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

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3.4. Interpretative remarks on the Case study descriptions Out of the three case studies undertaken, it was observed that Portland, compared to other two cities is a structured case study. The Portland Plan clearly defines its 20-minute neighbourhoods, its features, its relation to the scale of city and regional scale in absolute terms. The city managers have created unique tools and measurement indicators like ‘Neighbourhood leakage indicator’ and ‘Neighbourhood Economic strategies’ for intraneighbourhood governance of local amenities at city scale. These indicators suggest that the city is monitoring, both, provision and quality of services/ amenities, and thereby, as a whole, progress of neighbourhood development to meet its minimum standards from citizens’ perspective. On the other hand, the case of Melbourne shows many contingencies. The three pilot projects of Sunshine, Strathemore and Creadon in Melbourne only demonstrate community engagement for identifying street beautification projects like adding pedestrian/ bike paths and commissioning mural paintings as part of urban spaces in underutilised lots, etc. Furthermore, Melbourne case does not propose any specific indicators or strategies like Portland’s NED strategy, which make the case of Melbourne weak. However, it should be noted that the city of Portland is a relatively mature case since it was initiated in 2012, while Melbourne adopted the narrative in 2017, thus it may be assumed that the FMC policy still in development taking into account that new updated document informing the FMC policy was published, entitled ‘Plan Melbourne Addendum 2019’ as an addition to ‘Plan Melbourne 2017’. On the other hand, Portland is a relatively small city, and the scope of FMC policy is the within the city limits. Regarding Paris, FMC, at the time of writing this thesis, is only a political commitment through the current Mayor’s electoral campaign programme published in 2019. Although the Mayor has appointed a commissioner for the 15-minute city , the official city-documents studied mention only ‘neighbourhoods and eco-quartier’ terms, however, no mention of ‘Fifteen-minute city’ or city of quarter hour’ is found in official documents. (The principal document studied under Paris case study; the Paris En Commun strategy, is a part of current Mayor’s electoral campaign) In the pilot project undertaken at Paris Northgates. The white paper suggests, that only mapping of local services was undertaken and proposal for increasing community engagement was suggested.

The differentiation between scales of inner core, city, and Metropolitan scale. As mentioned above, the operating territory of FMC in Portland is the scale of city, while for Melbourne is the metropolitan territory. Both the cities have had focussed on car-oriented policies (and less on public transit access) producing low-density sprawl-like environments, especially in the suburbs, while the city centres of both the cities consist of high-rise towers and dense aggregation of population, depicting mixed land use features. Thus both the cities have combined structural spatial changes in the city, specially in the suburban areas (like installing public transit infrastructure, sidewalks, adding density through inclusionary zoning regulations) with public actions (like weekend farmers markets) and incentives to private firms for providing access to amenities to its residents.

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List of References

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6.2. Relevance of Study and future scope of work

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pages 134-136

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

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5.1.1. Strategy of ‘Enabling Service Localization in Neighbourhoods’

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pages 122-123

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

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

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Figure 37 - Principle of Networked urban system and its features

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

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Figure 36 - Principle of Sustainable mobility and its features

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4.2.3. Principle 3: Distributed and networked urban system

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4.2.2. Principle 2: Multi-modal sustainable transport

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

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

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3.4. Interpretative remarks on the Case study descriptions

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Figure 31 – Framework of Paris En Commun strategy

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

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suburban areas

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3.2.3. Strategies for spatial proximity

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3.3.2. The FMC: The Quarter Hour City

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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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Figure 18 - Portland's Urban Design Framework

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

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

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Figure 12 - Territorial Governance of Portland city

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Chapter 3. Exploring the Empirical Application of FMC

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2.4.4. Scope and Limitations of case studies

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

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Figure 10 - FMC's synonymity to Garden city concept

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

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

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2.2. Critical Voices

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

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2.1.2. FMC and Planning for resilience

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2.1.3. FMC and Reconnecting residents to proximity services

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Chapter 2. Arguments in favour and Critical Voices

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Chapter 1. The x-minute city

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

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

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1.2. The 15-minute city framework

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

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Introduction

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1.3. Interpretative Remarks

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Pathway

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