The New Urban Normal: Urban Sustainability and Resilience Post COVID-19

TU Delt Urban Thinkers Campus June/July 2020

Book (2021)
Contributor(s)

R.C. Rocco de Campos Pereira – Editor (TU Delft - Spatial Planning and Strategy)

C.E.L. Newton – Editor (TU Delft - Spatial Planning and Strategy)

Luz María Vergara Vergara d'Alençon – Editor (TU Delft - Housing Institutions & Governance)

Igor Tempels Moreno Pessoa – Editor (TU Delft - Urban Studies)

A. van der Watt – Editor (TU Delft - Spatial Planning and Strategy)

Research Group
Spatial Planning and Strategy
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Research Group
Spatial Planning and Strategy
ISBN (electronic)
978-94-6366-361-8
Reuse Rights

Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.

Abstract

The COVID19 pandemic has exposed several systemic failures and injustices in the way cities are planned and designed around the world. It has also exposed the failings due to lack of planning in most places in the Global South. Careful, inclusive and participatory spatial planning is thought to greatly strengthen the capacity of societies to withstand systemic shocks, as testified by the New Urban Agenda (2016), the Pact of Amsterdam (2016) and the New Leipzig Charter (2020). Integrated affordable housing, for instance, has come to the top of the agenda once again, now propelled by the realisation that slum dwellers (a staggering 1 billion people around the world) and homeless people are particularly vulnerable to health crises and other societal shocks. The pandemic has been saluted as an opportunity to implement far-reaching transformation of our societies towards sustainability and justice, but little signs of systemic change have actually surfaced. For example, several cities around the world claim they will overhaul public space, take space from private cars, and invest more on green spaces, bicycle paths and quality public mobility. But little has been said about addressing the structural causes of inequality. The champions of the circular economy salute the pandemic as a new dawn for more human-centred capitalism, for the abandonment of exploitation and unfair distribution, and a world where workers can find decent housing, health, work and leisure.
But what is actually happening on the ground?
This UTC explores some of these issues by giving a platform to people with knowledge from the ground. It also discusses the many advances being made towards an inclusive green transition, through the European Green Deal and a growing activist movement in the UK.
This event was organised by GUL, the Global Urban Lab of the TU Delft University of Technology, a communication and action platform that brings visibility and articulation to TU Delft staff and students doing work on topics of urbanisation in the Global South.