ABSTRACT

Handbook of Waterfront Cities and Urbanism is the first resource to address cities’ transformations of their coastlines and riverbanks and the resulting effects on environment, culture, and identity in a genuinely global context. Spanning cities from Gdańsk to Georgetown, this reference for design, development, and planning explores the transition of waterfronts from industrial and port zones to crowd-drawing urban spectacles within the frameworks of urban development, economics, ecology, governance, globalization, preservation, and sustainability. A collection of contextual studies, local perspectives, project reviews, and analyses of evolution and emerging trends provides critical insight into the phenomenon of waterfront development and urbanism in cities from the East to the West.

Features:

  • Explores the transformation of waterfronts from industrial hubs to urban playgrounds through the lenses of preservation, governance, economics, ecology, and more.
  • Presents chapter-length case studies drawn from cities in China, Bangladesh, Turkey, the United States, Malaysia, the European Union, Egypt, and other countries.
  • Includes contributions from an interdisciplinary team of international scholars and professionals, a much-needed corrective to the historical exclusion of researchers and issues from the Global South.

An ideal reference for graduate students, scholars, and professionals in urban planning, architecture, geography, and history, the Handbook of Waterfront Cities and Urbanism deserves to be on the shelf of urban authorities and any internationally minded academic or practitioner in real estate development, water management, preservation, or tourism.

part 1|88 pages

Settlement, Heritage, and Culture

chapter 1|25 pages

River as Lived Place in South Asian Urbanism

A Study of Buriganga Riverbank, Dhaka

chapter 3|17 pages

Indus River and Cultural Heritage

Commemoration of Three Sites in Sindh

chapter 4|14 pages

Sustainability of the Outstanding Universal Values of Historic Waterfront

Two World Heritage Sites of the Straits of Malacca

chapter 5|14 pages

Urban Threshold

A Space between Land and Water – Cases of Lisbon and Banjarmasin

part 2|85 pages

Climate, Ecology, and Water Sensitive Design

chapter 7|18 pages

Water Sensitive Urbanism in Bengal Delta

Socio-Spatial Dialectics of Ponds and Waterbodies in Barisal, Bangladesh

chapter 9|25 pages

Blue and Green Infrastructure as Public Spaces

Five Proposals for Resilient Urban Development and Social Integration in Peru

part 3|90 pages

Design, Plan, and Develop with Water

part 4|96 pages

Governance and Participation

chapter 15|20 pages

Postcolonial Water(front)

Land Regulations, Bureaucracy, and Urban Planning in Khulna

chapter 16|16 pages

Urban Megaprojects in Post-socialist Serbia

The Example of the ‘City on Water’ Project

chapter 18|20 pages

Leading the Way

The Role of Non-Profits in Waterfront Development

chapter 19|16 pages

Riverfront Regeneration for Inclusive and Healthier Cities

Retracing the Public Interest in Cairo

part 5|79 pages

Redevelopment and Emerging Issues

chapter 21|14 pages

The Bilbao Effect beyond the Guggenheim Museum

Urban and Social Renewal of a Metropolis

chapter 23|16 pages

Adaptive Strategies for Former Oil Port Areas

Educating Architects and Planners for Interventions beyond the Historic Waterfront