The Greek Urban Policy Reform through the Local Urban Plans (LUPs) and the Special Urban Plans (SUPs), Funded by Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Methodology of the Research
3. State of the Art
3.1. A Brief Literature Review
- (a)
- German, based on the implementation of spatial policy at a number of levels, within distinct boundaries (legal, organizational, content). At the level of urban planning legislation, the role of the central state is special since it is exercised in execution of the dictates of the constitution. The role of the regions, which is strong, focuses on issuing the federal building code (BauGB) and the distribution of land uses (Baunutzungsverordung) [24];
- (b)
- Napoleonic, which focuses on the establishment of a national code with urban planning regulations that operate at hierarchical levels of planning, of which the intermediate one (that of the district) is relatively weak with an emphasis on the national and local levels [26]. This fact is evident in the planning system of France, where the increased need to manage the hydrocephalus problem of Paris vis-à-vis the peripheral areas was managed in the context of the exercise of spatial policy on a national scale, utilizing the theory of development poles. At the level of regulations, pluralism prevails, a fact that is reflected in the 1995 law on spatial development and spatial planning, which did not limit the number of regulations but contributed to the addition of new ones with an interventionist nature [27];
- (c)
- Nordic, which refers to a planning system with weak national and regional scales, which is associated with a strong local level of planning. Local government forms the detailed plans that affect urban development and licensing [26];
- (d)
- British, which includes policies in which the role of central administration is supervisory to local administration responsible for the exercise of spatial planning. In terms of the nature of planning, in Britain the separation of physical planning from economic/strategic planning was applied, with the first type seeking to mitigate important phenomena such as the management of increased residential pressures, a subject to which the establishment of urban planning law rules is linked [28]. The preparation of land use plans in combination with the “development control” process were central tools that differed from the standard building rules [29];
- (e)
- Family of eastern countries, characterized by countries with early systems of urban development. For this reason, this grouping seems vaguer with an emphasis on the polyphony found in the influences on the transforming systems.
3.2. The Greek Framework of Spatial Institutional Planning
- −
- The inability of the central administration to systematically guide the local authorities as well as planners and practitioners through the specialization of the principles and directions contained in the above planning and the institutional framework, as well as to monitor and systematically control the implementation of the desired policy (shaping standards and implementation guidelines and the development and ongoing updating of a monitoring mechanism);
- −
- The variety of plans, tools and structures in spatial planning, their non-activation or their individual and fragmentary use;
- −
- The inability to monitor the implementation of projects and the inability to identify and assess the impact of design options;
- −
- The inability to respond and adapt urban plans to the ever-changing needs and data without the need to resort to ad hoc regulations and traditional and tried and tested practices;
- −
- The non-appropriate limitation of the variety of design levels, the unbalanced and clear wording of the binding of each level, the lack of simplification of the content of the studies and the approval procedures, as well as their technical and financial support;
- −
- The delays of investments and the further delay in meeting the required economic objectives of the state
3.3. The Institutional Framework for the Preservation of Cultural Heritage
4. The Greek Law 4759/2020 “Modernization of Spatial and Urban Planning Legislation” and the Innovative Reforms in Current Urban and Spatial Planning
5. The Urban Policy Reform in Greece in the Framework of RRF
- The municipalities involved, since the proposed interventions will upgrade and protect their space and will have institutionalized land uses in their administrative boundaries/territory;
- The Sectoral ministries and private investors, as they will know in advance which activities are allowed to be development in every place (so that to prepare properly their projects;
- The construction sector in the implementation stage of the interventions;
- The individual property owners and the users of the urban space in general.
Description of the Urban Policy Reform
- (a)
- Spatial planning to provide a coherent framework that will contribute to improving the country’s development prospects in terms of sustainability and prioritizing the safeguarding of the public interest. This direction required the rationalization of the spatial planning system and the improvement of its implementation at all levels, in terms of the sustainable management of land, rural and urban development;
- (b)
- The rapid implementation of urban planning, before it becomes obsolete and inefficient, in combination at the same time with the protection of the architectural heritage, the historical centers, the preserved complexes, etc.;
- (c)
- The activation of mechanisms and financial tools that will strengthen the operational capacity of the local self-government to implement the urban planning and urban regeneration programs;
- (d)
- Local authorities to acquire an essential role by participating in the audit-approval process and in addition the opportunity to participate effectively in rehabilitation interventions of their areas or other local authorities, to give directions, to expedite procedures;
- (e)
- Urban planning must be actively involved in the protection of the architectural heritage and its preservation within the urban fabric, through the activation of special building conditions and the harmonization of the proposals of the urban plans with the principles of the Valletta Convention [84] (the LUPs as an institutional tool to be combined with the protection of monumental structures and historical ensembles by the Archaeological Law N. 3028/02 [69]).
