What is it about?

This paper aims to review multiple historical perspectives on urban regeneration interventions while also serving as a prologue to and the rationale for a Special Issue of the Journal of Place Management and Development (JPMD) on Placemaking and Sustainable Urban Regeneration in Japan.

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Why is it important?

Cities are transformed as their centers grow and develop. City centers represent important anchor points in every community. However, evolving functional decentralization has occurred mostly due to changes in flows of capital, people, materials and other socio-economic transformations. The review shows how urban regeneration programs tend to be implemented to correct and or improve physical, socio-economic and environmental problems associated with functional and programmatic decentralization.

Perspectives

The key finding is that the history of planning city centers appears to be largely a response to urbanization and the problems it has brought forward. The papers in this JPMD’s Special Issue exemplify this finding with cases from Toyama, Kanazawa and Tokyo.

Dr. Carlos J. L. Balsas, AICP
Ulster University Belfast

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This page is a summary of: Historical and conceptual perspectives on urban regeneration: a prolog to a special issue, Journal of Place Management and Development, December 2021, Emerald,
DOI: 10.1108/jpmd-04-2021-0045.
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