Barriers to the Adoption of Urban Living Labs for NBS Implementation: A Systemic Perspective
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. UNaLab Urban Living Labs
2.1. Tampere
2.2. Eindhoven
2.3. Genoa
3. Barriers to the Adoption of Urban Living Labs for NBS Projects
3.1. Barrier Identification Workshops and Interviews
3.2. Identified Barriers
3.2.1. Organisational and Structural Barriers
- Lack of Political Will and Long-Term Commitment
- Lack of supportive legal and policy frameworks
- Disconnection from the mainstream development process
- Sectoral silos
- Inflexible hierarchical organisational structure
- Lack of sufficient human resources
- Lack of sustainable financial resources
3.2.2. Cognitive, Cultural and Behavioural Barriers
- Negative past experiences
- Perceived complexity of the ULL approach
- Risk aversion and reluctance to change
- Conflicting expectations
- Lack of public awareness and engagement
- Lack of engagement to take responsibility
3.2.3. Knowledge and Process Barriers
- Uncertainties regarding the added value and benefits of ULLs
- Lack of available guidelines and tools for engagement
- NBS monitoring and assessment challenges
- Lack of skilled knowledge brokers
- Inability to upscale and replicate projects
- Lack of learning from other experiences
3.2.4. Ethical Barriers
- Intellectual property (IP)
- Privacy issues
- Inclusiveness
4. Analysis and Modelling of Barriers
4.1. Survey
4.2. Interpretive Structural Modelling
- Identifying the variables affecting the system studied;
- Establishing a relationship between each pair of variables identified in step 1;
- Developing the Structural Self-Interaction Matrix (SSIM);
- Developing the reachability matrix from the SSIM and checking this matrix for transitivity;
- Partitioning the reachability matrix obtained in step 4 into different levels;
- Drawing a directed graph (or digraph) based on the identified relationships and removing the transitivity links;
- Converting the digraph into an ISM model by replacing nodes of the variables with statements;
- Using MICMAC analysis to classify barriers based on their driving and dependence power.
4.2.1. ISM-Based Model
4.2.2. MICMAC Analysis
- Quadrant I: Autonomous barriers are barriers with both weak dependence and driving power. This type of barrier is rather disconnected from the rest. None of the barriers in this study appear to be in this category.
- Quadrant II: Dependent barriers have strong dependence power but low driving power.
- Quadrant III: Linkage barriers have strong driving power and strong dependence power. Linkage barriers tend to be unstable, meaning any action on any of them is likely to affect several other barriers and cause a feedback mechanism.
- Quadrant IV: Driving (or independent) barriers have strong driving power, but weak dependence power.
5. Discussion
5.1. Analysis of the Results
- Disconnection from the mainstream development process (B4);
- Sectoral silos (B6);
- Inflexible hierarchical organisational structure (B8);
- Lack of skilled knowledge brokers (B10);
- Lack of supportive legal and policy frameworks (B12).
- Uncertainties regarding the added values and benefits of ULLs (B2);
- Lack of political will and long-term commitment (B3);
- NBS monitoring and assessment challenges (B5);
- Lack of public awareness and engagement (B9);
- Lack of available guidelines and tools for engagement (B13);
- Lack of learning from other experiences (B15).
- Lack of sustainable financial support (B1);
- Lack of engagement to take responsibility (B7);
- Risk aversion and reluctance to change (B11);
- Conflicting expectations (B14);
- Perceived complexity of the ULL approach (B16).
5.2. Addressing the Barriers
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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# | Barriers | Average Rate (from 1 to 10) | Rank |
---|---|---|---|
B1 | Lack of sustainable financial resources | 7.6 | 1 |
B2 | Uncertainties regarding the added value and benefits of ULLs | 7.3 | 2 |
B3 | Lack of political will and long-term commitment | 7.2 | 3 |
B4 | Disconnection from the mainstream development process | 7.1 | 4 |
B5 | NBS monitoring and assessment challenges | 6.9 | 5 |
B6 | Sectoral silos | 6.6 | 6 |
B7 | Lack of engagement to take responsibility | 6.4 | 7 |
B8 | Inflexible hierarchical organisational structure | 6.1 | 8 |
B9 | Lack of public awareness and engagement | 6 | 9 |
B10 | Lack of skilled knowledge brokers | 5.9 | 10 |
B11 | Risk aversion and reluctance to change | 5.9 | 10 |
B12 | Lack of supportive legal and policy frameworks | 5.8 | 12 |
B13 | Lack of available guidelines and tools for engagement | 5.8 | 12 |
B14 | Conflicting expectations among urban stakeholders | 5.6 | 14 |
B15 | Lack of learning from other experiences | 5.6 | 14 |
B16 | Perceived complexity of the ULL approach | 3.8 | 16 |
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Sarabi, S.; Han, Q.; L. Romme, A.G.; de Vries, B.; Valkenburg, R.; den Ouden, E.; Zalokar, S.; Wendling, L. Barriers to the Adoption of Urban Living Labs for NBS Implementation: A Systemic Perspective. Sustainability 2021, 13, 13276. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132313276
Sarabi S, Han Q, L. Romme AG, de Vries B, Valkenburg R, den Ouden E, Zalokar S, Wendling L. Barriers to the Adoption of Urban Living Labs for NBS Implementation: A Systemic Perspective. Sustainability. 2021; 13(23):13276. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132313276
Chicago/Turabian StyleSarabi, Shahryar, Qi Han, A. Georges L. Romme, Bauke de Vries, Rianne Valkenburg, Elke den Ouden, Spela Zalokar, and Laura Wendling. 2021. "Barriers to the Adoption of Urban Living Labs for NBS Implementation: A Systemic Perspective" Sustainability 13, no. 23: 13276. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132313276