21010190-1 - URBAN PLANNING

To provide the main methods and tools of context analysis and design of urban transformations in the prospect of urban regeneration and sustainable development, coordinating the use of Urban Agenda methods and operational tools of urbanism.
The workshop activity will be instrumental in experimenting the knowledge needed to clarify the main issues to be addressed and to formulate and argue a project proposal, being aware of its implications.

Canali

scheda docente | materiale didattico

Programma

The course addresses urban-scale design topics within the framework of methods established by the new Master Plan (PRG) of the city of Rome, focusing on themes such as: urban regeneration, particularly in public housing neighborhoods; public space design; the integration of climate change mitigation and adaptation goals into urban projects; and the involvement of local communities throughout the various phases of the design process.
The workshop provides elements of urban planning at the scale of operational municipal planning, referencing both the general planning scale and the principles and methods of sustainable urban development.
Study topic: urban regeneration in Rome, considering infrastructure, services, and the ecological network, within the perspective of ecological transition. The work will focus on developing strategies and intervention programs for urban regeneration and for restoring the environmental and landscape values of Rome’s Piani di Zona (I PEEP and II PEEP).
In particular, the proposed interventions will concern selected Piani di Zona in problematic contexts where the “public neighborhood” interacts and contrasts with other urban forms. Special attention will be given to the structural conditions—physical, economic, and social—for the production and renewal of public goods, including a quantitative assessment of infrastructure, services, and standards.


Testi Adottati

Donolo, C. (a cura di). (2006). Il futuro delle politiche pubbliche. Milano: Bruno Mondadori, pp. 141-155
Gabellini, P. (2018). Le mutazioni dell'urbanistica. Principi, tecniche, competenze. Roma: Carocci.
Lynch, K. (2001). L'immagine della città. Marsilio.
Secchi, B. (2000). Prima lezione di urbanistica. Roma-Bari: Laterza.
Tiezzi, E., & Pulselli, R. M. (2008). Città fuori dal caos. La sostenibilità dei sistemi urbani. Roma: Donzelli Editore


Bibliografia Di Riferimento

Cellamare, C. (2016). Le diverse periferie di Roma e le forme di autorganizzazione. Sapienza Università di Roma. https://www.urbanit.it/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/3_BP_Cellamare_C.pdf Cioffi, C. (2016). Dalle politiche della casa alla trasformazione urbana: I programmi complessi. In RISE – Rivista di Studi sulla Sostenibilità, V (Numero speciale: Città e territorio), 109–122. https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/80337913.pdf Comune di Roma, Nuovo PRG 2003. www.urbanistica.comune.roma.it Fioretti, C., Pertoldi, M., Busti, M. e Van Heerden, S. (cur.), Manuale delle strategie di sviluppo urbano sostenibile. Commissione Europea (2020). https://urban.jrc.ec.europa.eu/urbanstrategies/static/data/pdf/IT_MANUALE%20DELLE%20STRATEGIE%20DI%20SVILUPPO%20URBANO%20SOSTENIBILE.pdf Labsus – Laboratorio per la sussidiarietà. (2022). Luoghi Comuni. Appunti per le città del futuro. Fondazione Cariplo. https://www.labsus.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/LaCittaIntorno_LuoghiComuni-Digital.pdf [LUOGHICOMU...I - Labsus] Mattogno, C. (a cura di), & Romano, R. (a cura di). (2019). Dalla casa al paesaggio. Edilizia residenziale pubblica e mutamenti dell'abitare a Roma (Ediz. a colori). Gangemi Editore. Moreno, C., Allam, Z., Chabaud, D., Gall, C., & Pratlong, F. (2021). Introducing the “15-Minute City”: Sustainability, resilience and place identity in future post-pandemic cities. Smart Cities, 4(1), 93–111. https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities4010006 OECD (2023), Un approccio integrato alle infrastrutture verdi in Italia, OECD Publishing, Paris, https://doi.org/10.1787/4b449b4e-it UN-Habitat United Nations Human Settlements Programme (2015), Guiding Principles for City Climate Action Planning First published in Nairobi in 2015 by. https://e-lib.iclei.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Guiding-Principles-for-City-Climate-Action-Planning.pdf

Modalità Frequenza

Attendance is mandatory, with a minimum presence of 75% of the total hours.

Modalità Valutazione

The design work will be carried out in working groups of two to four members, each equipped with a laptop for project activities. Final submissions will be produced in A3, A2, or A1 format, or as a booklet, using freehand or digital techniques. To prepare the project portfolio, the following resources are required: materials from the Master Plan (PRG), base cartography, and proficiency in key GIS and CAD software (e.g., QGIS). The planned development phases include: • Identification and survey of the study area, including local infrastructure and services, physical and social degradation phenomena, and opportunities for intervention offered by the new PRG and its compatibility with the PTPR (Regional Landscape Plan). The context analysis must include an understanding and synthesis of data related to topography, hydrographic networks, environmental macro-systems, land and agricultural parceling (where present), built morphology, and vegetation patterns, with chronological comparisons. • Summary of key public objectives derived from the PRG forecasts and the knowledge framework of the plan, or its potential variations, with particular attention to the preservation/restoration of landscape values, the system of proximity and urban-scale public services, and the sizing of social housing provisions. This phase will include an assessment of existing territorial facilities and a preliminary sizing of desirable provisions, based on recent cultural and administrative approaches that aim to go beyond traditional urban planning standards. • Development of a preliminary strategic framework and intervention strategy (Concept Plan), along with a program of actions to be implemented (Master Plan).