort by the group as a whole.

As the title of the studio ‘ON SITE: Scenes in Stadspark West’ suggests, this project took place in Stadspark West (SPW), a unique location in Rotterdam, however it is not an officially recognised geographical name. The initiators behind SPW refer to it as ‘an idea’ and ‘a fictional park that actually exists’.

This document is divided into three elements, the first part, Analysis and Research, deals with the embodied on-site analysis of the site and the theoretical research that underpins this analysis. The main aim of this part is to get a better grip on the multifaceted area of Stadspark West and to find better ways to describe, define, discuss and work with this area from a landscape architectural perspective. The second part of this booklet focuses on exploring and transcending the outcome of this analysis to a wider audience. In the project we achieve this goal by designing an intervention in the landscape. As the findings of our analysis have come from our first-hand embodied experiences, the aim is to present and extend these impressions from the same perspective. In the final part we use these findings to create an overall vision for Stadspark West. ...

Circular Delta 2050: Sowing the seeds for a zero-emission society through a locally-oriented, knowledge-based greenhouse horticulture

The Dutch greenhouse industry contributing 19% of the national carbon emissions, highlights its significant role in the ever-increasing environmental, social, and political challenges developing from climate change. Geopolitical tensions including the war in Ukraine and the Covid-19 pandemic, coupled with resource scarcity and a world population growth underscore the urgency of transitioning societal practices within the food-energy nexus. Existing policies such as the European Green Deal emphasize the need to transition toward renewable energy. Given the horticulture sector’s substantial spatial and global exportation footprint, there is potential to strategically utilize these spaces and economic flows. If successful, Dutch greenhouses can be the catalyst for a circular society model that emphasizes environmental regeneration, peri-urban community empowerment, and representative policy.

This report builds from theories including social justice, circular economy, glocalization, and regenerating peri-urban landscapes. By applying a circular society framework, which prioritizes sustainable consumption patterns, co-created policy, and spatial justice, this report develops a regional strategy for connecting and diversifying greenhouse sub-regions. The goals of this strategy include enhancing community engagement, ecological restoration, innovative knowledge-based production, and fully renewably sourced systems. An analysis through the lens of these intended goals leads to an instruction manual for redesigning industrial landscapes and an index of potential building blocks to implement in the redesign.

This instruction manual offers to scientific relevance through a large-scale combination of innovations, and a circular 15-minute social and 30-minute economic system, and societal relevance through lowering political unrest and the combination of technical and social functions. The manual is useful for a diverse range of parties including municipalities, policymakers, scientists, students, and residents.

Ultimately, SowGrowConnect aims for a future where greenhouse regions are not just endless rows of glasshouses but inclusive and diverse energy and social landscapes. ...