ABSTRACT

During the last decades, many cities across the globe have gone through a transition process, moving from traditional industrial economic activities to knowledge-based ones, for a sustained economic progress. These cities revised their land-use policies to accommodate special zones for innovation activities—so-called ‘innovation districts’—to realise their knowledge-based economic development ambitions. The literature indicates that place quality of innovation districts is a critical success factor for the knowledge-based economy to flourish. However, so far there is no framework developed to assess the place quality of innovation districts. To fill this gap, this chapter proposes an evaluation framework comprised of a set of indicators derived from three spatial scales (i.e., regional, city, cluster). Numerous indicators were gathered from the interdisciplinary literature, and then they were screened, validated, and finalised by the key experts through an international Delphi survey. The analytic hierarchy process was also applied to derive the weights of the indicators. The chapter argues that the framework is an invaluable tool as it has the capability to assist city administrators, planners, and urban designers to assess and deliver high-quality innovation districts.