2013
DOI: 10.1080/09654313.2012.722927
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Dealing with Sustainability Trade-Offs of the Compact City in Peri-Urban Planning Across European City Regions

Abstract: The compact city has become a leading concept in the planning of peri-urban areas. The compact city concept is often advocated as 'sustainable', because of claims that include lower emissions and conservation of the countryside. The literature shows, however, that there are certain trade-offs in striving for compaction, especially between environmental and social aspects of sustainability. In this paper, we describe expressions of the compact city concept in the planning practice of several European urban samp… Show more

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Cited by 172 publications
(100 citation statements)
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References 32 publications
(31 reference statements)
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“…To get the compact city work as it is intended -facilitating to increase resource efficiency and reduce consumption -it is important to secure public spaces, a dense public transport system and a mixed land use on the local scale. In this sense the compact city idea is not only translated into proximity but rather reflected in accessibility as well as mix of uses, which allows a more broad interpretation of the concept (Westerink et al, 2013). It even gets more difficult when the definition should be empirically applicable, as very different urban forms can appear as compact cities.…”
Section: Defining Resource Efficiency and The Compact Citymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…To get the compact city work as it is intended -facilitating to increase resource efficiency and reduce consumption -it is important to secure public spaces, a dense public transport system and a mixed land use on the local scale. In this sense the compact city idea is not only translated into proximity but rather reflected in accessibility as well as mix of uses, which allows a more broad interpretation of the concept (Westerink et al, 2013). It even gets more difficult when the definition should be empirically applicable, as very different urban forms can appear as compact cities.…”
Section: Defining Resource Efficiency and The Compact Citymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It can be questioned if it is possible to densify without destroying valuable nature or cultural heritage (Naess, 1997). Strategies that are often applied to deal with those "sustainability trade-offs" include urban renewal, limitations on car use, mixed land-use and life cycle residential strategies (Westerink et al, 2013). Also, there are some critiques of the idea that compact urban form really makes a difference.…”
Section: Trade-offs and Rebound Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…It is also argued that compact form can support public transport services better than dispersed form since population densities in the former case are high enough to provide efficiency in different modes of public transportation (K. Williams, 2005). Alternatively, other studies question the sustainability of compact form (Breheny, 2001;Westerink et al, 2013) and suggesting that decentralised or polycentric urban development solutions would be more efficient in terms of transport patterns. One reason for this enhanced efficiency cited in research is that multi-centred cities can provide significant transport benefits by locating residences close to employment centres (Simmonds & Coombe, 2013;K.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The concept of the sustainable city itself is broad and covers "compact cities" (Westerink et al, 2013;Howley, 2009), nature's "cities" (Davidson and Arman, 2014), as well as "cosmopolitan cities" (Fainstein, 2011), "good cities" (Gleeson 2012), eco cities (Chang and Sheppard 2013), and urban improvement ideas include a range of "green cities" concepts, development of new green cities and renovation of existing cities (Beatley, 2011).…”
Section: Sustainable Urban Development Concept and Elementsmentioning
confidence: 99%