Boundaries to Socially and Enviromentally Equitable Communal Spaces - Finding Common Ground for a Sustainable Urban Existence in Multicultural Oslo
Master thesis
Permanent lenke
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/298079Utgivelsesdato
2011Metadata
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Sammendrag
During periods of urban renewal, neighborhoods change at a rapid pace. Developers
and land owners with resources renovate and build newer and nicer to attract a
different market of residents to previously run-down neighborhoods. Through the
process, people of varying societal sectors become neighbors, suddenly having
(perhaps only) the element of public and communal space in common - despite
broad demographic differences. This thesis examines communal space within a
disparate, changing residential neighborhood of Oslo as a potential basis for creating
sustainable, mutually reinforcing social and environmental coexistences.
If sustainability is a goal in today’s cities, as generally defi ned by the United
Nations after Agenda 21 as the balance of equities between Social, Ecological,
and Economic components, then the question this thesis asks is - how can a
neighborhood in change promote sustainability and a harmonious coexistence of
its residents in the midst of urban renewal - where economic inequity is inherent?
Where is common ground for all residents of a place, and what are the potentials of
that ground for promoting a more sustainable urban existence - environmentally and
socially if not economically?
This study examines many of the equity issues faced by Oslo’s changing and
multicultural inner-east neighborhoods of Tøyen and Grønland - immigration,
gentrifi cation, fragmentation, discrimination, social ignorance and fear, uneven
resources and participation. Such problems apply to many of today’s cities - inequity
here has been legislated out of the government but remains buried in the subtle
layers which compose and infl uence rental and real estate structures. Within these
structures, differences between people - exercised in the built environment and its
use - are creating limitations and boundaries to social and environmental equities.
The society is as fragmented as the divided yard spaces found in the study site and
residents often have no basis for identifying with their diverse neighbors despite
proximity and shared infrastructure.
Equity and sustainability topics are a matter of values and depend on what people
see as important to their personal lives. Such values, however, differ between
residents and among stakeholder groups within neighborhoods - the lack of
communal values being capable of hindering the potentials for sustainable
coexistence. The research project is specifi cally guided by the question: How do
value disparities hinder social and environmental equity potentials of communal
spaces in a context of inherent economic inequity? From understanding privately
owned communal spaces as a part and potential resource of the greater city to
deriving local values and motivating factors in its management, the analysis attempts
to bridge societal sectors and city agendas. The fi eldwork for this thesis revolved
around defi ning the values of stakeholder groups, noting where differences occur,
and then analyzing the boundaries being reinforced by found unaligned values.
Utilizing theoretical context including topics of Sustainable Cities, Urban Renewal
and Gentrifi cation, Multicultural Neighborhoods, and Housing Theory, indicator values
of community, identity, diversity, shared space, nature, upkeep and participation were
selected. These indicator values serve as a basis for comparison of a selected range
of communal yards - what values residents and property owners claim to have, what
values are demonstrated by the built environment, and what values are demonstrated
by the usage of the built environment. Such values are derived from cases through
balancing principles from both architectural determinism and behaviorism thought.
The thesis hopes to identify causes of socio-spatial boundaries at work in the study
area which can then targeted in future planning measures to encourage more
equitable communal spaces despite the common context of economic difference and
income inequality.