BH

B.L. Hoornaert

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An exploration of the mother- and child-friendly city

Master thesis (2022) - B.L. Hoornaert, M.J. van Dorst, T. Bouma
Density in a city puts a lot of pressure on the public space. As a result, public spaces are designed according to standard design rules, leaving the wishes of certain groups overlooked. This project aims to pay attention to a group of people who, while not involved in the design of the city, greatly profits from using it comfortably every day. This graduation thesis will explore the concept of the mother- and child-friendly city and try to map their wishes and needs. To achieve this, different fields of knowledge will be brought together through literature and fieldwork in the neighbourhood of Outremeuse in Liège, Belgium. The gathered input will then guide a series of interventions through the scales, gathered in a pattern language, and an urban design plan for the neighbourhood. This design plan consists of a masterplan for three central locations, one of which will be designed on the small scale. The final design will transform an existing road overtaken by car parking spaces into a pleasant space that invites outdoor play ...

For a sustainable agri-food sector in South Holland

Our modern food structure is unsustainable and fragile. Changes like climate crises, rising food demand, biodiversity loss, and the technological revolution will radicalize how and what we eat and produce. Whichever changes will happen, they will have an effect on the food system. In South Holland, this will happen with the transition to a circular economy. In order to deal with the unpredictability of these changes, this report proposes to create a resilient system. The main question that will be answered is ‘How can resilient food systems contribute to a circular agri-food sector in South Holland?’. In this context, resilience is the ability to ensure the provision of system functions in the face of increasingly complex and accumulating shocks and stresses.
Through capacities of robustness, adaptability, and transformability a just transformation to the circular food economy can be ensured. The strategy Recipe for Resilience derives from this definition. Based on a network of a mix of three types of hubs, the strategy calls for a more widespread and integrated distribution of knowledge about food and the food system. These hubs are the Seeds, where knowledge and food produce germinates, the Melting Pot, common interacting ground for all actors, and the Mixers, the in-between spaces that are not transparent. Together, they supply a network facilitating producers, distributors, and consumers. Thanks to this high-functioning network of knowledge, the main goals of the strategy can be achieved.
During and after implementation, there will be high stakeholder engagement through all layers of society, local food cycles with feedback loops to distribution centers and farmers, and the knowledge about it will be widespread throughout the South Holland population. The constant exchange of expertise will ensure feedback loops throughout all layers of the knowledge production. Through this constant adaptation and transformation, a resilient system can be achieved. ...