Abstract

Compact city planning and development has, over the last 30 years or so, emerged as the preferred response to the challenges of sustainable development. Global and local urban policies promote the compact city model due to the positive outcomes of its underlying design principles and strategics as to achieving more sustainable cities in terms of their environmental, economic, and social goals. The aim of this study is to examine how the compact city model is practiced and justified in urban planning and development in relevance to sustainability, and whether any kind of practical progress has been made in this regard. To illuminate the phenomenon of the compact city accordingly, a descriptive case study is adopted as a qualitative research methodology where the empirical basis is mainly formed by urban plans in two Swedish cities: Gothenburg and Helsingborg, in combination with qualitative interview data, secondary data, and scientific literature. This study shows that compactness, density, diversity, mixed land use, sustainable transportation, and green space are the prevalent design principles and strategies of compact city planning and development, with the latter being contextually linked to the concept of “green structure,” an institutional setup under which the two Swedish cities operate. Moreover, at the core of the compact city model is the clear synergy between the underlying principles and strategies in terms of their cooperation to produce combined effects greater than the sum of their separate effects with respect to the benefits of sustainability as regards its tripartite value. Further, this study demonstrates that the compact city model as practiced by the two cities is justified by its ability to contribute to the environmental, economic, and social goals of sustainable development. However, the economic goals dominate over the environmental and social goals, notwithstanding the claim about the three dimensions of sustainability being equally important at the discursive level. Nevertheless, new planning measures are being implemented to address the relevant environmental and social issues toward balancing the three goals of sustainability and thus strengthening their influence over urban development practices.

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