A Creative Living Lab for the Adaptive Reuse of the Morticelli Church: The SSMOLL Project
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
- The construction of a collaborative decision-making process, through the establishment and activation of a Creative Living Lab;
- The elicitation of values through deliberative evaluation techniques;
- The co-evaluation role within the collaborative decision-making process.
2.1. The Structuring of a Living Lab for Adaptive Reuse Processes
- Exploration of the “current state” of the decision-making context and users to design possible “future states”;
- Experimentation, i.e., co-designing in a real-life context to understand the relationships between the context and the users, triggering new possible behaviors and habits;
- Assessment of impacts by comparing the “current state” and the “future state”.
- CLL activation: the goal is to communicate and involve the community in its activation from the beginning of the open process.
- CH open: the reopening of the abandoned building to the community. This is a real event for the community; this phase highlights that, only after a complex phase of identification of needs and construction of awareness of the values recognized in the CH, is it possible to trigger the conditions for a real change.
- CLL actions: a co-design phase in which the production of different reuse actions is a decisional opportunity [56] to identify and test possible reuses of the cultural good, revealing shared scenarios and producing, at the same time, new forms of social, cultural, and economic capital in the reference context. Each action is characterized by the phases of co-exploration, co-designing, co-testing, and co-evaluation, to include the community in each phase of the process and evaluate each action.
- CH reuse monitoring: the evaluation of the individual actions tested allows identification of the preferred reuse solutions able to make the reuse of the good sustainable over time.
2.2. The Elicitation of Values by Deliberate Valuation Techniques
- Direct observation: human action and behavior reflect social value;
- Documentation: the consultation of textual, photographic, and historical materials reveals information on human preferences concerning the issues addressed;
- Media/social media analysis: the analysis of shared material on the theme or place of interest allows us to obtain data related to the reference values.
2.3. Co-Evaluation in Collaborative Decision-Making Processes
- Development of lists of shared indicators and negotiations between experts and users;
- Individual evaluation of the experience by both experts and users participating in the process, scoring each indicator according to a Likert scale;
- Indicators ranking and comparison between the preferences and contents of the answers, and analyzing the respective attributions of a score;
- Shared indicators verification and, in the case of disagreement, comparison of positions through mutual dialectical observations.
3. The Case Study: The SSMOLL Experiment
3.1. Co-Explore
- To identify new functions and related values for the use of the CH;
- To build and enhance social and professional networks able to connect people and their territory;
- To activate a more comprehensive process of regeneration of the historical center of Salerno starting from the reuse of the former Morticelli church.
- The relationship with the city of Salerno. Users were asked to define, using the five senses, the potential and criticality of their city;
- The relationship with the former Morticelli church, to gather stories and memories connected to it;
- The visions of a possible reopening and reuse of the church, to identify needs and desires, either latent or explicit.
- “Let’s get to know each other”: informal cognitive phase to collect personal data related to the education and origin of citizens according to the city’s districts;
- “The Salerno you live in”: useful to identify habits and means to frequent the city;
- “Your impressions about Salerno”: A qualitative survey phase on the cultural offerings present in the city, to determine the degree of satisfaction of users expressed on a scale from 1 to 5;
- “How much do you know the Morticelli”: to explore the degree of knowledge about the abandoned space;
- “The idea”: A phase in which the user was presented with a set of possible reuses of the historical building to choose from on a scale from 1 to 5;
- “How can we collaborate”: the last step of the questionnaire focused on the in-depth knowledge of the users, their habits, and their willingness to collaborate by donating time, skills, and money.
3.2. Co-Design
- The satisfaction index of the participants using a scale from 1 to 5;
- The average rate of participation in the individual activities;
- The adaptive capacity of the former church to accommodate the different activities tested, expressed on a scale from 1 to 5;
- The willingness to donate and the willingness to pay for each specific activity proposed, expressed on a monetary scale.
- Co-exploration, in which the participants (students, artists, residents, etc.) co-produce material of knowledge about the Morticelli church and the surrounding urban fabric through interviews, video-interviews, urban explorations, and brainstorming;
- Co-design, in which all the participants, guided by the Blam collective in moments open to citizens, co-create and co-test possible reuse solutions;
- Co-evaluation, in which the participants give back to the whole community through the work produced on the occasion, through events and meetings, thus stimulating feedback and reactions, and activating modes of interaction through collaborative evaluation.
4. Results
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Cerreta, M.; Elefante, A.; La Rocca, L. A Creative Living Lab for the Adaptive Reuse of the Morticelli Church: The SSMOLL Project. Sustainability 2020, 12, 10561. https://doi.org/10.3390/su122410561
Cerreta M, Elefante A, La Rocca L. A Creative Living Lab for the Adaptive Reuse of the Morticelli Church: The SSMOLL Project. Sustainability. 2020; 12(24):10561. https://doi.org/10.3390/su122410561
Chicago/Turabian StyleCerreta, Maria, Alessia Elefante, and Ludovica La Rocca. 2020. "A Creative Living Lab for the Adaptive Reuse of the Morticelli Church: The SSMOLL Project" Sustainability 12, no. 24: 10561. https://doi.org/10.3390/su122410561
APA StyleCerreta, M., Elefante, A., & La Rocca, L. (2020). A Creative Living Lab for the Adaptive Reuse of the Morticelli Church: The SSMOLL Project. Sustainability, 12(24), 10561. https://doi.org/10.3390/su122410561