In Search of Social Resilience? Regeneration Strategies for Polish Cities
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Frameworks
2.1. Social Resilience Concept
2.2. Resilience Strategies
- (1)
- Planning: this involves building greater resilience capacity by creating plans that are flexible and can keep up with a rapidly changing environment; plans should also be responsive to change as new information and events emerge during the process;
- (2)
- Designing related to the implementation of planned activities, which means designing physical (e.g., buildings) or logical (e.g., policies) artifacts; focusing on adaptability will ensure that the planning results achieved can be reused, stretched, and even modified in times of stress;
- (3)
- Governance, which includes the set of decisions and actions we take in times of normalcy and in times of crisis that affect the current and future state of various elements of the city [28].
2.3. Urban Regeneration in CEE
3. Materials and Methods
4. Results
4.1. Poland
- (1)
- A systematized approach to regeneration, its strong institutionalization, associated with clear, legal regulations, however limiting to some extent bottom-up initiatives;
- (2)
- The universality of regeneration strategies and their key role in the process of building resilience at the local level;
- (3)
- Comprehensiveness of regeneration strategies, with special attention to social aspects (unemployment, crime, poverty, low levels of education), which are considered to have been most affected by the shock of the transformation and decline of urban centers;
- (4)
- Largely posed public participation in regeneration. Although Regeneration Committees have been established among local communities, they are dominated by officials rather than local leaders. In addition, simple methods of public participation are being used, which have little effect on actual citizen control.
4.2. Poznan
- − Large-scale investments, related to the renovation of the city’s main streets, improving accessibility to public transportation, building a bridge to improve the connectivity of regeneration areas, building museums and cultural centers, regenerating riverside areas along the Warta River, and renovating municipal housing stock;
- − Initiatives to integrate and activate local communities, involving the organization of periodic meetings, cultural events, concerts, exhibitions, theatrical performances;
- − Small improvements involving the repair and construction of sidewalks, bicycle paths, arranging public spaces, creating small green areas, introducing elements of small architecture.
4.2.1. Social and Economic Aspects
4.2.2. Environmental Aspects
4.2.3. Spatial and Technical Aspects
5. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Social Group | Interviewee Characteristics |
---|---|
Inhabitants | Former inhabitant of a regenerated area |
Current inhabitant of a regenerated area | |
Local leaders | Urban activist, member of the management board of a home-owner association |
Lawyer, representing aggrieved home-owners formerly inhabiting regenerated areas | |
Architect, author of a mural in the regenerated district (Śródka) which received a National Geographic award, academic teacher, inhabitant of a regeneration area | |
Environmental activist, author of environmental impact forecasts for the city of Poznań | |
Entrepreneurs | Developer investing in the regenerated areas |
Co-owner of a popular restaurant, inhabitant of a regenerated area | |
Local government representatives | Head of the department at the Municipal Family Support Center at Poznan City Hall |
Councillor of the city of Poznań responsible for spatial planning |
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Ciesiółka, P.; Maćkiewicz, B. In Search of Social Resilience? Regeneration Strategies for Polish Cities. Sustainability 2022, 14, 11969. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141911969
Ciesiółka P, Maćkiewicz B. In Search of Social Resilience? Regeneration Strategies for Polish Cities. Sustainability. 2022; 14(19):11969. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141911969
Chicago/Turabian StyleCiesiółka, Przemysław, and Barbara Maćkiewicz. 2022. "In Search of Social Resilience? Regeneration Strategies for Polish Cities" Sustainability 14, no. 19: 11969. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141911969
APA StyleCiesiółka, P., & Maćkiewicz, B. (2022). In Search of Social Resilience? Regeneration Strategies for Polish Cities. Sustainability, 14(19), 11969. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141911969