ABSTRACT

A new taxonomy of placemaking is needed; concerns have been expressed about the professionalization of placemaking through the proliferation of standards, zoning codes, and restrictive covenants. "Place matters" has become a mantra in many disciplines - architecture, urban planning and urban design, geography, and sociology to name a few. While conceptualized narrowly by individual disciplines, a holistic framework of placemaking is sorely missing. Mahyar Arefi seeks to fill this gap by exploring these questions: how are places physically created, socially mobilized, and politically contested?

This book explores three competing approaches to placemaking: need-based, opportunity-based, and asset-based. Using a case study approach, the book delves into each paradigm and its stages of physical formation, social mobilization, and political contestation.

part 1|31 pages

Discourses/debates

chapter 1|8 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|21 pages

Three dichotomies

part 2|62 pages

Practices/approaches

chapter 3|15 pages

Placemaking in Istanbul and Boston

chapter 4|11 pages

Need-based placemaking

chapter 5|16 pages

Opportunity-based placemaking

chapter 6|18 pages

Asset-based placemaking

part 3|33 pages

Stages/influences

chapter 7|12 pages

Evolutionary stages

chapter 8|19 pages

Influences