An Assessment Framework for Cities Coping with Climate Change: The Case of New York City and its PlaNYC 2030

Climate change and its resulting uncertainties challenge the concepts, procedures, and scope of conventional approaches to planning, creating a need to rethink and revise current planning methods. This paper proposes a new conceptual framework for assessing city plans based on the idea of sustainabi...

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Main Author: Yosef Jabareen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2014-09-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/6/9/5898
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spelling doaj-8bea2af0256e47b4892cfce410c818392020-11-24T22:20:10ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502014-09-01695898591910.3390/su6095898su6095898An Assessment Framework for Cities Coping with Climate Change: The Case of New York City and its PlaNYC 2030Yosef Jabareen0Faculty of Architecture and City planning; Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 32000, IsraelClimate change and its resulting uncertainties challenge the concepts, procedures, and scope of conventional approaches to planning, creating a need to rethink and revise current planning methods. This paper proposes a new conceptual framework for assessing city plans based on the idea of sustainability and planning countering climate change. It applies this framework to assess the recent master plan for the city of New York City: PlaNYC 2030. The framework consists of eight concepts that were identified through conceptual analyses of the planning and interdisciplinary literature on sustainability and climate change. Using the proposed conceptual framework to evaluate PlaNYC 2030 reveals some of the merits of the Plan. PlaNYC promotes greater compactness and density, enhanced mixed land use, sustainable transportation, greening, and renewal and utilization of underused land. With regard to the concept of uncertainty, it addresses future uncertainties related to climate change with institutional measures only. From the perspective of ecological economics, the Plan creates a number of mechanisms to promote its climate change goals and to create a cleaner environment for economic investment. It offers an ambitious vision of reducing emissions by 30% and creating a “greener, greater New York,” and links this vision with the international agenda for climate change. On the other hand, the assessment reveals that PlaNYC did not make a radical shift toward planning for climate change and adaptation. It inadequately addresses social planning issues that are crucial to New York City. NYC is “socially differentiated” in terms of the capacity of communities to meet climate change uncertainties, and the Plan fails to address the issues facing vulnerable communities due to climate change. The Plan calls for an integrative approach to climate change on the institutional level, but it fails to effectively integrate civil society, communities, and grassroots organizations into the process. The lack of a systematic procedure for public participation throughout the city’s neighborhoods and among different social groupings and other stakeholders is a critical shortcoming, particularly during the current age of climate change uncertainty. Practically, the proposed conceptual framework of evaluate appears to be an effective and constructive means of illuminating the Plan’s strengths and weaknesses, and appears to be an easy-to-grasp evaluation method, and should be easily understood and applied by scholars, practitioners and policy makers.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/6/9/5898New York CityPlaNYC 2030planningplansclimate changesustainabilityadaptationmitigationrisk
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yosef Jabareen
spellingShingle Yosef Jabareen
An Assessment Framework for Cities Coping with Climate Change: The Case of New York City and its PlaNYC 2030
Sustainability
New York City
PlaNYC 2030
planning
plans
climate change
sustainability
adaptation
mitigation
risk
author_facet Yosef Jabareen
author_sort Yosef Jabareen
title An Assessment Framework for Cities Coping with Climate Change: The Case of New York City and its PlaNYC 2030
title_short An Assessment Framework for Cities Coping with Climate Change: The Case of New York City and its PlaNYC 2030
title_full An Assessment Framework for Cities Coping with Climate Change: The Case of New York City and its PlaNYC 2030
title_fullStr An Assessment Framework for Cities Coping with Climate Change: The Case of New York City and its PlaNYC 2030
title_full_unstemmed An Assessment Framework for Cities Coping with Climate Change: The Case of New York City and its PlaNYC 2030
title_sort assessment framework for cities coping with climate change: the case of new york city and its planyc 2030
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2014-09-01
description Climate change and its resulting uncertainties challenge the concepts, procedures, and scope of conventional approaches to planning, creating a need to rethink and revise current planning methods. This paper proposes a new conceptual framework for assessing city plans based on the idea of sustainability and planning countering climate change. It applies this framework to assess the recent master plan for the city of New York City: PlaNYC 2030. The framework consists of eight concepts that were identified through conceptual analyses of the planning and interdisciplinary literature on sustainability and climate change. Using the proposed conceptual framework to evaluate PlaNYC 2030 reveals some of the merits of the Plan. PlaNYC promotes greater compactness and density, enhanced mixed land use, sustainable transportation, greening, and renewal and utilization of underused land. With regard to the concept of uncertainty, it addresses future uncertainties related to climate change with institutional measures only. From the perspective of ecological economics, the Plan creates a number of mechanisms to promote its climate change goals and to create a cleaner environment for economic investment. It offers an ambitious vision of reducing emissions by 30% and creating a “greener, greater New York,” and links this vision with the international agenda for climate change. On the other hand, the assessment reveals that PlaNYC did not make a radical shift toward planning for climate change and adaptation. It inadequately addresses social planning issues that are crucial to New York City. NYC is “socially differentiated” in terms of the capacity of communities to meet climate change uncertainties, and the Plan fails to address the issues facing vulnerable communities due to climate change. The Plan calls for an integrative approach to climate change on the institutional level, but it fails to effectively integrate civil society, communities, and grassroots organizations into the process. The lack of a systematic procedure for public participation throughout the city’s neighborhoods and among different social groupings and other stakeholders is a critical shortcoming, particularly during the current age of climate change uncertainty. Practically, the proposed conceptual framework of evaluate appears to be an effective and constructive means of illuminating the Plan’s strengths and weaknesses, and appears to be an easy-to-grasp evaluation method, and should be easily understood and applied by scholars, practitioners and policy makers.
topic New York City
PlaNYC 2030
planning
plans
climate change
sustainability
adaptation
mitigation
risk
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/6/9/5898
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