Conservation Plans: Understanding Historic Cultural City and Stakeholders' Perceptions

Urban planning intended to conserve cities’ valuable past, both areas and structures, is challenging due to the need to find a balance between preserving urban heritage and fulfilling development needs. In China, efforts to preserve cities designated to be Historic Cultural Cities (HCCs) are affecte...

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Main Author: Li, Lin
Language:en
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/7363
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spelling ndltd-WATERLOO-oai-uwspace.uwaterloo.ca-10012-73632013-02-23T04:05:13ZLi, Lin2013-02-22T18:51:27Z2013-02-22T18:51:27Z2013-02-22T18:51:27Z2013-06http://hdl.handle.net/10012/7363Urban planning intended to conserve cities’ valuable past, both areas and structures, is challenging due to the need to find a balance between preserving urban heritage and fulfilling development needs. In China, efforts to preserve cities designated to be Historic Cultural Cities (HCCs) are affected by HCC planning mechanism (HCCPMs), which have been developed to protect the cities’ significant value as a whole. In this study, policies in HCC conservation plans are evaluated on their amount of detail and are compared to stakeholders’ expectations. A case study is carried out for areas in the City of Beijing. Findings of this study include the following: a general level of the detail used in HCC conservation plans; this level of detail ranges distinctively in various policy categories and HCC classes; stakeholders desire a higher level of detail than currently exists in the conservation plans; different expectations exist among stakeholder groups (residents, participants from the central districts, and participant without planning knowledge). Five statements can be reflected from the general level of detail: 1) urban conservation is not a primary concern in HCCs; 2) plan objectives were achieved in HCC plans; 3) the public did not effectively impact planning decisions; 4) little financial and human resources support exists for conservation activities; 5) the written legislative guidance is inaccurate. The differences in stakeholders’ expectation and the current plans reveal the failure to achieve public participation goals such as transparency and democracy. Recommendations are provided on improving plan quality and public participation in Historic Cultural Cities to better serve for urban conservation in Chinese cities.enheritage conservationpublic participationplan evaluationurban planning in ChinaConservation Plans: Understanding Historic Cultural City and Stakeholders' PerceptionsThesis or DissertationPlanningMaster of ArtsPlanning
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic heritage conservation
public participation
plan evaluation
urban planning in China
Planning
spellingShingle heritage conservation
public participation
plan evaluation
urban planning in China
Planning
Li, Lin
Conservation Plans: Understanding Historic Cultural City and Stakeholders' Perceptions
description Urban planning intended to conserve cities’ valuable past, both areas and structures, is challenging due to the need to find a balance between preserving urban heritage and fulfilling development needs. In China, efforts to preserve cities designated to be Historic Cultural Cities (HCCs) are affected by HCC planning mechanism (HCCPMs), which have been developed to protect the cities’ significant value as a whole. In this study, policies in HCC conservation plans are evaluated on their amount of detail and are compared to stakeholders’ expectations. A case study is carried out for areas in the City of Beijing. Findings of this study include the following: a general level of the detail used in HCC conservation plans; this level of detail ranges distinctively in various policy categories and HCC classes; stakeholders desire a higher level of detail than currently exists in the conservation plans; different expectations exist among stakeholder groups (residents, participants from the central districts, and participant without planning knowledge). Five statements can be reflected from the general level of detail: 1) urban conservation is not a primary concern in HCCs; 2) plan objectives were achieved in HCC plans; 3) the public did not effectively impact planning decisions; 4) little financial and human resources support exists for conservation activities; 5) the written legislative guidance is inaccurate. The differences in stakeholders’ expectation and the current plans reveal the failure to achieve public participation goals such as transparency and democracy. Recommendations are provided on improving plan quality and public participation in Historic Cultural Cities to better serve for urban conservation in Chinese cities.
author Li, Lin
author_facet Li, Lin
author_sort Li, Lin
title Conservation Plans: Understanding Historic Cultural City and Stakeholders' Perceptions
title_short Conservation Plans: Understanding Historic Cultural City and Stakeholders' Perceptions
title_full Conservation Plans: Understanding Historic Cultural City and Stakeholders' Perceptions
title_fullStr Conservation Plans: Understanding Historic Cultural City and Stakeholders' Perceptions
title_full_unstemmed Conservation Plans: Understanding Historic Cultural City and Stakeholders' Perceptions
title_sort conservation plans: understanding historic cultural city and stakeholders' perceptions
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/7363
work_keys_str_mv AT lilin conservationplansunderstandinghistoricculturalcityandstakeholdersperceptions
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