The Learning City: Temporary Housing Projects as Urban Niches for Sustainability Experiments
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
3. Types of Experiments for Sustainability Transitions
3.1. Niche Experiments
3.2. Urban Living Labs
3.3. Bounded Sociotechnical Experiments
3.4. Transition Experiments
3.5. Grassroots Experiments
3.6. Comparison of Concepts
4. Temporary Housing Experiments for Sustainability Transitions
4.1. Method
- Does the research interest primarily revolve around the functionality and acceptance of a technology or service?
- Does the research interest primarily revolve around new forms of living and cooperation?
- Does the experiment aim allow actors and participants to question overarching practices, systems and infrastructures?
- Does the experiment aim require monitoring of user behavior and acceptance? (e.g., when testing a novel technology or service in real-world conditions)
- Does the experiment require a cocreation or coproduction process? (e.g., seeking flexible problem-solving for specific local contexts or exploring alternative pathways)
- Does the experiment involve participants as initiators of core elements of the experiment? (e.g., needs-oriented experiments exploring alternative pathways)
- Does the experiment require a high level of control? (taking into consideration factors such as, e.g., available project budget, involved actors and user groups, and main objectives)
4.2. Beat the Heat
4.2.1. Step 1: Selection
4.2.2. Step 2: Experiment Description
“Beat the Heat” as a Niche Experiment
4.3. Gap Module
4.3.1. Step 1: Selection
4.3.2. Step 2: Experiment Description
“Gap Module” as a BSTE
4.4. Life Sharing
4.4.1. Step 1: Selection
4.4.2. Step 2: Experiment Description
“Life Sharing” as Grassroots Experiment
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Core Characteristics | Niche Experiments | Urban Living Labs | Bounded Sociotechnical Experiments | Transition Experiments | Grassroots Experiments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Starting point | Development of sustainability-oriented technology or service | Development of innovative technology or service | Development of sustainability-oriented technology or service and sustainability visions | Societal challenge | Societal challenge, ideology |
Main objectives | Successful introduction of sustainability-oriented technology or service | Successful and efficient introduction of innovative technology or service for sustainable and smart cities |
|
| Meeting social and environmental needs through flexible, localized services |
Scope | Advancing knowledge surrounding a technology or service including user needs and preferences | Advancing knowledge surrounding a technology or service including user needs and preferences | Advancing knowledge surrounding a technology or service or new forms of living and cooperation with the potential of questioning existing systems, infrastructures, practices or paradigms | Advancing new forms of living and cooperation with the potential of questioning existing systems, infrastructures, practices or paradigms | Advancing new forms of living and cooperation with the potential of questioning existing systems, infrastructures, practices or paradigms |
Learning processes |
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Actors |
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Degree of control | High | High | Limited | Limited | Low |
Strengths |
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Weaknesses |
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Model | Beat the Heat | Gap Module | Life Sharing |
---|---|---|---|
Description | Temporary housing environment with a natural cooling system and circularity solutions for individuals at particular risk during heat waves | Housing on temporarily unused building gaps in a densely populated area with a mix of user groups, including refugees with positive asylum status | Housing solutions in industrial buildings with mix of user groups including refugees with positive asylum status and individuals currently not well-integrated into society |
Focus | Increasing urban heat islands and rising average temperatures in summers | Existence of vacant building gaps which remain unused for several years | Vacancy activation or temporary use of former industrial buildings |
Question | Niche exp. | ULL | BSTE | Transition exp. | Grassroots exp. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | x | x | x | ||
B | x | x | x | ||
C | x | x | x | ||
D | x | x | (x) | (x) | |
E | x | x | x | x | |
F | x | ||||
G | x | x | (x) |
Question | Beat the Heat | Gap Module | Life Sharing |
---|---|---|---|
A | x | x | |
B | x | x | |
C | x | x | |
D | x | (x) | |
E | (x) | x | |
F | (x) | ||
G | x | (x) |
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Rose, G.; Stocker, M.; Ornetzeder, M. The Learning City: Temporary Housing Projects as Urban Niches for Sustainability Experiments. Sustainability 2022, 14, 5198. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095198
Rose G, Stocker M, Ornetzeder M. The Learning City: Temporary Housing Projects as Urban Niches for Sustainability Experiments. Sustainability. 2022; 14(9):5198. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095198
Chicago/Turabian StyleRose, Gloria, Mirjam Stocker, and Michael Ornetzeder. 2022. "The Learning City: Temporary Housing Projects as Urban Niches for Sustainability Experiments" Sustainability 14, no. 9: 5198. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095198
APA StyleRose, G., Stocker, M., & Ornetzeder, M. (2022). The Learning City: Temporary Housing Projects as Urban Niches for Sustainability Experiments. Sustainability, 14(9), 5198. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14095198