TY - JOUR
T1 - Remaking the material fabric of the city:‘Alternative’ low carbon spaces of transformation or continuity?
AU - Hodson, Michael
A2 - Burrai, Elisa
A2 - Barlow, Catherine
N1 - The authors acknowledge the support of the UK EPSRC-funded Retrofit 2050 project (Grant number EP/I002162/1) and the Mistra Urban Futures Greater Manchester Local Interaction Platform in producing this paper. They are also grateful to Simon Marvin for his support in developing the ideas in this paper. The paper has benefitted from the very helpful comments of four reviewers.
PY - 2015/6
Y1 - 2015/6
N2 - This article is about re-making the material fabric of the city and the role that space plays in this. There are many ways of under-standing the remaking of the city, including a range of often diverse‘alternative’ initiatives which are enacted by neighbourhood, voluntary and civil society groups. We address the construction of ‘alternative’ urban low carbon spaces and whether these result in transformation of or continuity with dominant ways of thinking about remaking the city. Drawing on examples in Greater Manchester, UK, the article argues that, often despite the intention to promote forms of localist values and strategies as alternatives to dominant accounts of remaking the city, the hand of dominant and particularly state interests is critical in shaping ‘alternative’ spaces and strategies. This tension – between dominant and alternative– is illustrated through a five-fold typology of the role of space in alternative strategies of remaking the city.
AB - This article is about re-making the material fabric of the city and the role that space plays in this. There are many ways of under-standing the remaking of the city, including a range of often diverse‘alternative’ initiatives which are enacted by neighbourhood, voluntary and civil society groups. We address the construction of ‘alternative’ urban low carbon spaces and whether these result in transformation of or continuity with dominant ways of thinking about remaking the city. Drawing on examples in Greater Manchester, UK, the article argues that, often despite the intention to promote forms of localist values and strategies as alternatives to dominant accounts of remaking the city, the hand of dominant and particularly state interests is critical in shaping ‘alternative’ spaces and strategies. This tension – between dominant and alternative– is illustrated through a five-fold typology of the role of space in alternative strategies of remaking the city.
U2 - 10.1016/j.eist.2015.06.001
DO - 10.1016/j.eist.2015.06.001
M3 - Article
SN - 2210-4224
JO - Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions
JF - Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions
ER -