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Planning for intentional temporariness : Case of a community-led urban regeneration initiative in Kolkata

By: Chatterjee, Debayan.
Publisher: Mumbai Indian Institute of Architects 2021Edition: Vol.86(07), July 2021.Description: 12-21p.Subject(s): URBAN PLANNING AND DESIGN (AR-UPD)Online resources: Full Article In: Journal of the Indian institute of architects :(JIIA)Summary: ‘Change’ is the only constant in urban societies. Thus, conventional planning needs to re-evaluate its priorities and adapt new resilient approaches that refuse to build lasting imaginations and accept a transient yet robust urban narrative. This is the case for any cities, but more importantly for highly diverse cities in the Global South, typically in India, the focus of this study. The following research aims to position ‘Time-Space Planning’ as an alternative planning discourse that recognizes time as something inseparable from space. It, therefore, can empower both mainstream and marginalized actors in curating time-bound (socio-spatial) everyday practices during difficult times. To illustrate that, this research essay adopts a case study approach, and documents and analyzes an ongoing community-led regeneration initiative in Kolkata. The project exemplifies how the deliberate application of ‘Time-Space Planning’ can prevent urban decline, reduce space poverty, and support social inclusion across scales. The analysis also draws from Levy’s strategic indicators to examine the case critically through various actors and their roles, types of spatial and institutional experiments, and their contribution towards just development.
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‘Change’ is the only constant in urban societies. Thus,
conventional planning needs to re-evaluate its priorities and adapt
new resilient approaches that refuse to build lasting imaginations
and accept a transient yet robust urban narrative. This is the case
for any cities, but more importantly for highly diverse cities in the
Global South, typically in India, the focus of this study. The following
research aims to position ‘Time-Space Planning’ as an alternative
planning discourse that recognizes time as something inseparable
from space. It, therefore, can empower both mainstream and
marginalized actors in curating time-bound (socio-spatial) everyday
practices during difficult times. To illustrate that, this research
essay adopts a case study approach, and documents and analyzes
an ongoing community-led regeneration initiative in Kolkata. The
project exemplifies how the deliberate application of ‘Time-Space
Planning’ can prevent urban decline, reduce space poverty, and
support social inclusion across scales. The analysis also draws from
Levy’s strategic indicators to examine the case critically through
various actors and their roles, types of spatial and institutional
experiments, and their contribution towards just development.

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