Abstract

Community regeneration has drawn much attention in both the urban development and sustainable design fields in the last decade. As a response to the regeneration challenges of Shanghai’s old and high-density communities, this article proposes two design-driven strategies: enabling residents to become innovation protagonists and facilitating collaborative entrepreneurial clusters based on the reorganization of community resources. Two ongoing collaborative projects between the Siping community and Tongji University—Open Your Space microregeneration (OYS) and the Neighborhood of Innovation, Creativity, and Entrepreneurship Towards 2035 (NICE 2035) living labs project—are adopted as main case studies. Research findings are put forward through a structured analysis of qualitative data. Firstly, we reviewed the situation and sustainable goals for Shanghai’s old residential communities, and how design-centric social innovation and collaboration can be effective interventions. Secondly, we analyzed resident empowerment approaches to decision-making, co-design, and co-management processes in OYS with participatory observation. Finally, through participants’ interviews and key events analysis in NICE 2035, we investigated how living labs reuse community distributed resources to develop lifestyle-based business prototypes. The inquiry of this article proposes a co-creation mechanism and action guides towards localized and sustainable community regeneration, which can provide a contextual paradigm for similar challenges.

Highlights

  • In the Chinese context, “community (社区)” has multiple meanings, including residential areas, residential quarters, neighborhoods, and housing estates

  • Due to the different perspectives of sociological research, scholars have not formed a unified definition of old residential community

  • Its large area and population account for the high density of the residential fabric, with a large proportion of old residential buildings

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Summary

Introduction

In the Chinese context, “community (社区)” has multiple meanings, including residential areas, residential quarters, neighborhoods, and housing estates. Due to the different perspectives of sociological research, scholars have not formed a unified definition of old residential community. These residential areas can be characterized by “comprehensive obsolescence,” in which case their functional status is affected by urban development, social needs, and material aging factors as service life increases [1]. In the 1990s, the city entered an era of rapid urban construction and real estate development, and single-function housing was the typical feature of residential communities during the period. Backward infrastructures and limited development approaches in such areas cannot meet the material and spiritual demands of contemporary residents. The systematic and sustainable regeneration of old urban communities has been an urgent issue for economic, environmental, and social development

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