Abstract

Urban planning is, in many countries, increasingly becoming intertwined with local climate ambitions, investments in urban attractiveness and “smart city” innovation measures. In the intersection between these trends, urban experimentation has developed as a process where actors are granted action space to test innovations in a collaborative setting. One arena for urban experimentation is urban testbeds. Testbeds are sites of urban development, in which experimentation constitutes an integral part of planning and developing the area. This article introduces the notion of testbed planning as a way to conceptualize planning processes in delimited sites where planning is combined with processes of urban experimentation. We define testbed planning as a multi-actor, collaborative planning process in a delimited area, with the ambition to generate and disseminate learning while simultaneously developing the site. The aim of this article is to explore processes of testbed planning with regard to the role of urban planners. Using an institutional logics perspective we conceptualize planners as navigating between a public sector—and an experimental logic. The public sector logic constitutes the formal structure of “traditional” urban planning, and the experimental logic a collaborative and testing governance structure. Using examples from three Nordic municipalities, this article explores planning roles in experiments with autonomous buses in testbeds. The analysis shows that planners negotiate these logics in three different ways, combining and merging them, separating and moving between them or acting within a conflictual process where the public sector logic dominates.

Highlights

  • Urban planning is, in many countries, increasingly intertwined with local climate ambitions, including expectations on municipalities to implement sustainability goals (Davidson & Gleeson, 2018)

  • 2014) which allows for the investigation of testbed planning processes across multiple settings, and through this, gain a deeper understanding of how such processes are enacted in the intersection between the different logics

  • This article introduces the notion of testbed planning as a way to conceptualize planning processes in delimited sites where planning is combined with processes of urban experimentation

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Summary

Introduction

In many countries, increasingly intertwined with local climate ambitions, including expectations on municipalities to implement sustainability goals (Davidson & Gleeson, 2018). Urban experimentation can take the forms of urban living labs, pilot projects and testbeds, which all constitute processes where actors are granted space to develop and/or test innovations, often in collaborative settings (Menny, Voytenko Palgan, & McCormick, 2018; Mukhtar-Landgren, Kronsell, Voytenko Palgan, & von Wirth, 2019). Experiments are conducted in a range of areas from transport to energy efficient housing, with the common goal of sharing knowledge to facilitate policy learning, including scaling up and disseminating results with the ambition to generate system change (von Wirth, Fuenfschilling, Frantzekaki, & Coenen, 2019)

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