Resilience and Urban Regeneration Policies. Lessons from Community-Led Initiatives. The Case Study of CanFugarolas in Mataro (Barcelona)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Background
2.1. Resilience and Panarchy
2.2. Resilience and Panarchy in the Urban Realm. Self-Organization as a Main Issue
2.3. Fath Approach. Navigating the System as a Measure of Resilience
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. The Case Study: “CanFugarolas: Workshop of Social and Sustainable Repairs”, in Mataró (Barcelona, Spain)
3.2. Data Collection, Organization, and Analysis
3.2.1. Data Collection
3.2.2. Data Analysis
4. Results
4.1. Running the System. Transiting the Adaptive Cycle
4.1.1. The Regulatory Subsystem
4.1.2. The Infrastructural Subsystem
4.1.3. The Social Subsystem
4.2. Community Driving Urban System. The Social-Centered Panarchy
4.2.1. Remember. Social Subsystem as the Sink of the Urban System
4.2.2. Revolt. Social Subsystem as the Trigger of the Urban System
5. Conclusions and Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Traps-Stage | Preparedness Features |
---|---|
Ω-stage (Release)—Dissolution trap | 1. Reduce fault cascade (r): The ability to prevent crises from spreading throughout the system through early detection and organizational structure. |
2. Cohesive leadership (K): Key actors that back growth financially and spread information rapidly. | |
3. Maintain vital functions (Ω): Identifying and maintaining functions that are essential to the continuation of a minimum level of social utility. | |
4. Improvisation (α): Suspending prescribed roles in response to immediate needs. | |
α-stage (Reorganization)—Vagavond trap | 1. Self-organization (r): The extent to which the system can restructure social networks and develop new organizations from within. |
2. Access to stored capital (K): The access to emergency resources in the form of natural, built, human, economic, and social capital during and post-crisis. | |
3. Memory (Ω): Remembering both past crisis experiences and past successes. | |
4. Modularity (α): Sets of densely connected nodes loosely connected to other subsets of nodes. | |
r-stage (growth)—Poverty trap | 1. Positive feedbacks (r): A change in a particular variable, process, or signal reinforces subsequent changes of the same type. |
2. Bilateral information flows (K): Information flowing in both directions of system hierarchy. | |
3. Emergent leadership (Ω): Emergence of and collaboration with organizations not originally tasked with a particular crisis response. | |
4. Adaptive capacity (α): Recognizing learning experiences and using the opportunity to make adjustments to behavior. | |
K-stage (Consolidation)—Rigidity trap | 1. Negative feedbacks (r): Structural characteristics that regulate the rate of growth. |
2. Maintain diversity (K): Diversity in function and response of components and their relationships. | |
3. Small-scale disturbances (Ω): The frequency and intensity of noncrisis disturbances. | |
4. Buffer capacity (α): Stored capital and redundancies within the system. |
Social Subsystem | Infrastructural Subsystem | Regulatory Subsystem | |
---|---|---|---|
Large scale | Orchestrated social initiatives occurring at a city scale | Regeneration/degradation at former industrial areas within the city | Urban regeneration policies |
Focal scale (the project) | CanFugarolas: the project (independent of physical emplacement) | CanFugarolas: the building | CanFugarolas: an urban planning remodeling sector |
Small scale | Scattered and dispersed community-led “actions”, occurring within the city | Scattered regeneration processes; urban planning development | Punctual and sectorial modifications of urban planning |
Traps-Stage | Period | Social Subsystem Response |
---|---|---|
Ω-stage (Release)—Dissolution trap | September 2013 | Participation (at the individual level) of some of the actors of the Project in scattered social initiatives (shadow networks) in the city prevents the dismemberment of the social capacity at a large scale. |
All the entities taking part of the project in Can Fabregas de Paper strengthen linkage in the face of its forced abandonment and provide their financial capacity, even at an individual/personal level, for the continuation of the project, wherever it is. | ||
Maintenance of the “usual” activity in view of the notification to leaving the previous location. | ||
However, forced leaving of Can Fabregas de Paper makes everyone focus on finding a new location. | ||
α-stage (Reorganization)—Vagavond trap | October–November 2013 | Former Project’s entities constitute CanFugarolas’ seminal organization |
Individuals (active agents) from former social-led initiatives participating the Project become the main capital (knowledge) during reorganization | ||
The Project’s former experiences as a social background in the form of organizational and administrative/legal memory | ||
Set of scattered actors-relational networks taking place within the city as emergent responses to urban regeneration policies (urban gaps) | ||
r-stage (growth)—Poverty trap | End 2013–Mid 2016 | Entering Can Fugarolas (the building) implies the access to a new dimension of possibilities and engagement of new entities to the Project |
Multilateral conversation among actors. Network connections are established, and trust and dependencies are built. | ||
Cronopis stands up as the leader as it becomes the spoke-man with to Municipally and establishes connections to other entities aiming at participating The Project | ||
Definition of seminal Structured/Hierarchical functioning rules as foundational conditions to grow | ||
K-stage (Consolidation)—Rigidity trap | Mid 2016–today | Inner Regulatory framework to improve communication and participation channels |
The characteristics of the new proposals are analyzed before allowance to join the Project. This is deemed to ensure diversity | ||
Parallel communication channels (in the fringes) and alternatives to original designed functioning of the building (new entrance) appear | ||
No personal assignment of positions and responsibilities (flexible hierarchy). Set up of social networks at larger scales |
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Saez Ujaque, D.; Roca, E.; de Balanzó Joue, R.; Fuertes, P.; Garcia-Almirall, P. Resilience and Urban Regeneration Policies. Lessons from Community-Led Initiatives. The Case Study of CanFugarolas in Mataro (Barcelona). Sustainability 2021, 13, 12855. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132212855
Saez Ujaque D, Roca E, de Balanzó Joue R, Fuertes P, Garcia-Almirall P. Resilience and Urban Regeneration Policies. Lessons from Community-Led Initiatives. The Case Study of CanFugarolas in Mataro (Barcelona). Sustainability. 2021; 13(22):12855. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132212855
Chicago/Turabian StyleSaez Ujaque, Diego, Elisabet Roca, Rafael de Balanzó Joue, Pere Fuertes, and Pilar Garcia-Almirall. 2021. "Resilience and Urban Regeneration Policies. Lessons from Community-Led Initiatives. The Case Study of CanFugarolas in Mataro (Barcelona)" Sustainability 13, no. 22: 12855. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132212855
APA StyleSaez Ujaque, D., Roca, E., de Balanzó Joue, R., Fuertes, P., & Garcia-Almirall, P. (2021). Resilience and Urban Regeneration Policies. Lessons from Community-Led Initiatives. The Case Study of CanFugarolas in Mataro (Barcelona). Sustainability, 13(22), 12855. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132212855