Post Un-Lock : From Territorial Vulnerabilities to Local Resilience.
Main Author: | |
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Other Authors: | , |
Format: | eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Cham :
Springer International Publishing AG,
2023.
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Edition: | 1st ed. |
Series: | The Urban Book Series
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Click to View |
Table of Contents:
- Intro
- Preface
- Contents
- Part I The Research
- 1 Post-pandemic Challenges. The Role of Local Governance for Territorial Resilience
- 1.1 Framing Territorial Resilience
- 1.2 Territorial Resilience. Does the Scale Matter?
- 1.3 Converging Experimentations: Challenges, Methodologies, and Tools for Post-pandemic Territories and Cities
- References
- Part II Topics
- 2 Notes on Spatial Implications of COVID-19. Evidence from Piedmont Region, Italy
- 2.1 How Do Spatial Implications Matter in the COVID-19 Pandemic?
- 2.2 Methodology
- 2.3 Results and Discussions
- 2.4 Lessons Learned from COVID-19. The Leading Role of Spatial Dimension
- 2.5 Contributions
- References
- 3 The Role of the Minor Hydrographic System in Increasing the Ecological Network
- 3.1 Introduction: The Ecological Network for Planning at the Local Scale
- 3.2 The Minor Hydrological System in Mappano
- 3.3 The Value of Minor Waterways for the Construction of Local Ecological Network and Green and Blue Infrastructures
- 3.4 Discussion
- 3.5 Conclusion
- References
- 4 Ecosystem Services and Territorial Resilience: The Role of Green and Blue Infrastructure
- 4.1 Introduction
- 4.1.1 The Territorial Interpretation for Resilience and Well-Being
- 4.1.2 Methods and Data
- 4.2 Morphological Conditions and Land Uses in Basse di Stura
- 4.3 Mapping Ecosystem Service for Territorial Resilience
- 4.3.1 The Land Cover Piemonte Database and the Habitat Quality Model
- 4.3.2 Design Scenarios for Basse di Stura
- 4.4 Discussion and Open Issues
- 4.5 Conclusion
- References
- 5 Indicators and Scenarios for Sustainable Development at the Local Level
- 5.1 Introduction
- 5.2 Methodology
- 5.2.1 Phase 1: Indicators Selection
- 5.2.2 Phase 2: A Baseline Scenario
- 5.3 Results
- 5.4 Conclusion and Future Developments
- References.
- 6 Towards Neighbourhoods as Minimum Units of Resilience?
- 6.1 Neighbourhoods and Pandemic
- 6.2 The Ideal Type of the Neighbourhood Unit
- 6.3 The Spanish Superilla
- 6.4 The 15-Min City
- 6.5 Are Minimum Units of Resilience a Worthwhile Target?
- References
- Part III Case Studies
- 7 NO2 Concentrations and COVID-19 in Local Systems of Northwest Italy
- 7.1 Introduction
- 7.2 Materials and Methods
- 7.3 Results
- 7.3.1 Descriptive Analysis
- 7.3.2 Statistical Analysis
- 7.4 Discussion and Conclusions
- References
- 8 The COVID-19 Effects and the Development Process of Lanzo Valleys in a Metro-Mountain Perspective
- 8.1 Introduction. Lanzo Valleys and the Metro-Mountain Perspective
- 8.2 Research Methodology
- 8.2.1 Elements Emerging from the Analysis
- 8.2.2 Focus on the Area: The Protected Areas for Biodiversity, Health, and Sustainable Development
- 8.3 New Metro-Mountain Relationships for Local Sustainability
- References
- 9 Analysis of Hydrogeological Risks Related to Climate Change: Testing the ClimeApp Assessment Tool on the Torino Nord Homogenous Zone
- 9.1 Introduction
- 9.2 The ClimeApp Assessment Tool
- 9.3 Testing ClimeApp on the Homogeneous Zone of Pinerolo
- 9.4 The Application of ClimeApp to the Homogeneous Zone of North Turin
- 9.4.1 Context and Methodology
- 9.4.2 Cross-Cutting Remarks and Indicators
- 9.4.3 Results
- 9.4.4 Discussion and Conclusion
- References
- 10 From Knowledge to Land-Use Planning: Local Resilient Experience in the Territory of the Municipality of Mappano
- 10.1 A Landscape Resilience Perspective
- 10.2 A Case Study of Local Resilience
- 10.3 Analysing and Understanding the Environmental and Landscape System
- 10.4 Analysing and Understanding the Environmental and Landscape System: Landscape Sensitivity.
- 10.5 Analysing and Understanding the Environmental and Landscape System: Accessibility and Sustainable Mobility
- 10.6 Conclusion: Reasoning in an Integrated Perspective
- References
- 11 Space for Rights. The School Between Planning Standard and Social Innovation
- 11.1 Introduction
- 11.1.1 Planning Standards, Urban Welfare, and the Spatial Structure of the City
- 11.1.2 Common Goods and Social Innovation
- 11.2 The Case Study of Settimo Torinese
- 11.2.1 Schools and Proximity Areas. Creating Settlement Conditions for an Innovative School-City-Territory Project
- 11.2.2 An Established Participatory Tradition and a Future for the Community in Action
- 11.3 Conclusion
- References
- Part IV Digital Tools
- 12 The 3D Metric Survey for the Digital Cartographic Production to Support the Knowledge of the New Municipality of Mappano
- 12.1 Introduction
- 12.2 The Case Study
- 12.3 Methodology
- 12.3.1 Data Acquisition
- 12.3.2 The Geo-Topographic Database
- 12.4 Results
- 12.4.1 Cartographic Products
- 12.4.2 The Digitalization Process and the BDTRE
- 12.5 Conclusions and Future Perspectives
- References
- 13 Source and Data for the Analysis of the Metropolitan Territory with GIS Tools: A Critical Review Between Commercial and Open Access Tools
- 13.1 Introduction
- 13.2 Background: Open Data in the Big Data Era and Its Relevance in Spatial Analysis
- 13.2.1 Data as a Common Good
- 13.2.2 Volume of Data and Information Extraction: Big Data
- 13.2.3 Where Is Big Data Coming From?
- 13.2.4 Data Availability and Access: Some Critical Issues
- 13.3 Availability and Access to GIS-Based Data on the Metropolitan City of Turin
- 13.3.1 Satellite Images
- 13.3.2 Physical and Basic Cartography
- 13.3.3 Demographic Data
- 13.3.4 Vehicular Flows
- 13.3.5 Soft Mobility
- 13.3.6 Energy Consumption
- 13.3.7 Risk and Hazards.
- 13.3.8 Health Data
- 13.3.9 Presence of Services
- 13.4 Conclusions
- References
- Part V Lesson Learned and Perspectives
- 14 Final Remarks on the Implementation of the Post-pandemic City and the Role of Technology
- References.