A New Time Based Urban Agenda. Exploring the 15 minute city in concepts and practices

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Pathway The study is divided into three sections. Section 1. The ‘New’ Urban Planning Concept & Its International Debate presents the ’15-minute city’ as a ‘new spatial planning concept’ as proposed by Carlos Moreno and C40 cities as well as the debate and discussion around the propositions. The section is synthesised by undertaking an exhaustive methodological documentation and analysis by actively participating in various online conferences and seminars that were published over the period of seven months (starting from the November 2020 to May 2021), as well as by putting various media articles and reports on ’15-minute city’ under an analytical scrutiny. These discussions are primarily conceptualised based on the current normative understanding of ‘city making’ and the various socio-economic processes related to it. Through these discussions, I have attempted to provide pragmatism to the concept and reflect on the spatial features of the FMC. Section 2. Contrasting the Concept with Empirical Application is dedicated to testing the application of the FMC concept in real-time context. I do so by undertaking empirical investigation of cities of Portland, Melbourne and Paris that have embraced the concept. The potentialities and conflicts discovered in the first section are put to test. The case studies are based on rigorous content analysis of various official documents of the three cities and preliminary interviews of city officials (Melbourne) that were undertaken during participation in various seminars/webinars. A discussion regarding the findings and synthesis ensues in the subsequent part of the section. Section 3. Discussion and Conclusion presents and discusses the insights gained from the empirical findings. It binds together the initial assumption of FMC being a ‘new spatial planning concept’ to the findings of the study of FMC being a ‘communicative tool’. It delivers the goal of the study, i.e. situating the significance of the Rhetoric from the urban planning perspective. These three sections are expanded into 6 chapters. While the first two chapter concern the section 1, Chapter 3 and 4 relate to section 2 and Section 3 is composed of Chapter 5 and 6.

Chapter 1. The x-minute city starts by briefly introducing a few prominent ‘time based’ narratives floating in ‘post-pandemic- urban planning space’ namely, 1-minute city, 15minute city and 30-minute city. The chapter is dedicated to discussing the ’15-minute city’ as a new ‘spatial planning model’ and its components put forward by Moreno .et. al., the main proponents of the concept. Chapter 2. A critical appraisal: Arguments in favour and Critical Voices presents the various point of views offered by prominent experts in urban planning and theory like Saskia Sassen, Richard Florida, Jan Gehl, Edward Glaeser, Andres Duany and Ezio Manzini, and their take on the ’15-minute city’ as a spatial planning concept. These various opinions can be divided into themes of common agreement, or consensus, that underline the commonly agreed upon characteristics of FMC and thus provide a positive thrust to its implementation, and themes of conflict, or tensions derived from some ‘critical voices’ that should be addressed for successful implementation of the concept.

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6min
pages 129-131

List of References

16min
pages 137-147

6.2. Relevance of Study and future scope of work

3min
pages 134-136

Table 5 - Creating and Governing ‘Proximity’ in compact cities

1min
page 128

5.1.1. Strategy of ‘Enabling Service Localization in Neighbourhoods’

4min
pages 122-123

5.1.2. Strategy of ‘Defining and Providing services to people’

7min
pages 124-127

5.1. Creating ‘proximity city’ starting from Neighbourhoods and people

4min
pages 120-121

Figure 37 - Principle of Networked urban system and its features

3min
pages 115-118

Chapter 5. A discussion regarding ‘proximity city’ and ‘Fifteen-minute City’

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page 119

Figure 36 - Principle of Sustainable mobility and its features

1min
page 113

4.2.3. Principle 3: Distributed and networked urban system

2min
page 114

4.2.2. Principle 2: Multi-modal sustainable transport

4min
pages 111-112

Table 4 - Comparison of Empirical models of spatial planning to Moreno’s FMC proposition

4min
pages 103-104

Chapter 4. Findings and Synthesis: The Spatial form of FMC

1min
page 100

3.4. Interpretative remarks on the Case study descriptions

3min
pages 98-99

Figure 31 – Framework of Paris En Commun strategy

2min
pages 91-92

Figure 32 - Various Strategic projects scheduled till 2030 in Greater Paris region

5min
pages 94-97

suburban areas

1min
pages 82-83

3.2.3. Strategies for spatial proximity

4min
pages 80-81

3.3.2. The FMC: The Quarter Hour City

2min
page 90

Figure 21 - The built environment of Central city, middle ring neighbourhoods, and outer neighbourhoods of Melbourne Metropolitan Area

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Figure 20 - Melbourne’s Urban footprint compared to inner city

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Figure 15 - Components of Complete Neighbourhoods and the city scale connected network of complete neighbourhoods

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Figure 14 - Strategic Framework of Portland Plan

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pages 63-64

Figure 18 - Portland's Urban Design Framework

5min
pages 69-72

3.1.2. The FMC: Complete neighbourhoods (formerly 20-minute city

2min
page 62

Figure 17 - Portland's Investment Strategy to prioritize strategic neighbourhoods

3min
pages 67-68

Figure 12 - Territorial Governance of Portland city

1min
page 60

Chapter 3. Exploring the Empirical Application of FMC

1min
page 58

2.4.4. Scope and Limitations of case studies

5min
pages 55-57

2.4.3. Case study methodology, unit of analysis, materials, and methods

2min
page 54

Figure 10 - FMC's synonymity to Garden city concept

2min
pages 47-48

2.3. Interpretative remarks, problem statement & way forward to case studies

4min
pages 49-50

2.2.2. FMC and Challenge to ‘walkable’ Neighbourhood space metric

2min
page 40

2.2. Critical Voices

2min
page 37

Figure 8 – Fifteen-minutes and distance covered through various transport modes and its actual overlay on Paris’ urban footprint

5min
pages 42-44

2.1.2. FMC and Planning for resilience

2min
page 33

2.1.3. FMC and Reconnecting residents to proximity services

3min
pages 35-36

Chapter 2. Arguments in favour and Critical Voices

1min
page 31

Chapter 1. The x-minute city

1min
page 18

Figure 1- The One minute city and the 30 minute city variants

2min
pages 19-20

Figure 4 - Prescriptive Elements of Moreno's 15-minute city framework

5min
pages 25-28

1.2. The 15-minute city framework

1min
page 24

2.3. FMC and Challenge of existing demographic and socio-economic differential in

2min
page 14

Introduction

2min
page 13

1.3. Interpretative Remarks

3min
pages 29-30

Pathway

4min
pages 15-16
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