Abstract

Small towns are a significant component of the landscape in Europe and a key element of its cultural heritage. Currently, they face socio-economic crisis and spatial disintegration. Against this background, the spatial transformation of the Swiss town of Monte Carasso is of particular interest. It was initiated in the 1970s as a design intervention made by the architect Luigi Snozzi and eventually constituted a local spatial policy with a scope to maintain or even restore town urbanity and identity. This paper describes the case through its decomposition into primal elements such as context, main procedure elements, supplementary action, and obtained results. The results were measured by calculating urban parameters and observations compared with the adjacent town of Sementina, whereby they proved that the policy is effective. In the next step, a synthetic diagram was proposed that describes the interrelation between specific elements of the procedure. It was then modified to serve as a model for other possible contexts. Finally, its main potentials and limitations were described. It was concluded that the construction of the Monte Carasso urban regulatory mechanism has the potential to be replicated elsewhere. However, some of its features need to be rethought—mainly the role of an individual architect, which was highly exposed in the original case.

Highlights

  • A synthetic diagram was proposed that describes the interrelation between specific elements of the procedure

  • It was concluded that the construction of the Monte Carasso urban regulatory mechanism has the potential to be replicated elsewhere

  • Small towns are a substantial component of the landscape in Europe and a key element of its cultural heritage

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Summary

Introduction

Small towns are a substantial component of the landscape in Europe and a key element of its cultural heritage. They account for a significant fraction of the total population in Europe [1,2]. The vast majority of dynamic economic and cultural processes occur in larger cities [3]. This leads to semi-urban and rural areas (including small towns) facing an economic and social crisis [4]. The problem seems to be common—albeit with slight variation in its spectrum—across most regions in Europe [5,6,7,8,9] and beyond [10]

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