Terraced Landscapes Regeneration in the Perspective of the Circular Economy

Terraced landscapes were for centuries forms of sustainable and multifunctional land management, results of a long and intimate relationship between peoples and their environment. They demonstrated a rich cultural diversity and agrobiodiversity through sustainable land-use systems. These productive...

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Main Authors: Antonia Gravagnuolo, Mauro Varotto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-04-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/8/4347
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spelling doaj-e2caa170633e451691c2fe65fa4a881f2021-04-14T23:01:00ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-04-01134347434710.3390/su13084347Terraced Landscapes Regeneration in the Perspective of the Circular EconomyAntonia Gravagnuolo0Mauro Varotto1CNR IRISS Institute for Research on Innovation and Services for Development, National Research Council, 80134 Napoli, ItalyDepartment of Historical and Geographic Sciences and the Ancient World-DiSSGeA, University of Padova, 35123 Padova, ItalyTerraced landscapes were for centuries forms of sustainable and multifunctional land management, results of a long and intimate relationship between peoples and their environment. They demonstrated a rich cultural diversity and agrobiodiversity through sustainable land-use systems. These productive cultural landscapes in many cases were expressions of a pre-industrial circular model of rural development, where no resource was wasted. However, not all terraced landscapes have to be considered sustainable in themselves: in recent times, the terraces have undergone changes that have threatened their sustainability with abandonment and degradation as well as exclusively productive exploitation. This paper explores whether and how terraced landscape can recover an active role in modern society, analyzing emerging terraces recovery practices from the perspective of the circular economy. Innovative circular and productive uses of abandoned terraced landscapes aim at reducing the waste of natural and cultural resources, enlarging the lifetime (use value) of landscapes and preserving cultural and natural values for present and future generations. Results show that new functional uses of terraced landscapes are able to enhance in different ways their role as “middle landscapes” or places of mediation among economic, ecologic, ethical and aesthetic needs through circular adaptive reuse practices, becoming key drivers of new “circular” economies and a new pact between rural and urban regions.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/8/4347terraced landscapescircular economymiddle landscapescultural heritagecultural landscapeadaptive reuse
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Antonia Gravagnuolo
Mauro Varotto
spellingShingle Antonia Gravagnuolo
Mauro Varotto
Terraced Landscapes Regeneration in the Perspective of the Circular Economy
Sustainability
terraced landscapes
circular economy
middle landscapes
cultural heritage
cultural landscape
adaptive reuse
author_facet Antonia Gravagnuolo
Mauro Varotto
author_sort Antonia Gravagnuolo
title Terraced Landscapes Regeneration in the Perspective of the Circular Economy
title_short Terraced Landscapes Regeneration in the Perspective of the Circular Economy
title_full Terraced Landscapes Regeneration in the Perspective of the Circular Economy
title_fullStr Terraced Landscapes Regeneration in the Perspective of the Circular Economy
title_full_unstemmed Terraced Landscapes Regeneration in the Perspective of the Circular Economy
title_sort terraced landscapes regeneration in the perspective of the circular economy
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Terraced landscapes were for centuries forms of sustainable and multifunctional land management, results of a long and intimate relationship between peoples and their environment. They demonstrated a rich cultural diversity and agrobiodiversity through sustainable land-use systems. These productive cultural landscapes in many cases were expressions of a pre-industrial circular model of rural development, where no resource was wasted. However, not all terraced landscapes have to be considered sustainable in themselves: in recent times, the terraces have undergone changes that have threatened their sustainability with abandonment and degradation as well as exclusively productive exploitation. This paper explores whether and how terraced landscape can recover an active role in modern society, analyzing emerging terraces recovery practices from the perspective of the circular economy. Innovative circular and productive uses of abandoned terraced landscapes aim at reducing the waste of natural and cultural resources, enlarging the lifetime (use value) of landscapes and preserving cultural and natural values for present and future generations. Results show that new functional uses of terraced landscapes are able to enhance in different ways their role as “middle landscapes” or places of mediation among economic, ecologic, ethical and aesthetic needs through circular adaptive reuse practices, becoming key drivers of new “circular” economies and a new pact between rural and urban regions.
topic terraced landscapes
circular economy
middle landscapes
cultural heritage
cultural landscape
adaptive reuse
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/8/4347
work_keys_str_mv AT antoniagravagnuolo terracedlandscapesregenerationintheperspectiveofthecirculareconomy
AT maurovarotto terracedlandscapesregenerationintheperspectiveofthecirculareconomy
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