- Local Urban Plans (LUPs) (Law 4759/2020, Article 10) [23]
- 2.
- Special Urban Plans (SUPs) (Law 4759/2020, Article 11) [23]
- 3.
- Development Rights Transfer Zones (RTZ) of Buildings (Law 4759/2020, Article 14 & 74) [23]
- 4.
- Delimitation of Settlements (Law 4759/2020, Article 12) [23]
- 5.
- Plans for the characterization of Municipal Roads (Law 4759/2020, Article 14) [23]
6. Implementation of the National Urban Policy Reform
- Action 1 (LUPs) is going to cover around 200 municipal units or municipalities For each LUP, the stages of Analysis and Proposal will define several thematic layers or files with vector information that will be used for the compilation of the study. The thematic levels will be accompanied by a list of properties incorporating all the descriptive information deemed necessary for their cartographic representation, as well as any other necessary descriptive element. All deliverables should be available with open standards and consider the provisions of Law 3882/2010 [85] and all legislation on public data and e-Government;
- Action 2 (SUPs) is scheduled by the end of 2022 to include at least 10 assignments/contracts for plans in areas that face urgent issues such as: preparation of projects of supra-local or strategic importance, projects of urban regeneration or environmental protection or disaster relief, etc.;
- Action 3 (Development Rights Transfer Zones-RTZ) is going to be implemented in one phase of assignment/contract. The cycle will include around 80 municipal units especially those with densely populated cities or/and include historic centers where the definition of these zones will allow the activation of another very useful planning tool which is called building coefficient transfer. The municipal units to be studied will be defined through multicriteria analysis;
- Action 4 (Delimitation of Settlements) is going to be implemented in three phases of assignments/contracts. The first phase is about 20 municipal units whose settlements delimitation is urgent because of the cancellation decisions of the Supreme Court. The second and third ones are going to include 50 municipal units each;
- Action 5 (Characterization of Municipal Roads): is also going to be implemented in three phases of assignments/contracts. Every phase will include around 100 municipal units and the emphasis will be given in areas with intense development pressures where the local road networks is urgent be to be identified and characterized in order to cover the residential or productive needs of these areas.
7. Impact on Employment, Economy, Urban and Rural Development, Preservation of Cultural Heritage and EU Strategies
- (a)
- the implementation of the relevant studies and projects will support the construction industry at all levels (designers, manufacturers—contractors, industry, etc.);
- (b)
- the promotion and implementation of actions will stimulate “green” entrepreneurship and “green” innovation and technology;
- (c)
- the expected improvement of the urban environment will entail the growth of other business activities related to city branding;
- (d)
- the long-term benefits of the cultural heritage preservation (energy saving/upgrading of the urban environment.
8. Conclusions
- The natural resource management, as well as the increase of natural space and biodiversity in cities;
- The regeneration of degraded areas, the promotion of mixed uses and the residential development. based on the bearing capacity of the environment;
- The coordination of urban governance, the production of statistics on living conditions in urban centers, public awareness, networking etc.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Vassi, A.; Siountri, K.; Papadaki, K.; Iliadi, A.; Ypsilanti, A.; Bakogiannis, E. The Greek Urban Policy Reform through the Local Urban Plans (LUPs) and the Special Urban Plans (SUPs), Funded by Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF). Land 2022, 11, 1231. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11081231
Vassi A, Siountri K, Papadaki K, Iliadi A, Ypsilanti A, Bakogiannis E. The Greek Urban Policy Reform through the Local Urban Plans (LUPs) and the Special Urban Plans (SUPs), Funded by Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF). Land. 2022; 11(8):1231. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11081231
Chicago/Turabian StyleVassi, Avgi, Konstantina Siountri, Kalliopi Papadaki, Alkistis Iliadi, Anna Ypsilanti, and Efthimios Bakogiannis. 2022. "The Greek Urban Policy Reform through the Local Urban Plans (LUPs) and the Special Urban Plans (SUPs), Funded by Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF)" Land 11, no. 8: 1231. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11081231
APA StyleVassi, A., Siountri, K., Papadaki, K., Iliadi, A., Ypsilanti, A., & Bakogiannis, E. (2022). The Greek Urban Policy Reform through the Local Urban Plans (LUPs) and the Special Urban Plans (SUPs), Funded by Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF). Land, 11(8), 1231. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11081231