Planning for 1000 Years: The Råängen Experiment

While traditional forms of urban planning are oriented towards the future, the recent turn towards experimental and challenge-led urban developments is characterized by an overarching presentism. We explore in this article how an experimental approach to urban planning can consider the long-term thr...

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Main Authors: Peter Pelzer, Roger Hildingsson, Alice Herrström, Johannes Stripple
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2021-03-01
Series:Urban Planning
Subjects:
art
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/3534
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spelling doaj-fe21fc1858c347c4bbf0059947b7d2942021-03-26T11:12:20ZengCogitatioUrban Planning2183-76352021-03-016110.17645/up.v6i1.35341902Planning for 1000 Years: The Råängen ExperimentPeter Pelzer0Roger Hildingsson1Alice Herrström2Johannes Stripple3Department of Human Geography and Spatial Planning/Urban Futures Studio, Faculty of Geosciences, Utrecht University, The NetherlandsDepartment of Political Science, Lund University, SwedenDepartment of Political Science, Lund University, SwedenDepartment of Political Science, Lund University, SwedenWhile traditional forms of urban planning are oriented towards the future, the recent turn towards experimental and challenge-led urban developments is characterized by an overarching presentism. We explore in this article how an experimental approach to urban planning can consider the long-term through setting-up ‘conversations with a future situation.’ In doing so, we draw on a unique experiment: Råängen, a piece of farmland in Lund (Sweden) owned by the Cathedral. The plot is part of Brunnshög, a large urban development program envisioned to accommodate homes, workspaces, and world-class research centers in the coming decades. We trace how Lund Cathedral became an unusual developer involved in ‘planning for thousand years,’ deployed a set of art commissions to allow reflections about values, belief, time, faith, and became committed to play a central role in the development process. The art interventions staged conversations with involved actors as well as publics geographically and temporally far away. The Råängen case illustrates how long-term futures can be fruitfully brought to the present through multiple means of imagination. A key insight for urban planning is how techniques of financial discounting and municipal zoning plans could be complemented with trust in reflective conversations in which questions are prioritized over answers.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/3534artdeep-time organizationsexperimentationlong-termplanningsweden
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Peter Pelzer
Roger Hildingsson
Alice Herrström
Johannes Stripple
spellingShingle Peter Pelzer
Roger Hildingsson
Alice Herrström
Johannes Stripple
Planning for 1000 Years: The Råängen Experiment
Urban Planning
art
deep-time organizations
experimentation
long-term
planning
sweden
author_facet Peter Pelzer
Roger Hildingsson
Alice Herrström
Johannes Stripple
author_sort Peter Pelzer
title Planning for 1000 Years: The Råängen Experiment
title_short Planning for 1000 Years: The Råängen Experiment
title_full Planning for 1000 Years: The Råängen Experiment
title_fullStr Planning for 1000 Years: The Råängen Experiment
title_full_unstemmed Planning for 1000 Years: The Råängen Experiment
title_sort planning for 1000 years: the råängen experiment
publisher Cogitatio
series Urban Planning
issn 2183-7635
publishDate 2021-03-01
description While traditional forms of urban planning are oriented towards the future, the recent turn towards experimental and challenge-led urban developments is characterized by an overarching presentism. We explore in this article how an experimental approach to urban planning can consider the long-term through setting-up ‘conversations with a future situation.’ In doing so, we draw on a unique experiment: Råängen, a piece of farmland in Lund (Sweden) owned by the Cathedral. The plot is part of Brunnshög, a large urban development program envisioned to accommodate homes, workspaces, and world-class research centers in the coming decades. We trace how Lund Cathedral became an unusual developer involved in ‘planning for thousand years,’ deployed a set of art commissions to allow reflections about values, belief, time, faith, and became committed to play a central role in the development process. The art interventions staged conversations with involved actors as well as publics geographically and temporally far away. The Råängen case illustrates how long-term futures can be fruitfully brought to the present through multiple means of imagination. A key insight for urban planning is how techniques of financial discounting and municipal zoning plans could be complemented with trust in reflective conversations in which questions are prioritized over answers.
topic art
deep-time organizations
experimentation
long-term
planning
sweden
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/3534
work_keys_str_mv AT peterpelzer planningfor1000yearstheraangenexperiment
AT rogerhildingsson planningfor1000yearstheraangenexperiment
AT aliceherrstrom planningfor1000yearstheraangenexperiment
AT johannesstripple planningfor1000yearstheraangenexperiment
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