Greening the Greyfields : New Models for Regenerating the Middle Suburbs of Low-Density Cities.

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Newton, Peter W.
Other Authors: Newman, Peter W. G., Glackin, Stephen., Thomson, Giles.
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Singapore : Springer Singapore Pte. Limited, 2021.
Edition:1st ed.
Subjects:
Online Access:Click to View
Table of Contents:
  • Intro
  • Preface
  • Contents
  • About the Authors
  • Abbreviations
  • List of Figures
  • List of Tables
  • List of Boxes
  • 1: The Global Greyfields Transition: Why Urban Redevelopment in Low-Density, Car-Based Middle Suburbs Needs a New Model
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 The 10 Transitions in Greening the Greyfields
  • 2.1 Transition 1: Urban Fabrics
  • 2.2 Transition 2: Building Typologies
  • 2.3 Transition 3: The Evolving Spatial Patterns of Urban Industrial Cycles
  • 2.4 Transition 4: Housing Life Cycles and Residential Redevelopment
  • 2.5 Transition 5: Changing Household Structures and Composition
  • 2.6 Transition 6: Overcoming Multiple Problems of Sprawl and Regenerating Car-Dependent Suburbs
  • 2.7 Transition 7: Aligning Metropolitan Planning Strategies with Urban Redevelopment Needs
  • 2.8 Transition 8: Overcoming Failure of Current Urban Infill Strategies to Achieve Sustainable Redevelopment and Targeted Housing Yields
  • 2.9 Transition 9: A New 'Missing Middle' Model for Housing and Urban Redevelopment: Greyfield Precinct Regeneration
  • 2.10 Transition 10: Establishing 'Precinct' as a Scale for Regenerative Redevelopment
  • 3 The Challenge of GPR: Charting the Transition
  • 4 Conclusion
  • References
  • 2: The Greyfield Challenge to Australian Governments
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Challenges Faced by Australian Cities
  • 2.1 Housing Needs and Services
  • 2.2 Ecological Issues
  • 2.3 Planning Failure
  • 2.4 Urban Structure
  • 2.5 An Urban-Planning Transformation Agenda
  • 2.6 Conclusion
  • References
  • 3: Distributed Green Technologies for Regenerating Greyfields
  • 1 Introduction
  • 1.1 Technological Innovation: The Sixth Wave
  • 2 New Distributed Technologies
  • 2.1 Renewable Energy, Rooftop Solar, and Batteries
  • 2.2 Integrated Water-Sensitive Systems Combined with Biophilic Urbanism.
  • 2.3 Circular-Economy Technologies
  • 2.4 Smart City-Based Demand Management
  • 3 Case Studies
  • 3.1 White Gum Valley
  • 3.2 East Village
  • 4 Conclusion
  • References
  • 4: Transport and Urban Fabrics: Moving from TODs to TACs with Greyfield Regeneration
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Urban Fabrics and Urban Metabolism
  • 3 Cities' Current Mobility Trends and Trajectories
  • 4 TODs and TACs
  • 5 New Transit and Transit-Activated GPRs
  • 6 Micro-Mobility and Active Transport in Transit-Activated GPRs
  • 7 Delivering Transit-Activated GPR
  • 8 Conclusion
  • References
  • 5: Climate Resilience and Regeneration: How Precincts Can Adapt to and Mitigate Climate Change
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Metropolitan Climate Projections and Bioregional Considerations
  • 3 Climate-Adaptation Strategies
  • 3.1 Benefits of Urban Nature
  • 3.2 Planning for Urban Nature-Based Solutions
  • 4 Integrating Nature-Based Solutions at the Precinct Scale
  • 4.1 Water
  • 4.2 Urban Heat
  • 4.3 Urban Vegetation
  • 5 Conclusion
  • References
  • 6: Changing Attitudes to Housing and Residential Location in Cities: The Cultural Clash and the Greyfield Solution
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Greening the Greyfields Survey
  • 2.1 Stated Preferences for Dwelling Type and Preferred 'Living Arrangement'
  • 2.2 Exploring NIMBYism: Resident Perspectives on Neighbourhood Densification and Change
  • 2.3 Exploring YIMBYism: Perspectives on Resident-led Residential Redevelopment
  • 3 Meshing Housing Life Cycle and Household Life Cycle Analyses: A Step Towards Realising GPR
  • 4 Conclusion
  • References
  • 7: Planning, Design, Assessment, and Engagement Processes for Greyfield Precinct Regeneration
  • 1 A Framework for Smart Regenerative Urban Development at Precinct Scale
  • 2 Governance Processes for Greyfield Precinct Renewal.
  • 2.1 Declaration of Greyfields as Areas Capable of Delivering More Housing Supply, Choice, and Diversity
  • 2.2 A Broad Analysis of an Entire City's Potential for Greyfield Regeneration Needs to Become Part of Future Metropolitan Strategic Planning Processes
  • 2.3 Locate Candidate Precincts for GPR at Municipal Level: Data Analytics
  • 2.4 Identify GPR Precincts for Rezoning: Municipal-Community-State Government Engagement
  • 2.5 Establish Normal Planning Processes for GPR Precincts: Municipal-State Government Processes
  • 3 Design for Greyfield Precinct Regeneration
  • 3.1 Dwelling Typologies
  • 3.2 Street Typologies and Activation
  • 4 Precinct Design Assessment Tools
  • 5 Stakeholder Engagement
  • 5.1 Legislative Engagement and Political Risk-Mitigation
  • 5.2 Landowner Engagement in Pilot Precincts
  • 5.3 Engagement with Developers
  • 6 Conclusion
  • References
  • 8: Integrating Transition Processes for Regenerating the Greyfields
  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Making the Transition: What Needs to Change
  • 3 The Need for Partnerships
  • 3.1 Residents/Community
  • 3.2 Innovators/Urban Designers
  • 3.3 Urban Developers/Communities and Civil Society
  • 3.4 Federal/State/Local Government
  • 4 Getting Started
  • 5 Conclusion
  • References
  • Correction to: The Global Greyfields Transition: Why Urban Redevelopment in Low-Density, Car-Based Middle Suburbs Needs a New Model
  • Index.