Cultural districts are becoming an important field of study to promote a growing number of initiatives for local development. Despite substantial research in this field, knowledge gaps remain, especially with regard to initiatives at supra-urban level. Many policy-makers, funding agencies, local administrators and managers still face important design issues. This paper contributes to the developing body of theory on cultural districts in two ways. Firstly, focusing on concepts from complexity theory, it expands the debate on the conception of cultural districts as complex adaptive systems. Secondly, it highlights the dysfunctional tensions that can arise from conflicting ways of conceiving organizations, organizing and designing among ‘promoters’ and designers. We have been involved for three years in a large project aimed at designing a wide supra-urban cultural district in Italy, financed by a major banking foundation. Adopting an organizational perspective and through participative action research, we develop an explorative case study. Our core argument is that a linear, predictable and deterministic approach to analysis and design presents many limitations for such complex projects, offering learning opportunities from the design experience.

Alberto, F., Dossena, C., Learning to design cultural districts and learning from designing them, <<EUROPEAN PLANNING STUDIES>>, 2016; 24 (4): 704-722. [doi:10.1080/09654313.2015.1133565] [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/163210]

Learning to design cultural districts and learning from designing them

Dossena, Claudia
Secondo
2016

Abstract

Cultural districts are becoming an important field of study to promote a growing number of initiatives for local development. Despite substantial research in this field, knowledge gaps remain, especially with regard to initiatives at supra-urban level. Many policy-makers, funding agencies, local administrators and managers still face important design issues. This paper contributes to the developing body of theory on cultural districts in two ways. Firstly, focusing on concepts from complexity theory, it expands the debate on the conception of cultural districts as complex adaptive systems. Secondly, it highlights the dysfunctional tensions that can arise from conflicting ways of conceiving organizations, organizing and designing among ‘promoters’ and designers. We have been involved for three years in a large project aimed at designing a wide supra-urban cultural district in Italy, financed by a major banking foundation. Adopting an organizational perspective and through participative action research, we develop an explorative case study. Our core argument is that a linear, predictable and deterministic approach to analysis and design presents many limitations for such complex projects, offering learning opportunities from the design experience.
2016
Inglese
Alberto, F., Dossena, C., Learning to design cultural districts and learning from designing them, <<EUROPEAN PLANNING STUDIES>>, 2016; 24 (4): 704-722. [doi:10.1080/09654313.2015.1133565] [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/163210]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/163210
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