The Realms of Abandonment: Measures and Interpretations of Landscape Value/Risk in Northern Sardinia (Italy)
Abstract
:1. Landscapes and Interconnected Risks
1.1. Nature and Culture of Landscapes
1.2. The Environmental Issues and the Landscape Risk
1.3. Contents and Aims
2. Materials
Case of Study
3. Method
3.1. General Premises
3.2. Sources and Data
- With reference to the natural context, the Territorial Landscape Plan (PPTR) of the Region of Sardinia, the Geological and the Land Use Map from 2008, accessible on https://www.sardegnageoportale.it/ (accessed on 2 February 2023). The first shows the structure of the main systems with reference to the land aggregations that form homogeneous landscapes, while the two maps provide quantitative information on the abiotic and biotic components;
- The database of the Italian National Statistics Institute (NSI) from 2011, with specific reference to the entire database on the details of the municipality and to the Census Section (CS) for the basic information on social, economic, and urban system aspects; the ‘8000 Censuses’ sections, which offer an ordered selection of general databases for the purpose of presenting the phenomenon of social vulnerability; the ‘Italy in detail’ section, which includes the main municipal data of civil interest of the NSI (geographical, demographic, register, economic-productive, employment, patrimonial, etc.), important for the section dedicated to the urban system; the portals of the ‘Italian Municipalities’, which make it easier to consult data on demographic and income dynamics to describe the social system and aspects of income distribution; the Statistical Atlas of Municipalities (2011), with specific reference to ATECO (2007) data describing the production system of the territory;
- The database of the Italian Real Estate Market Observatory (REMO)—by the Revenue Agency—provides general information on the structure of real estate; REMO data refer to the period from 2006 to 2022 and are aggregated in
- -
- the Microzones (MZ), consisting of five main classes aggregating 34 subsets distinguishing historical centres, semi-central and peripheral areas, industrial or craft areas, coastal and rural areas;
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- residential buildings, economic dwellings, boxes, industrial buildings, typical buildings, laboratories, warehouses, shops, offices, structured offices, villas, and cottages (by a topology);
- The database of the Regional Plan of Mining Activities (PRAE), which lists the mining concessions and authorisations of the companies operating in Sardinia (updated to 2004): the PRAE also identifies active and inactive (i.e., upgraded or abandoned) quarries. This information tool has made it possible to measure both the degree of exploitation and anthropisation of the territory to produce traditional buildings and the possibilities for reactivating this production chain as an important part of local identities underlying a consolidated building culture.
3.3. The Model
3.3.1. Territorial Units
- The first works at the municipal scale with the details of the NSI CS and consists of 5170 tUNSICS and 140 iUNSICS (the information units provided by the NSI database);
- The second consists of the areas identified by the MZs coming from the Real Estate Market Observatory (ReMO) of the National Revenue Agency (NRA), which extends to the 92 municipalities under study, forming a database of 3814 tUReMOMZ. Since the latter distinguish historical centres, zones of the first and second expansion, commercial and industrial zones, peripheral and coastal zones, and rural areas, through the functions of spatial association, the CS belonging to each MZ has been identified in order to be able to enrich the territorial real estate information (Real Estate Territorial Information) with the socio-economic and building information (Socio-economic Building Information) coming from the NSI at the retail of CS, thus being able to link heterogeneous levels of information related to different systems. This intermediate information apparatus consists of two sub-databases that coordinate a total of 5170 tUs and 1020 iUs (30 iUNSICS for each of the 34 ReMO MZs);
- The third database consists of the Municipalities bounded by the NSI in 2023 and according to the 2011 survey. It uses the aggregations of the iUs attributed to each tUs of the two above-mentioned databases and elaborations made on the basis of the available thematic maps. The last database, which represents the entire set of observations and indices for all municipalities and is the main basis of the evaluation model, is composed of 92 tUNSIM (rows) and a total of 527 iUNSIM (columns).
3.3.2. The MAVT-Based Model
3.3.3. Attributes: Measurements and Valuations
3.4. Phases of Use of the Model
- The first coordinates are the set of databases consulted in a hierarchical model in which each unit of information finds its place in each of the four systems mentioned above; on the basis of this information, detailed and synthetic index maps are produced in order to describe and consequently evaluate the municipal territories from the point of view of the four systems studied;
- The second phase focuses on the aspects of abandonment by defining specific measurement indicators; the mapping of indices allows us to understand aspects of asymmetry between significantly different areas of the territory;
- The third phase, based on the results of the previous two phases, describes the relationships between structural aspects (Natural System and Urban System) and anthropic aspects (Social System and Economic System) in an attempt to identify, measure, and represent landscape risk in terms of its main drivers.
4. Application and Results
4.1. Landscape(s)
4.1.1. Natural System
- Granitoid complex;
- Rocks and haplitic groups;
- Plateau basalts;
- Sediments:
- 4.1.
- Water bodies;
- 4.2.
