Utrecht University: Creating a sustainable city: time, pragmatism and persistence
Cities want to become more sustainable, but bringing that ambition to life can be quite the challenge. Academics have to work together with urban planners to help realise sustainability transformations. But when transformation does take place, it is unlikely to come from a single radical moment of change; instead, it requires persistent small steps over time. There is always an opportunity to take such a step, according to James Patterson external linkand collaborators. Their new paper on the challenge of finding feasible action for urban transformation was published in the new Nature partner journal Urban Sustainability.
According to the researchers, transformative action needs to navigate political, social and legal feasibility. Urban planners constantly face these dilemmas, and academics may easily overlook them. But plans can run into problems, derailing promising opportunities for sustainability.
“This happened to, for example, a project in Helsinki that wanted to convert roads into green city boulevards; it encountered problems in all three areas,” Patterson and colleagues say. “Political problems, due to coalitions trying to stop the project, social problems because the project went against what local residents were used to, and legal problems where required legal provisions clashed with the project plans, among other things.”
In the shoes of urban planners
These obstacles make it difficult to sustainably transform a city in one fell swoop. “Academics are often closely involved in debates on urban sustainability,” the researchers say. “But we need to get better at putting ourselves in the shoes of urban planners to find pragmatic responses to real-world dilemmas.”
Seeing as sustainable urban transformations are difficult to plan, the researchers argue that real transformation is more likely to happen through multiple changes that accumulate over time. “City planners make decisions in their everyday work, and may be able to do things like nudging budgetary decisions and persuading other key decision-makers, which may not be obvious from the outside but can be very important for securing durable changes,” Patterson and colleagues illustrate. “The path ahead may be foggy, but we have to accept this and find ways to join up diverse actions to enable a transformative pathway to emerge.”