Rural placemaking for sustained community well-being

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Rural placemaking for sustained community well-being. / Tietjen, Anne; Jørgensen, Gertrud.

Rural quality of life. red. / Pia Heike Johansen; Anne Tietjen; Evald Bundgaard Iversen; Henrik Lauridsen Lolle; Jens Kaae Fisker. Manchester : Manchester University Press, 2023. s. 134-157.

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Tietjen, A & Jørgensen, G 2023, Rural placemaking for sustained community well-being. i PH Johansen, AT, EB Iversen, HL Lolle & JK Fisker (red), Rural quality of life. Manchester University Press, Manchester, s. 134-157. https://doi.org/10.7765/9781526161642.00018

APA

Tietjen, A., & Jørgensen, G. (2023). Rural placemaking for sustained community well-being. I P. H. Johansen, A. T., E. B. Iversen, H. L. Lolle, & J. K. Fisker (red.), Rural quality of life (s. 134-157). Manchester University Press. https://doi.org/10.7765/9781526161642.00018

Vancouver

Tietjen A, Jørgensen G. Rural placemaking for sustained community well-being. I Johansen PH, AT, Iversen EB, Lolle HL, Fisker JK, red., Rural quality of life. Manchester: Manchester University Press. 2023. s. 134-157 https://doi.org/10.7765/9781526161642.00018

Author

Tietjen, Anne ; Jørgensen, Gertrud. / Rural placemaking for sustained community well-being. Rural quality of life. red. / Pia Heike Johansen ; Anne Tietjen ; Evald Bundgaard Iversen ; Henrik Lauridsen Lolle ; Jens Kaae Fisker. Manchester : Manchester University Press, 2023. s. 134-157

Bibtex

@inbook{833acdce127149b4b16d78956c70a290,
title = "Rural placemaking for sustained community well-being",
abstract = "Rural spatial development policy increasingly aims to improve quality of life and meet broad sustainable development goals. The New Rural Paradigm marked a shift towards supporting place-based, participatory local projects. In Denmark, this coincided with the 2007 structural reform whereby 273 municipalities were merged into 98 while giving municipalities full planning sovereignty over their territory, including the open countryside. Hundreds of place-based, participatory local spatial projects have since been carried out. This chapter examines the potential of such interventions in the built environment to enhance rural quality of life in peripheral areas affected by population loss. An inventory of projects receiving public or philanthropic funding in the 2010–2016 period was assembled to identify projects that (1) involved built interventions (buildings, open spaces, landscape projects), (2) were carried out to enhance quality of life, (3) were publicly accessible or open to a larger public, and (4) community-driven or participatory. Of 734 such projects that were found, 13 were selected for in-depth study using spatial and functional analysis, document studies, and site visits and interviews with key actors. The chapter finds that quality of life is pursued by (a) creating spaces shared by locals and non-locals alike, (b) reinventing cultural heritage, (c) creating green meeting places, and (d) forging new spatial connections, all with a focus on sustained community well-being. Importantly, the project communities often outlast the projects themselves, sometimes with long-term placemaking effects.",
author = "Anne Tietjen and Gertrud J{\o}rgensen",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} Manchester University Press 2022.",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.7765/9781526161642.00018",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781526161635",
pages = "134--157",
editor = "Johansen, {Pia Heike} and {Anne Tietjen} and Iversen, {Evald Bundgaard} and Lolle, {Henrik Lauridsen} and Fisker, {Jens Kaae}",
booktitle = "Rural quality of life",
publisher = "Manchester University Press",
address = "United Kingdom",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Rural placemaking for sustained community well-being

AU - Tietjen, Anne

AU - Jørgensen, Gertrud

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © Manchester University Press 2022.

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Rural spatial development policy increasingly aims to improve quality of life and meet broad sustainable development goals. The New Rural Paradigm marked a shift towards supporting place-based, participatory local projects. In Denmark, this coincided with the 2007 structural reform whereby 273 municipalities were merged into 98 while giving municipalities full planning sovereignty over their territory, including the open countryside. Hundreds of place-based, participatory local spatial projects have since been carried out. This chapter examines the potential of such interventions in the built environment to enhance rural quality of life in peripheral areas affected by population loss. An inventory of projects receiving public or philanthropic funding in the 2010–2016 period was assembled to identify projects that (1) involved built interventions (buildings, open spaces, landscape projects), (2) were carried out to enhance quality of life, (3) were publicly accessible or open to a larger public, and (4) community-driven or participatory. Of 734 such projects that were found, 13 were selected for in-depth study using spatial and functional analysis, document studies, and site visits and interviews with key actors. The chapter finds that quality of life is pursued by (a) creating spaces shared by locals and non-locals alike, (b) reinventing cultural heritage, (c) creating green meeting places, and (d) forging new spatial connections, all with a focus on sustained community well-being. Importantly, the project communities often outlast the projects themselves, sometimes with long-term placemaking effects.

AB - Rural spatial development policy increasingly aims to improve quality of life and meet broad sustainable development goals. The New Rural Paradigm marked a shift towards supporting place-based, participatory local projects. In Denmark, this coincided with the 2007 structural reform whereby 273 municipalities were merged into 98 while giving municipalities full planning sovereignty over their territory, including the open countryside. Hundreds of place-based, participatory local spatial projects have since been carried out. This chapter examines the potential of such interventions in the built environment to enhance rural quality of life in peripheral areas affected by population loss. An inventory of projects receiving public or philanthropic funding in the 2010–2016 period was assembled to identify projects that (1) involved built interventions (buildings, open spaces, landscape projects), (2) were carried out to enhance quality of life, (3) were publicly accessible or open to a larger public, and (4) community-driven or participatory. Of 734 such projects that were found, 13 were selected for in-depth study using spatial and functional analysis, document studies, and site visits and interviews with key actors. The chapter finds that quality of life is pursued by (a) creating spaces shared by locals and non-locals alike, (b) reinventing cultural heritage, (c) creating green meeting places, and (d) forging new spatial connections, all with a focus on sustained community well-being. Importantly, the project communities often outlast the projects themselves, sometimes with long-term placemaking effects.

U2 - 10.7765/9781526161642.00018

DO - 10.7765/9781526161642.00018

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AN - SCOPUS:85160148154

SN - 9781526161635

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EP - 157

BT - Rural quality of life

A2 - Johansen, Pia Heike

A2 - null, Anne Tietjen

A2 - Iversen, Evald Bundgaard

A2 - Lolle, Henrik Lauridsen

A2 - Fisker, Jens Kaae

PB - Manchester University Press

CY - Manchester

ER -

ID: 348244793