Abstract

We take the first step in the development of a new field of research with the aim of merging spatial morphology and resilience science. This involves a revisiting and reunderstanding of the meaning of sustainable urban form. We briefly describe the fields of resilience science and spatial morphology. Drawing on a selected set of propositions in both fields, we put urban form in the context of the adaptive renewal cycle, a dynamic framework model used in resilience science to capture the dynamics of complex adaptive systems, of which urban systems are prime examples. We discuss the insights generated in this endeavor, dealing with some key morphological aspects in relation to four key attributes of resilience, i.e., “change,” “diversity,” “self-organization,” and “learning.” We discuss and relate these to urban form and other social variables, with special attention paid to the “backloop phase” of the adaptive renewal cycle. We conclude by postulating ways in which resilience thinking could contribute to the development of a new research frontier for addressing designs for resilient urban social-ecological systems, and end by proposing three strategic areas of research in such a field.

Highlights

  • From planet Earth to spaceship Earth: the sciences of the artificial In 1967, at the 50th annual convention of the American Planner Association, the engineer, architect, and inventor Buckminster Fuller delivered an address with the title An Operational Manual for Spaceship Earth

  • We briefly describe the fields of resilience science and spatial morphology

  • Drawing on a selected set of propositions in both fields, we put urban form in the context of the adaptive renewal cycle, a dynamic framework model used in resilience science to capture the dynamics of complex adaptive systems, of which urban systems are prime examples

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Merging spatial morphology and resilience science: a new research frontier In response to these challenges, we set into communication two theoretical fields that we consider to be well posed for opening up and addressing a new research frontier that we refer to as the “spatial morphology of urban social-ecological systems.”. These fields are “resilience theory” (Holling 1973) and “spatial morphology” as developed in “space syntax theory” (Hillier and Hanson 1984).

RESILIENCE THEORY
Findings
SPATIAL MORPHOLOGY
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