Sustainable Mediterranean Construction

RE-EVALUATING THE DISTANCE: VIRUS AS A “GREAT URBAN PLANNER” IN THE REDISCOVERY OF INNER AREAS AT RISK OF DEPOPULATION

Autori: 

Francesca Bruni

Keywords: 

covid-19, inner areas, proximity, new inhabitants

File Size 565 KB
Downloads 27

Abstract

The Covid-19 pandemic has triggered a broad critical reflection on the improvement of human life with respect to the themes of living and the relationship with nature and the environment, marking a return to those inner areas from which in the last century we had moved away because they were considered isolated, cut off from the urban logic of connections, of proximity (Fig. 1).
Now that distance appears necessary, perhaps our parameters and desires have also changed. The lockdown has awakened us dormant desires of nature, of culinary tradition, of a different relationship with the neighborhood; in short, it has changed our horizon.
Here the virus, “great urban planner” – paraphrasing the book of Marguerite Yourcenar “the time great sculptor ” -, acts as an accelerator of transformations in attributing a new centrality to those smaller towns up to that moment considered at risk of abandonment, bringing out that cultural and historical-landscape richness that has always existed but prefiguring new or rediscovered models of reuse of the territory in favor of a possible demographic recovery that is more residential than receptive and that passes for a new model of life. Smart working and digital teaching open up to new perspectives by reducing the disadvantages due to the distance from essential services and prefiguring a new dimension of living that can influence individual choices in the direction of building a new way of living.
Designing a new time of work reconciling it with a different cycle of life is what we could therefore try to do to fulfill a long-lost request for a relationship with nature. The question is complex and not without problems, but the regeneration of inner areas at risk of depopulation passes from this opportunity which must not be lost.

Anteprima

SMC Special Issue N.05 2021

SMC MAGAZINE SPECIAL ISSUE N. FIVE/2021

WHOLE BOOK

001_COVER AND INDEX

003_Notes on Landscape at risk and post-pandemic implications
Marialuce Stanganelli, Carlo Gerundo

006_BOARDS AND INFORMATION

SECTION 1 – LANDSCAPE AT ENVIRONMENTAL AND CLIMATE CHANGE RISK

007_Emergency management and urban planning: policies and actions for the Vesuvian coastal area
Marialuce Stanganelli, Carlo Gerundo, Maria Perillo, Beatrice Faggiano, Francesco Silvestri, Giovanni Forte, Giacomo Iovane

013_Insights on risk perception: the case of Friuli Venezia Giulia
Giorgia Bressan, Andrea Guaran, Gian Pietro Zaccomer

016_The post-disaster temporary landscape. Reflecting on housing and tourism practices in the crater of central Italy
Sara Cipolletti, Alessandro Gabbianelli

020_The complex thinking to avoid the “reconstruction risk”. A design methodological proposal for Inner Areas
Giovangiuseppe Vannelli

023_Advanced planning for urban landscape enhancement
Roberto De Lotto, Caterina Pietra, Elisabetta Maria Venco

027_Elements of integration of Regional Landscape Planning with Risk Management Planning in Abruzzo
Donato Di Ludovico

032_Small Rivers and Landscape. Nature-based solutions to mitigate flood risk
Malena Magliocchetti, Valentina Adinolfi, Giacomo Viccione, Michele Grimaldi, Isidoro Fasolino

037_Post-communist urban landscape at risk – challenge and innovation
Tana Nicoleta Lascu, Cristina Victoria Ochinciuc

SECTION 2 – LANDSCAPE AT RISK OF ABANDONMENT

041_Re-evaluating the distance: virus as a “great urban planner” in the rediscovery of inner areas at risk of depopulation
Francesca Bruni

044_On the relations between landscape and production. The case study of Rufoli in Salerno
Guglielmo Avallone

051_The landscape of the Amalfi Coast: an endangered paradise
Giorgia De Pasquale, Lorenzo Nofroni, Serena Savelli

055_Social ecology and traditional landscape enhancement. Some issues from a case study in the Gorizia Karst
Alessandra Marin, Alfredo Altobelli

061_Conservation through development: paths of innovation for protected areas
Giovanni Ottaviano

064_Circular economy as ‘catalyst’ for resilience in inner areas
Marco Rossitti, Francesca Torrieri

068_Designing the margins. A strategy for Lioni
Chiara Barbieri, Giovanni Zucchi

073_Landscapes at risk of peripheralization. A methodological framework for risk analysis to support planning strategies
Roberto Gerundo, Alessandra Marra

080_Periurban landscapes, vulnerabilities and potentials for regeneration
Anna Attademo, Maria Gabriella Errico

SECTION 3 – LANDSCAPE AT RISK OF OVEREXPLOITATION AND TOURISM

084_Tourism in the time of COVID-19. A research on the behaviour and travel expectations of Italians
Fabio Corbisiero

089_Collaborative governance for coastal landscape integrated management. The Agro Pontino Coast Contract
Stefano Magaudda, Serena Muccitelli, Carolina Pozzi, Cristina Palazzini

093_Tourism in the Phlegraean Fields. Public perception and framing agenda of territorial public initiatives
Salvatore Monaco, Carmine Urciuoli

096_Environmental Hazard and Resource Use: a comparison Between Volcanic Landscape of Vesuvius and Stromboli
Maurizio Conte, Dora Francese, Giuseppe Vaccaro

101_Archeological resources: a blended landscape with various hazard factors. The case of Bacoli
Luca Buoninconti, Paola De Joanna, Dora Francese

106_LIST OF AUTHORS

L’ultimo numero della Rivista
SMC n. 19 | 2024