Abstract
Resource consumption and related waste production are still rapidly increasing all over the world, leading to social and environmental challenges and to the production of the so-called ‘wastescapes’. Peri-urban areas—in-between urban and rural territories—are particularly vulnerable and prone to develop into wastescapes because they are generally characterised by mixed functions and/or monofunctional settlements, as well as by fragmentation in a low-density territory that is often crossed by large infrastructure networks. Moreover, peri-urban areas are generally the selected locations for the development of plants for waste management. In this way, they are crossed by waste flows of a different nature, in a landscape of operational infrastructures and wasted landscapes. Implementing Circular Economy (CE) principles, interpreting waste and wastescapes as resources, is a way to significantly reduce raw material and (soil) resource consumption, improving cities’ metabolism. A circular approach can positively affect the spatial, social and environmental performances of peri-urban areas. However, the transition towards a CE presents many challenges. This article outlines an approach to address these challenges, presenting a co-creation process among researchers, experts and stakeholders within Living Labs (LLs) processes. LLs are physical and virtual spaces, aiming at the co-creation of site-specific eco-innovative solutions (EIS) and strategies. In the LLs, public–private–people partnerships are developed by applying an iterative methodology consisting of five phases: Co-Exploring, Co-Design, Co-Production, Co-Decision, and Co-Governance. This article presents a case study approach, analysing the co-creation methodology applied in two peri-urban living labs, located in the Metropolitan Areas of Naples (Italy) and Amsterdam (The Netherlands), within REPAiR Horizon2020 research project.
Highlights
This article is based on the European Horizon 2020 research project “REPAiR: REsource Management in Peri-urban AReas: Going Beyond Urban Metabolism”, interpreting waste and wastescapes as resources for sustainable regeneration
Eco-innovative solutions (EIS) and strategies for waste and wastescapes are developed in co-creation workshops implemented in Living Labs (LLs)
In the case of Amsterdam, the flows of Construction and Demolition Waste and Food Waste are deepened. In both cases, this research studies the spatial effects of waste flows on the landscape, as well as the life cycle of the territories which in some cases can assume the appearance of wastescapes
Summary
This article is based on the European Horizon 2020 research project “REPAiR: REsource Management in Peri-urban AReas: Going Beyond Urban Metabolism”, interpreting waste and wastescapes as resources for sustainable regeneration. Urban and territorial metabolisms are mainly linear They are characterised by a high degree of resource depletion and outbound loss. This is leading to resource consumption on one hand—related to scarcity—and to severe waste accumulation on the other. Related to the limited availability of raw materials; secondly, to the condition of the places where the availability of virgin land for agriculture is becoming scarce due to soil pollution, high imperviousness, abandonment, vacancy and decay To overcome this situation, a transition from a linear to a circular model of growth (EC, 2014; Ellen MacArthur Foundation, 2015a; European Commission, 2018) becomes the priority
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.