- Related to gravity;
- 4.3.
- Historical succession.
4.1.2. Urban System
4.1.3. Social System
4.1.4. Economic System
4.2. Abandonment(s)
4.2.1. The Collective Dimension: Land Abandonment
- Stone economies, given by the ratio between the total area of inactive quarries and the total area of active quarries within the boundaries of each municipality;
- Agricultural economies, given by the ratio of the inverse of the agricultural area in use to the total agricultural area;
- Industrial settlements, given by the number of disused industrial buildings (taken from the website sardegnaabbandonata.it [55]) out of the total municipal territory;
- Built heritage, given by the total number of unused buildings out of the total number of buildings.
4.2.2. The Individual Dimension: Home Abandonment
- Dwellings—disused ones compared to total dwellings;
- Historic centres—residential buildings not in use in historic centres in relation to the total;
- Dwelling ownership—rented or otherwise occupied dwellings compared with owner-occupied ones;
- Thinning—the number of residents per dwelling.
4.3. Interpretation: Drivers of Abandonment
- -
- The productive system, in terms of the relationship between the causes and effects of land abandonment (quarries, agricultural land). The greater efficiency in the use of the productive potential of local assets indicates a certain resistance to abandonment in both clusters, but more so in the coastal areas, both because of their greater dynamism and because of the location of some important productive settlements (Figure 15a);
- -
- The landscape components: although with a very low index of determination, both coastal and mountain communities show an increasing tendency to land abandonment. Because of the value of the landscape, communities seem to opt for the possibility of exploiting local resources (Figure 15b);
- -
- The characteristics of settled communities in terms of density, heterogeneity, and occupation of dwellings. In this case, the two clusters interpret the relationship between the abandonment index and social integration differently. Coastal areas are, on average, more socially integrated and seem to resist abandonment, unlike mountain communities (Figure 15c).
- -
- The characteristics of the urban housing system in terms of the state of conservation and the heritage value of the buildings. In mountain areas, the degree of abandonment is higher for buildings in a poor state of preservation, while in coastal areas, on the contrary, the tendency to abandon houses increases for those in a very good state of preservation due to the seasonal use of the buildings. The heritage value constitutes a driver of resilience in both clusters, showing how urban identity tends to create a stable link between the population and the house (Figure 16a);
- -
- The economy of the settled communities in terms of income and employment levels. The two clusters are very different in these two respects; the richer coastal areas confirm one of the main risks of abandonment due to the friction between the traditional economy of local production and the newer economy of services linked to seasonal tourism; in fact, while the richer inland communities maintain the link with housing, the opposite is the case in the coastal areas, precisely because of the preponderance of housing used by non-residents (Figure 16b);
- -
- The characteristics of households in terms of the number of members and the relationship between households and housing are measured by the percentage of owner-occupied dwellings. For both clusters, the size of the household is an element of resilience that is more evident in the interior; on the contrary, the relationship between the abandonment rate and the number of households living in rented accommodation outlines divergent trends in the two clusters; in coastal areas, the tendency towards abandonment denotes those cities where the high number of rented households in relation to the total is justified by the low number of inhabitants and high market prices of dwellings, as well as the presence of temporary work and study opportunities; in inland areas, the resilience to abandonment denotes a more complex urban reality, as in Cargeghe and Luogosanto, where a wider range of economic activities and more job opportunities seem to incentivise renting (Figure 16c).
5. Discussion
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- support wide area planning in identifying development strategies that originate predominantly from their own territorial capacities in order to foster forms of autonomy consistent with the profile outlined by the measures implemented against the COVID-19 pandemic [76];
- -
- -
- reinterpret abandoned industrial, productive, and urban sites by recognising them as resources with a high capacity to generate new development paths for local communities, according to a holistic vision that integrates environment, society, and economy, as proposed by the new Regional Development Plan (RDP) 2020–2024 [81,82,83] and also in line with the objectives of the SDGs [84].
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Monsù Scolaro, A.; Cappello, C. The Realms of Abandonment: Measures and Interpretations of Landscape Value/Risk in Northern Sardinia (Italy). Land 2023, 12, 1274. https://doi.org/10.3390/land12071274
Monsù Scolaro A, Cappello C. The Realms of Abandonment: Measures and Interpretations of Landscape Value/Risk in Northern Sardinia (Italy). Land. 2023; 12(7):1274. https://doi.org/10.3390/land12071274
Chicago/Turabian StyleMonsù Scolaro, Antonello, and Cheren Cappello. 2023. "The Realms of Abandonment: Measures and Interpretations of Landscape Value/Risk in Northern Sardinia (Italy)" Land 12, no. 7: 1274. https://doi.org/10.3390/land12071274
APA StyleMonsù Scolaro, A., & Cappello, C. (2023). The Realms of Abandonment: Measures and Interpretations of Landscape Value/Risk in Northern Sardinia (Italy). Land, 12(7), 1274. https://doi.org/10.3390/land12071274